I suspect this is the name that someone suggested a few weeks back people really would want to talk about. Suspect GB News will be fairly straight laced during the day, then opionated at night, with the "balanced" daytime service used as justification for any straying from impartiality at night.
Indeed, it does look like they're going down the Sky News Australia route. A perfectly balanced rolling news product by day and opinion at night.
Who's hosting and what the slant is can be deceiving, too. Nicole Wallace, a veteran Republican political strategist and advisor, has developed into a very strong broadcaster on MSNBC's 4-6pmET slot, which is far from a conservative programme. And despite being a left-leaning news channel, they employ mostly established, objective news correspondents to hold down their daytime programming. Their running orders may be politically aligned in terms of which stories attract what attention in the running order, but not how they're covered necessarily. And a lot of that is likely about selecting the stories likely to attract and appeal to their viewership, rather than it be ideologically-minded. Even places like Fox News have employed reputable presenters in the past, such as Shep Smith or Alisyn Camerota. Despite Fox News's undeniable right-wing agenda, Shep Smith's programmes were always far more balanced and reputable.
I think GB News is going to end up far more like LBC, where the channel as a whole has little obvious voice or agenda, and where viewers/commentators judge each 'host' or programme on its own terms. In that sense, I see McCoy and Brazier's hirings as akin to Eddie Mair, John Pienaar or Shelagh Fogarty's departures from the BBC. If I were Sky or ITN or the Beeb, I wouldn't hesitate to hire any of them back.
Not sure where the 'sounds like he'll be doing a lot of OBs' has come from, though. The first paragraph of the press release literally states he's presenting an afternoon slot. What I hope is that he gets to spend more time interviewing and reporting than throwing to endless news reports or pre-recorded pieces. The BBC News Channel, after all the cuts and changes, feels more like a never-ending series of BBC 1 news bulletins than ever, and that probably wastes a lot of their on-screen broadcasters' talents when 15-20 minutes of every half hour is them sitting waiting to be cued again.
Last edited by House on 25 March 2021 2:30pm