You have to feel
for Chloe Smith. The Government she’s
part of performs the umpteenth u-turn and she is chosen to be the front person
for this, and face not just Jon Snow but Jeremy Paxman. I saw bits and bobs of her interview with
Paxman and never thought she was that bad.
That hasn’t stopped people from claiming her moment as the biggest
car-crash interview in some time, despite Danny Alexander (for example) performing even more badly any time i've seen him up against Paxman.
Paxman is the
obvious king of the political interviews. Someone whose intimidating style cow’s
politicians across the spectrum – someone I would have liked to have seen given
“Question Time” before Dimbleby got the job.
Yet there are times when he doesn’t get things right, for example his jibe
comparing Salmond to Robert Mugabe.
There are other people who rate “This Week’s” Andrew “Brillopad” Neill,
while I am a fan of “PM’s” Eddie Mair – who did the multiple questioning of
Michael Howard a couple of weeks before Paxman had his go.
With the ongoing
debate about the future of Scotland,
BBC Scotland doesn’t have either Mair or Neil to adequately take apart the
Nationalist’s case or to spotlight the flaws in the Unionists argument. Instead, we have Glenn Campbell or Brian
Taylor – ok broadcasters but not really of the calibre of those mentioned
above. This is why I think that BBC
Scotland needs to look hard at how they are going to cover the Referendum
debate.
I think that they
have one or two options. Either they can
coax one of the above up here for the “Big Debate” specials they are clearly planning
on doing… or they could try and sign one
of the other big beasts. The one
interviewer I reckon BBC Scotland should try and sign is STV’s Bernard
Ponsonby.
Ponsonby used to do
a post-pub “debate” show called “Trial by Night” – and hosted it with great
aplomb. I saw him do STV’s leaders
debate just before the Holyrood election last year, and saw that he had lost
none of his sharpness or his incisiveness.
Certainly he performed better than the distinctly wooden Campbell. BBC Scotland, if they want to seriously beef
up their political unit in the run up to the Referendum vote, could possibly go
for Ponsonby. To be fair to BBC Scotland
though, all is not that bad. Isobel Fraser
has emerged in the last year as an insightful interviewer, maybe in the mould
of a Victoria Derbyshire. It’s just that
at times she is rather criminally underused.
It’s telling that
of the three interviewers mentioned above, two of them are Scots who have moved
south – cashing in their Union dividend I suppose. At this crucial time in our history, we
really need our main broadcaster to step up.
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