Quinn was born in Dublin in 1935. After a series of other jobs, he moved into television in 1961, joining Ireland's national public-service television station,
RTÉ, as a trainee studio operator the year it first broadcast. He worked up to directing films there, but resigned in 1969 in protest against the commercialisation of the network. He wrote his first book,
Sit Down and be Counted with
Lelia Doolan and Jack Dowley, who had also quit, about that episode. In June 1995, Quinn was appointed to the
RTÉ Authority. After he criticised RTÉ on Tonight With
Vincent Browne, on
RTÉ Radio 1, on 7 November 1996, he was removed from the panel interviewing candidates to be
Director-General of RTÉ. Quinn had also been part of the campaign that led to the launch of TnaG, now
TG4, on 31 October 1996. While on the Authority, he suspended his own membership every Christmas to protest RTÉ's reliance on
toy advertising aimed at children, and he quit the Authority in July 1999, saying that "to brainwash children is simply unacceptable and the pressure it puts on parents to buy these products is simply scandalous" and that RTÉ needed to do more to represent regions of Ireland outside the capital, Dublin. ==Filmmaking==