Earlier this month, I noted
that veteran TV presenter Noel Edmonds – or rather the ubiquitous “friends” that prove so useful at such
times – was telling anyone who would listen, which meant Rupe’s downmarket
troops at the Super Soaraway Currant Bun, that the BBC wanted him to return to
Saturday night primetime as front man for a new Endemol vehicle called The Bodyguard.
He's not coming back. Or Mr Blobby
Strangely, nobody from the Corporation was available to give
a quote, but readers were assured that BBC1 Controller Danny Cohen wanted
Edmonds, who fronted the Late Late
Breakfast Show, Noel’s Saturday
Roadshow and Noel’s House Party
between 1982 and 1999, back on his manor. After all, Endemol do Edmonds’
current vehicle Deal Or No Deal, and
they were making a pilot show.
Well, now the same Sun
is
reporting that Edmonds will not be continuing beyond the pilot. And, by the
usual fortunate coincidence, the “insider”
with the information is telling that it was Edmonds who walked away, because he
didn’t feel the new show was sufficiently “amazing,
different and exciting”. Is anyone out there not hearing their bullshit
detector going off right now?
This report bears all the hallmarks of someone determined to
get his retaliation in first. Edmonds never wanted to leave the Beeb’s Saturday
evening line-up in the first place: had the House
Party been given another series, he’d have been in there like a shot. It
wasn’t his decision, though: the Corporation pulled the show because its
ratings were in freefall and it was out of time.
And there is another factor working against Edmonds: one
hates to have to remind him, being of A Certain Age oneself, but Noel,
sprightly or otherwise, will reach state pension age at the end of next year.
The BBC make exceptions for folks like Brucie, and even he needs a younger co-presenter to help with shows like Strictly. Edmonds is now personally out
of time.
There are dozens of younger men and women who would dearly
love a chance to front The Bodyguard.
The only problem for the Beeb is to select the one who fits the role and brings
the personal chemistry needed to bring in the viewers. There’s no need for the depth
of experience that made Forsyth – and Len Goodman – such a good fit for Strictly. This new show is no place for
old men.
So forget all the creative briefing to the Sun, Noel. The deal is, there is no deal.
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