As is well-known, the Fourier-transform is an injective bounded linear operator from $L^1(\mathbb R)$ to $(C_0(\mathbb R),\Vert \cdot \Vert_\infty)$, where the latter is the space of continuous functions on $\mathbb R$, vanishing at infinity, equipped with the supremum norm.
My question: is the inverse operator (defined on the image) bounded?
I.e., is there a $C>0$ such that $$\Vert \hat f \Vert_\infty \geq C \Vert f \Vert_{L^1}\qquad \forall\; f\in L^1(\mathbb R) ?$$
Edit: Maybe I should add (in view of the first comment) that I expect the answer to be negative $-$ in fact, I've spent some time trying to construct simple counterexamples but without success. Therefore, a way to re-phrase this "provocative" question is:
How can we see that the answer is no? What is a nice counterexample?
2nd Edit: Perhaps it is easier to answer the analogous question for the discrete Fourier transform $l^1(\mathbb Z)\to (C(S^1),\Vert \cdot \Vert)$, where $S^1$ is the circle.