Glad to hear it. If you had suggested that maths wasn't hard I would have to revise a lifetime's opinion on my hierarchy of awe for degree subjects.
Printable View
I wonder if Emily Maitlis will be sacked for breaking the BBC's impartiality rules.
She should certainly be made to hold a press conference in her garden, where she will be made to give a full account of her actions leading up to her "offence" and then a procession of Brexiteers and anti BBC campaigners can take turns to ask her questions about her actions and thought processes.
Maitlis has form for this. Last September, the Brexit supporting journalist Rod Liddle appeared on Newsnight to talk about his new book. Instead Maitlis launched a frenzied, personal attack on him - I watched it. A complaint was upheld against her. Even the BBC concluded she was “sneering and bullying”, “too persistent and personal” and “failed to be even-handed”.
The BBC guidelines state ‘Our audiences should not be able to tell from BBC output the personal opinions of our journalists.’ Can anybody guess Emily's?
I have never rated Maitlis. The problem now is that because of the Andrew interview she believes her own propaganda and because the BBC got so much publicity from his "revelations" she is given free rein.
The better BBC interviewers are on radio because they concentrate on the interview and not how good they look in front of the camera.
A friend of mine went to school with her in Sheffield. He says she was a right cow then.
OK. I think that is her three strikes. She should be out.
That is a red herring. Political issues are rarely so clear cut. BBC news is unlikely to get involved in such a debate.
On a more typical issue:” Brexit” it became apparent that many journalists ( indeed the BBC) were not giving a level playing field to both camps of the argument.