Spencer Pratt enlists Jedward to help track down reclusive Irish singer Enya

He's built a career on being seen. She's built one by being absent.
The fundamental mismatch between Spencer Pratt's approach to fame and Enya's deliberate invisibility.

In the ancient tension between the visible and the invisible, a reality television personality has chosen the most human of responses to an artist's deliberate silence: he will simply show up. Spencer Pratt, armed with a letter and the assistance of Irish pop duo Jedward, plans to travel to Enya's castle in Killiney, Dublin, to request permission to sample her music — and if she does not answer, he will wait in a nearby pub. The gesture, however earnest or absurd, illuminates the quiet power of an artist who has made absence itself into a kind of presence.

  • Pratt has announced via TikTok a plan to fly to Ireland next month and knock on Enya's castle door for sample clearance — treating music licensing like a romantic grand gesture.
  • Enya's reclusiveness is so complete that even her Irish neighbors rarely glimpse her, making any unsolicited visit a genuine long shot with no guarantee of acknowledgment.
  • Jedward, who live near Enya and met Pratt on Celebrity Big Brother UK, have agreed to place his handwritten letter directly in her mailbox — adding a layer of local credibility to an otherwise improbable scheme.
  • Irish internet commenters have responded with fond skepticism, noting that Enya's invisibility is near-total and that Bono, also a local resident, might be the more accessible neighbor.
  • The plan currently rests on a 24-hour pub vigil — Pratt leaving his number with a local barman and waiting, on the off chance that Enya changes her mind and calls.

Spencer Pratt, the reality television personality from The Hills, has devised an unconventional strategy for obtaining music sample clearance: fly to Ireland, knock on the artist's castle door, and wait in a pub. The artist in question is Enya — Donegal-born, castle-dwelling, and so deliberately absent from public life that she has become something of a ghost even to her own countrymen.

Announced on TikTok in early February, the plan centers on Pratt's desire to use an Enya sample in what he's calling the "Do it Enya Echoes and Rain remix." He intends to arrive at her Killiney residence next month, and if she doesn't answer, leave a note with the phone number of a local pub where he'll make himself available for the following 24 hours — a strategy borrowed more from romantic comedy than from entertainment law.

The scheme gains a certain local texture through the involvement of Jedward, the Irish twin pop duo who live near Enya and met Pratt during Celebrity Big Brother UK. In a follow-up video, Pratt refined the approach: Jedward would write the letter requesting sample permission and place it directly in Enya's mailbox, with one twin — Gunner — described by Pratt as "the sweetest angel" and presumably the more persuasive of the two.

Online reaction has been warmly skeptical. Irish commenters joked that a letter addressed simply "Enya, Enya's Castle, Killiney" would likely find its way to her, while others noted that her reclusiveness is so thorough that even locals rarely spot her. Someone suggested enlisting Bono, who also lives nearby — a detail that somehow made the whole enterprise feel both more connected and more hopeless.

What the episode quietly reveals is the strange power Enya holds precisely because of her absence. She made some of the most recognizable music of her era and then stepped almost entirely out of sight — no tours, no interviews, barely any new releases. For Pratt, a man whose career runs on visibility, that kind of chosen obscurity may read as a door worth knocking on. Whether she answers it remains, for now, an open question.

Spencer Pratt, the reality television personality best known for his time on The Hills, has decided that the proper way to ask a reclusive Irish singer for permission to sample her music is to fly to her castle, knock on the door, and wait in a nearby pub. The target of this unconventional mission is Enya, the Donegal-born artist whose sparse output and deliberate invisibility have made her something of a phantom in popular culture—even to Irish people who live in her own country.

The plan, which Pratt announced via TikTok in early February, involves traveling to Ireland next month to request clearance for a sample he wants to use in what he's calling the "Do it Enya Echoes and Rain remix." He's been transparent about his intentions: he'll show up at her castle in Killiney, Dublin, and if she doesn't answer, he'll leave a note with the phone number of a local pub where he plans to spend the next 24 hours, essentially making himself available should she change her mind. The whole thing has the quality of a man who has watched too many romantic comedies and decided to apply their logic to music licensing.

What makes this scheme slightly less absurd is that Pratt has enlisted help from Jedward, the Irish twin brothers and pop duo who happen to live down the street from Enya's residence. Pratt met them during a stint on Celebrity Big Brother UK, and they've apparently agreed to the plan. In a follow-up video, Pratt refined his approach: he would have Jedward—specifically mentioning one of them, Gunner, as "the sweetest angel"—write a letter requesting sample permission, which Jedward would then place directly in Enya's mailbox. It's a plan that somehow manages to be both elaborate and straightforward, a multi-step process to accomplish something that could theoretically be handled by a lawyer and an email address.

The internet's response has been a mixture of amusement and skepticism. Irish fans flooded the comments with observations about their country's postal system, joking that addressing a letter simply "Enya, Enya's Castle, Killiney, Co. Dublin, Ireland" would probably work. Others noted that Enya's reclusiveness is so complete that even Irish people rarely see her, making Pratt's pub-waiting strategy a genuine long shot. One commenter pointed out that Bono, who also lives in the area, might be willing to help—a detail that somehow makes the whole thing both more and less plausible.

What's notable about this entire enterprise is how it reveals something true about Enya's place in the cultural landscape. She's famous for being unfamous, for having created some of the most recognizable music of the 1990s and 2000s while remaining almost entirely absent from the machinery of celebrity. She doesn't do interviews. She doesn't tour. She barely releases music anymore. For someone like Pratt, accustomed to the currency of visibility and self-promotion, this kind of deliberate obscurity must seem almost like a challenge—a puzzle to be solved by showing up in person and being persistent enough to wear someone down through sheer availability. Whether Enya will answer her castle door, respond to a letter left in her mailbox, or acknowledge Pratt's 24-hour pub vigil remains to be seen. But the attempt itself says something about the gap between how modern celebrity works and how one artist has chosen to opt out of it entirely.

I'm gonna be knocking on that castle door. Next month. The trip is booked.
— Spencer Pratt, in a TikTok video
Enya is a recluse even us Irish never see her! Jedward might pull it off.
— Irish fan commenting on Pratt's plan
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why would Spencer Pratt think showing up at someone's house is the right move here?

Model

Because in his world, visibility and persistence solve problems. He's built a career on being seen, being heard, being present. Enya's entire career is the opposite—she's built something by being absent. He doesn't quite understand that absence is her answer.

Inventor

Does he actually think she'll answer the door?

Model

I don't think he expects it. That's why he has the pub plan. He's hedging. He's saying, "I'll be here, waiting, available." It's almost like he's trying to out-patient her.

Inventor

Why Jedward specifically?

Model

They're local. They live near her. They're Irish, so there's a cultural bridge he doesn't have. And they're famous enough that they might find this funny, which they apparently do. They're his way of making this feel less like a stranger showing up and more like a coordinated thing.

Inventor

Does he understand how famous Enya actually is?

Model

He understands she's famous. What he might not fully grasp is that her fame and her invisibility are the same thing. She's not hiding from the world—she's built something so complete that she doesn't need to be visible. He's trying to solve a problem she solved by not engaging with it.

Inventor

What happens if she ignores the letter?

Model

Then he's spent money to sit in an Irish pub for 24 hours. Which, honestly, might be the real point. The story is the attempt, not the success.

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