Dear Gen Xer,
It was the rip heard round the world.
On October 3, 1992, Sinéad O’Connor - having performed an acapella version of Bob Marley’s ‘War’ - raised a picture of Pope John Paul II and tore it to pieces in front of millions of viewers. “Fight the real enemy,” she said, then dropped the pieces and left the stage.
The studio audience remained silent; shocked, no doubt, by what they’d just seen. It didn’t help that Lorne Michaels, famed producer of Saturday Night Live, demanded the applause sign stay unlit.
“I remember knocking on the door [after the performance]. I went in and she was talking to herself. Her hands were behind her back, she had her socks on and she was doing something between poetry and chanting. I didn’t know what to do.” – Daniel Glass, Executive at Chrysalis Records
Daniel Glass had accompanied Sinéad to Saturday Night Live. They were there to promote Sinéad’s new album, Am I Not Your Girl?
She’d nailed her first song: ‘Success Has Made a Failure of Our Home’. A couple of big-shot radio figures were so impressed, they assured Daniel Glass that they’d be adding Sinéad’s single to their playlists immediately.
Then Sinéad performed again.
‘Going viral’ wasn’t a thing in 1992, yet that’s what happened when Sinéad tore the Pope a new one. Pearls were clutched. Phone lines were flooded. And the righteous came out swinging.
Media outlets condemned Sinéad. So did the Anti-Defamation League. Celebrities got in on the act as well. Joe Pesci, who hosted SNL the following week, held up the photo that Sinéad had torn up and said he’d asked for it to be taped back up. You can bet the applause sign burned bright for that one.
Pesci went on to say: “I’ll tell you one thing: She’s very lucky it wasn’t my show. ‘Cause if it was my show, I woulda gave her such a smack”. Cue more cheers and applause.
Not to be outdone (and certainly not due to flagging record sales), Madonna recreated Sinéad’s famous act when she appeared on SNL later that year. At the end of her performance, Madonna held up a picture of Joey Buttafuoco and said “fight the real enemy” before tearing it to pieces. Because as we all know, the Pope’s got nothing on Buttafuoco.
Speaking of the Pope - he wasn’t impressed. Neither was Cardinal Bernard Francis Law, who called Sinéad’s act a “gesture of hate” and “neo-anti Catholicism”.
Sinéad attempted to explain her behavior by revealing that she’d suffered physical, sexual, and emotional abuse as a child; abuse she held the Catholic Church responsible for. The picture Sinéad tore up on television had been taken during the Pope’s visit to Ireland in 1979. It had hung in her mother’s bedroom until her death. Sinéad had been waiting for the moment to destroy it.
But nobody cared about Sinéad’s abuse. And nobody came to help. Not SNL, who banned her for life. Nor the radio stations, who refused to play her songs. Not even a popular feminist of the day:
“In the case of Sinéad O'Connor, child abuse was justified.” – Camille Paglia
Nine years after Sinéad’s defiant act, the very same Pope - John Paul II - acknowledged (surprise!) that children had been abused in the Catholic Church.
One year after that, Bernard Francis Law, the Cardinal who’d called Sinéad’s act a “gesture of hate”, resigned as the current Archbishop of Boston when it was found he’d been covering up child abuse in the church.
Nobody thought of Sinéad O’Connor when light was finally shed. It was too little, too late for her anyway. Her career had been dead for years.
“She never recovered after [her performance on SNL]. No one judged the music, that’s what I was very pissed off about. Being outspoken should not be a penalty.” – Daniel Glass
I’d like to admit, in the name of transparency, that I’ve never been a fan of Sinéad O’Connor’s music. Especially not then when the shit went down. I was listening to grunge and rap in 1992, with plenty of punk sprinkled in between. But I was watching SNL the night she tore up the picture and I remember how impressed I was by her defiance. I was 21 at the time. Sinéad was barely four years older.

The episode with Sinéad came back to me recently while watching the documentary, Ladies & Gentlemen... 50 Years of SNL Music. In it, producer Lorne Michaels states, “There was a part of me that just admired the bravery of what she’d done. And also the absolute sincerity of it.”
It’s a far cry from what Michaels said in an interview with Spin Magazine in 1993:
"I thought it was sort of the wrong place for it, I thought her behavior was inappropriate. Because it was difficult to do two comedy sketches after it." – Lorne Michaels
That’s right. Turns out Michaels wasn’t pissed off because Sinéad had blasphemed or offended Catholics. He was upset that his musical guest had cramped the flow of masterful skits like Book Burning Campfire and Sweet Jimmy: The World’s Nicest Pimp.
Let’s recap, shall we?
Sinéad calls out the Pope on television
Sinéad is ‘cancelled’ by the music industry
Lorne Michaels bans Sinéad, but continues airing the episode
Lorne Michaels whitewashes history, switching Sinéad’s original performance with footage from Sinéad’s rehearsal
Lorne Michaels profits for 33 years
Lorne Michaels claims to admire Sinéad’s bravery during a self-congratulatory doc
Lorne Michaels whitewashes history a second time to realign with contemporary values
Lorne Michaels continues SNL’s brand narrative that it’s always been ‘edgy’
I know it’s not a revelation that showbiz is rife with scum. But the horrible way Sinéad was treated offers a valuable lesson:
Listen to those who defy convention and the powers that be. Be patient with those who have the courage to challenge society’s heroes.
Odds are they were trod upon on the road to glory.
Shooting the messenger was and is nothing new. The idea that biting the hand society is using to pull you up with is a classic dramatic theme. Think about Brando refusing his Oscar to protest the depiction of Native Americans by Hollywood. There are countless examples of being ahead of your time -but society says time’s up for you. I was never a huge fan of Sinead, although I did have her first album- “The Lion and the Cobra” -which I recently Iearned comes from a Bible verse.
I was raised Catholic, went to Catholic school and had no real problem with my treatment by them -except I do recall our Irish Nun eighth grade teacher being pretty cold, not very engaging, and a bit boring. That being said, I still have much love for Irish musicians like Shane MacGowan and Van Morrison. I have dear Irish friends.
To separate Catholicism from Ireland is pretty difficult. To look the other way when abuse has happened would have been wrong. She used her platform but really to blame the Pope is like blaming the President- they are figureheads and of course they matter- but it’s who and what they are representing that must be challenged. Can you say Vietnam was all Nixon’s fault? Johnson’s fault? No, they were doing the will of powerful people behind them- the Masters of War, as it were. The latest Pope did his best to be a better leader, but it’s still the Catholic Church- who persecuted Copernicus and burned many women accused of Witchcraft. It has a complex history and it has an entrenched following. Like my mom, who prays mass every day still with a televised mass. It’s the largest religious concern going. To attack the figurehead was brave but really it wasn’t going to be anything other than career suicide. Poor Sinead took it on but in this case the Goliath triumphed over Joan of Arc. If she thought it would win her respect- it is only begrudgingly in the hindsight of history because shooting the messenger has always been sadly-more satisfying than listening to them.
My family were big Sinead fans and we stood by her. I always thought she got a rotten deal.