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Thursday, 7 August, 2008

Brian Thornton | 17:32 UK time, Thursday, 7 August 2008

Here is Kirsty's look ahead to tonight's programme:

"We go on air as Beijing wakes up to the start of the Olympics. With George Bush's criticisms of the country's human rights record China is under more scrutiny than ever before. In 2001 when China was awarded the Games it promised greater openness but are changes anything more than cosmetic, given internet blocking, the suppression of protests and the detention of activists? Rupert Wingfield-Hayes spent eight years reporting for the ´óÏó´«Ã½ from China and he returns to hear a Chinese lawyer saying that human rights have actually got worse.

Is Stamp Duty staying or going? Alistair Darling spent his summer holidays in a traditional Black House on a remote Hebridean island, perhaps thinking about the dire problems in the housing market, but clearly not making a decision about Stamp Duty. He doesn't need to wait until the pre-budget report - after all he announced there would be no hike in fuel duty before he headed to his highland fastness. So what's keeping him?

Yet more drama in Pakistani politics as the country's ruling coalition parties begin impeachment hearings against President Musharraf (who is NOT now going to the Olympic Games). Benazir Bhutto's widower Asif Ali Zardari of the PPP warned Musharraf not to dissolve parliament: "If he does it, it will be his last verdict against the people." But will one effect of this instability be damage to counter terrorism measures in the tribal areas?

And as if there is simply not enough for you to watch on television, you'll soon be able to turn on to GBTV ..... or is it State TV? Gordon Brown is to have his own channel - promising exclusive video of the prime minister's speeches, press conferences, media appearances, news archive, Pilates classes, tennis matches and visits to the terraces of Raith Rovers - OK I made the last three up, but it's going to be a challenge - just how much of a challenge David Grossman will be telling us tonight. Perhaps the prime minister should enlist Paris Hilton to talk about sustainability. That might be a ratings winner.

I hope you'll be watching,

Kirsty"

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    GBTV?

    When during a recent coup Thai TV was switched off to be replaced by continuous archives of the the King, Thai friends found it made useful background music while they got on with their lives around the house.

    Better than the risk of a jingoistic channel representing Gordon Brown would be a channel that featured many of the political leaders and issues.

    I know we have the Parliamentary channel, but that can seem very cold for all but the most hardcore viewer - a Parliamentary Lite would be very interesting.

    Maybe we could push all the electioneering onto there and get it off the mainstream channels.

    And for those politicians who complain "but people would never watch it," well, therein lies a very important lesson for them.

  • Comment number 2.

    Given the "does Gordon dither" debate as expressed in the stamp duty holiday/no holiday it will be interesting to see whether anything will get produced by GB for GBTV.

  • Comment number 3.

    NEWSNIGHT'S soundbytes could never handle it,

    but the ´óÏó´«Ã½ needs to examine "human rights" from a cosmopolitan standpoint.

    For example, do they really exist and are they universally accepted standards?

    More controversially, are they applied by the USA?

    Again, NEWSNIGHT'S soundbyters can't think of it, but the ´óÏó´«Ã½ could.

  • Comment number 4.

    I hope that soon the anthrax killer story will get some solid coverage on Newsnight.

    "US anthrax victim Robert Stevens' widow has called it shocking that army scientist Bruce Ivins was allowed near anthrax when he was certifiable".

    It does sound as though he had to be working alone.

    Does it raise questions for us also about the vetting process, perhaps the MoD would comment etc?

  • Comment number 5.

    Gurubear, like presenter June Sarpong's website mixing popular culture and politics, or more traditional and Newsnight-y?

  • Comment number 6.

    GBTV / State TV. I thought that the ´óÏó´«Ã½ (state broadcaster) already had this niche covered. How will Gordon Brown TV be any different? Will Gordon Brown TV be staffed by ´óÏó´«Ã½/ex´óÏó´«Ã½ employees, I wonder?

  • Comment number 7.

    Caroline should be in China: she could win a gold medal for filibustering.

  • Comment number 8.

    THE GREAT GAME AND THE NEPOTISTIC PEOPLE'S PARTY

    So (allegedly 'Islamo-fascist') President Musharraf isn't going to the games, but the Socialist International representatives for Pakistan (PPP co-chairmen 19 year old Bilawal Bhutto Zardari and his dad) are going to help make the world a far better place by booting out axis-of-evil 'fascists' like Mr Musharraf whom Richard Armitage allegedly once advised "we'll bomb you to Stone Age" unless....

    If that isn't an endorsement of the PPP and neocon/Socialist Internationalist cosmopolitans and their interests, what is?

    Pakistan: low mean IQ, but fast growing workforce (lowish mean IQ means high TFR). Like Bangladesh and Nigeria, its population has tripled to over 150m whilst in the same period the UK has had to start importing labour from S. Asia and Africa because of the UK's low birth rate.

    Now..... why is that?

  • Comment number 9.

    Erik

    Adding popular culture would be interesting - who would think of, say, mixing a political strand with an arts review programme?

    But, maybe a better formula would be somewhere between a sports channel and a shopping channel.

    The parties get their nice, meaty, political slots, but it is padded out with more independently minded panels and commentary. And perhaps the odd political video diary, fly on the wall stuff and face the public bits.

    For instance, I would love to have been at the Shadow Cabinet meeting when it was decided that no member of the conservative party was allowed to say the words "Prime Minister" without using the word "Dithered"

    It must have happened - some giggling school boy come PR consultant sat down and made that policy recommendation. If the public saw that, then their perceptions of how politics work may start to change.

    But in the end, this sort of mix and match channel (with plenty of self produced party nonsense) would be the perfect TV equivalent of "Give them enough rope ...."

  • Comment number 10.

    Housing Minister Caroline Flint's interview was a classic demonstration of why New Labour is so unlikeable and unelectable.

    Her complacent, patronising, gobbledygook, doublespeak replies to Kirsty's serious questions about the government's policy on reviving the housing market, spoke volumes about the government's total inertia and panic on this front.

    I was left with the impression Ms Flint thought she was being ever so canny in her rebuttal techique to the questions.

    No Ms Flint, you came across as bombastic and clueless.

  • Comment number 11.

    I agree with you restassured. I would add that it is assuring in a minister that they are confident and assertive but very unappealing when that is substituted for obtuse arggression.Tonight Caroline Flint even outdid her previous interviews on Newsnight which more than hinted what was to follow.
    As further trouble mounts in the housing market i dread to think what is to come in any interview with this minister.Does she not realise the electorate is simply turned off by her manner and irrespective of the intellect of the listener her words merely become hot air even when there is merit in them.
    Kirsty,Jeremy or whoever interviews her next time prepare yourselves.I am sure you will.

  • Comment number 12.

    The problem is often the media training ministers get given.

    Often run by the same journalists that end up interviewing them, the training spends far too much time on "Takign control of the agenda" rather than just answering competently.

    However assured you are, being interviewed in the Newsnight studio is far from easy - and the politicians are often more worried about getting it right than getting the right information across.

    I used to do media training with Peter Hobday - his training was far more about workign with the interview than against it, as is the current trend.

    Better training and we might see better answers

  • Comment number 13.

    Hardfaced or what!

    Caroline Flint has as much charm as a cold bloodied Tesco till supervisor on a busy saturday. She's got looks but the minute she opens her mouth... J-e-s-u-s!!!
    The coffins already built for labour; and Flint the housing minister has the hammer and nails.
    Keep a firm grip Caroline... and Bang those nails in..

  • Comment number 14.

    concerns stamp duty.
    what baffles me is dat the min. of the ecq. can spend 24
    billion pound on northen rock or buy for 3 billion pounds worthless nothon rock shares without so much as a parlementary debate but that for only 1,5 billion pounds goverment cost for suspending stamp duty on transaction until 250000 puonds a lot of discussion is neccesary?
    Is it that the 24 and 3 billion pounds are virtual money and
    1,5 billion pounds are real taxpayers money !
    Or is this in a nutshell the
    core of the problems
    the 24 plus 3 are write offs
    and the 1,5 billion pounds are real money with wich the salarys are to be paid!
    i am dutch and sorry for my
    poor inglish.

  • Comment number 15.

    yes the national oath should be to defend the rights of freedoms of ALL the people not just one family of role gamers.

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