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News rover newsreader
News rover newsreader






news rover newsreader
  1. #News rover newsreader series
  2. #News rover newsreader tv

With BBC2 and Radio 4, there's a fear of being accused of dumbing down by having quizzes, so on Eggheads, for instance, Dermot Murnaghan is there to bring gravitas. Whether in practice they draw a higher audience is unclear. However, the broadcaster and writer Mark Lawson believes that as "news is more popular than most other factual genres, news presenters tend to have a reputation for higher ratings – Dimbleby is known to millions, Andrew Graham-Dixon plays to hundreds of thousands. Examples of the reverse process are hard to find. Take the pattern of news types replacing presenters with other backgrounds: Vine for the former crooner Young on Radio 2 Fi Glover for John Peel on Radio 4's Saturday mornings Paxman and now Marr for Melvyn Bragg on Start the Week Sue Lawley and now Young for Michael Parkinson on Desert Island Discs Matt Frei preferred to pundits' essays in replacing Letter from America Humphrys and Paxman for Magnus Magnusson and Bamber Gascoigne.

#News rover newsreader series

These were also the years when celebrity culture in its current, overblown form took hold – Heat was enjoying its salad days, Grazia launched – and the attraction of news presenters in documentary series looks to be that they almost uniquely combine credibility and celebrity, at a time when being famous is increasingly de rigueur for those fronting factual programmes.Īnother analysis of the trend views the mega-department BBC News as slightly sinisterly setting out to win hearts and minds by making us love its public faces – hence the fanning out into almost every genre. In the following year Who Do You Think You Are? (with Moira Stuart) and Strictly Come Dancing (with Natasha Kaplinsky) began and in 2005 Dimbleby first toured Britain in his Land Rover and Dragons' Den debuted with Evan Davis presenting. How did we get here? The trend perhaps began in 2003, when Jeremy Vine took over Jimmy Young's Radio 2 show and John Humphrys was picked to resuscitate Mastermind. Less liable to raise hackles as yet is the apparent difficulty of being a BBC quiz compere if you haven't practised by cross-examining politicians, and news types also regularly pop up in celebrity-centred shows – Strictly Come Dancing has managed to include one in almost every series, most recently Christine Bleakley and the 2009 winner, Chris Hollins. It made my buttocks clench to see them trying to make out Young is a David Kynaston figure.

#News rover newsreader tv

"The losers are the poor experts who spend a lifetime studying their field and get pushed aside." The New Statesman's TV critic, Rachel Cooke, is less mild: "This newsreader thing is commissioning editors being lazy, and sometimes it's embarrassing too. "I can see the logic - they suggest authority and can write their own scripts," says the Evening Standard's deputy editor, Sarah Sands (whose novel Playing the Game has a newsreader heroine). While Bruce's emergence as an antiques connoisseur led to some tut-tutting, it's anchors in "landmark" series who attract most criticism. The faces of BBC news now hoover up presenter jobs across the board ( see panel) – some in factual series they can plausibly claim to be qualified for, some that involve barging clumsily but spiritedly into experts' territory, and some where there is no discernible link at all between CV and show. With the corporation privately sheepish about its lack of female series presenters, Young looks set for similar opportunities as a utility frontwoman and she and Bruce have adroitly mixed Crimewatch's grimness with lighter fare – Desert Island Discs, Have I Got News for You and Antiques Roadshow. In this role as an amateur enthusiast he's been imitated by Paxman, who has switched from art in The Victorians to history for a forthcoming series on the British empire and by Andrew Marr, whose degree was in English but who fronted series on biology (Darwin's Dangerous Idea), history (The Making of Modern Britain) in 2009, and geography (Britain from the Air) in 2008.








News rover newsreader