Simon McCoy is certainly a character, although he's one of those people who
can shift from serious news into something a bit lighter fairly seamlessly.
Not mentioned in that Twitter thread is the time he interviewed a
children's glove puppet (Basil Brush - think a mischievous muppet), or the
time he interviewed an actor playing a character from the BBC-set sitcom
W1A, as though he was a real person. That was probably as meta a thing as
I've seen at the BBC.

https://twitter.com/bbcsimonmccoy/status/929035613508050944?lang=en

On Fri, Mar 26, 2021 at 2:05 AM Brad Beam <[email protected]> wrote:

> *From:* [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] *On
> Behalf Of *JW
>
> *>*Seth Meyers tweeted:
>
> *>*
>
> *>*"I did not know of @BBCSimonMcCoy <https://twitter.com/BBCSimonMcCoy>
> until today and yet, this thread has be[sic] deeply sad that he is leaving."
>
>
>
> Buried in the comments – Mr McCoy will be moving to GB News, previously
> discussed on here as a possible Trojan fox for sneaking right-wing news
> past Ofcom.
>
>
>
It's worth saying that you can't completely do a version of Fox News in the
UK because of the impartiality rules. What you *can *do is balance a right
leaning commentator with a left leaning one - each of them getting their
own show. It's kind of presumed that this is what GB News is likely to do.
The most notable example of this is in radio (where the same rules apply)
and LBC - a news station. They have a breakfast show presenter who's
probably a little to the right, followed  by a morning show that leans
left. The afternoon presenter is probably centre-left and then there's an
evening presenter who's centre-right.

Basically, they can't fill the airwaves with right-wingers and not get
rapped by Ofcom - an authority who can ultimately take a service off-air.

I don't know what McCoy's personal politics are - the BBC doesn't allow its
news presenters to show any kind of political bias on air. I'd suspect that
he'll play a fairly central role. Even Andrew Neil, the former editor of
Murdoch's The Sunday Times, and the editorial lead behind GB News, managed
to play a very straight bat when conducting political interviews on the BBC
as he has done for a number of years before leaving to start this new
channel.

That all said, this is certainly going to be a story to keep an eye on. The
proposed launch date has slipped a few times - perhaps inevitably given the
pandemic. (And Comcast last year completely cancelled a proposed NBC/Sky
News global news competitor to CNN that they had been planning and started
recruiting for).


Adam

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