Meltdown: things that cannot be unseen
Sadly, that thought does not appear to have entered for veteran Sky News (“first for breaking wind”) man Adam Boulton, who has reappeared on the Zelo Street radar as he has, indeed, flagrantly abused his position of trust on the Tom Watson and Leon Brittan saga, although this is not the first time he has done so. Boulton’s wobbly behaviour has been evident for more than five years now.
It was in the aftermath of the 2010 General Election - where Young Dave and his jolly good chaps were going to cruise to victory, and then didn’t - when the Sky News man showed the beginnings of partiality, losing it big time, live on air, with Alastair Campbell, to even the latter’s evident surprise. After his meltdown before Big Al’s relatively gentle winding-up, he apparently lost it again later in the day with Labour MP Ben Bradshaw.
That both Campbell and Bradshaw have shown significant support for properly independent press regulation, and the Royal Charter which emerged from the aftermath of the Leveson Inquiry, is, I believe, not a a coincidence. And even before his disgraceful intervention in the Watson melée, Boulton had intervened in discussions on the future of the BBC, a matter in which he could be said to have an interest.
“[For God’s sake] this is not existential. Just how much public money spent on what” he scoffed, before responding to Sean Lawson’s “It's not existential. It's party political and ideological Adam”, with “Move on not much to see here”. Au contraire: there is rather a lot to see here. But most revealing to see the mask of impartiality slip so readily.
The reaction was as sharp as it was shocking: “dream on”. There you have the objectivity of Adam Boulton and Sky News in one: would they like to give that objective picture to the viewers, that range of views, that full information? Would they buggery. That alone disqualifies Adam Boulton from any role other than that of a partisan pundit. Any show fronted by him and pretending otherwise is instantly devalued.
4 comments:
Does anybody in full possession of their common sense and decency need to know more than this: Boulton and Sky News are employed and instructed by Rupert Murdoch.
Says it all really.
You can't trust any news outlet that Murdoch is involved with. Newspapers or broadcast media.
This is from a Guardian article ( 17 April 2015 I think?) some Q&A piece in the Saturday Magazine with TV election presenters modelling clothes. Adam knows what the national interest is. Do we need elected politicians?
"Worst on-air moment?
Losing my temper with Alastair Campbell in the aftermath of the 2010 election: he argued it was not in the national interest for Gordon Brown to resign immediately. But I was right and most of the public agreed with me. They usually ask why I didn’t punch him"
Dream on!
A trio of Guido, Adam Boulton and Eric Pickles looking enviously at media coverage of "Fat Frauds" and wondering how they can possibly have been left out.
There's no such thing as bad publicity, so they say, and the Streisand effect could be just as devastating and might enable the real truth to be known.
Just don't rely on Sky News to deliver it!
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