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‘It’s absolutely abhorrent’: Jon Sopel on Huw Edwards, chaos in Britain and quitting the BBC | Podcasting
When Jon Sopel left London in 2014 for Washington DC, to become the BBC’s North America editor, everything seemed fairly stable. “The boring coalition with Clegg and Cameron, who didn’t seem that different as people,” he remembers. “Brexit was not even a glimmer.” Nor was the rest of the turmoil to come: Boris Johnson, the pandemic, Liz Truss, even Donald Trump in the US. When Sopel moved back in 2022, the country felt completely different – “like a nervous breakdown”, he says, and eerily unfamiliar. Trying to get his head around it all has resulted in a book, Strangeland: How Britain Stopped Making Sense.
“It was quite triggering to write,” he says with a small laugh, “just thinking how crazy it was.” Same here – I had wiped the words “tractor porn” from my mind until Sopel’s reminder in a chapter about the worst of our MPs (this is Neil Parish who was forced to resign in 2022 after being caught accessing explict material in the House of Commons).
It’s late morning in a hotel bar, Sopel is warm and engaging – as listeners of the hit podcast The News Agents he presents with Emily Maitlis and Lewis Goodall will know – and looking like an off-duty centrist dad in jeans and oatmeal sweater. Is he a centrist dad? (At 65, Sopel is also a grandfather.) “I suppose centrist sounds vaguely pejorative and dull.” Anyway, pigeonholing, he says, is “really idiotic. There are some things where I would be classed as left of centre, other things I’d be classed right of centre.” He prefers to describe himself as “questioning”.
For a book about Britain, a huge amount of it focuses on the US, and the shockwaves since Trump’s 2016 victory. Isn’t the US very different from the UK? “It is,” he says, “but America does things, and we copy. No, we’re not as divided as a society, thank God, but I look at some of the dialogue that takes place on social media, the intolerance, or just a lack of willingness to hear an alternative argument.” Sopel was shocked by the Capitol riot in January 2021, fuelled by Trump’s false claims that the election had been rigged. It made him think, he says, “How safe are the institutions that I’ve grown up with all my life?”
Is it not rather a leap to suggest that could happen here? “It could have been very different – if Trump had been a little better organised, if there was more discipline, if three or four people hadn’t done the right thing. You realise that so much of our democracy relies on people behaving decently and properly.” In the UK, he adds, “Boris Johnson had no interest in behaving properly or decently. He was eventually muscled out, but there could have been people who wanted to indulge him more. You don’t want to keep stress-testing our institutions to destruction.”
Sopel left the BBC in 2022, after nearly 40 years. He says he was being lined up to become the BBC’s political editor, but realised he didn’t want it. “There was a laziness [on my part]. Do I want to be outside Downing Street at quarter past 10 on a wet November night, and then doing it all again at six the next morning for the Today programme?” And, he adds, “I had concerns about whether I would be able to do it the way I wanted to do it.” It was Maitlis, with whom he presented the BBC’s Americast podcast, who suggested they take their chemistry and insight to commercial podcasting. “I just thought, why not? If I’m not going to do it now, I’m never going to do it.” Neither regret it, he says. How much do they pay him? “Lots,” he says with a laugh. Do he and Maitlis earn the same? No idea, he says. They haven’t talked about it? “Not really.”
He describes having been institutionalised by the BBC – he had never bought a mobile phone, or a laptop. “If I had any problem, I rang tech support. My daughter pointed out that she’s had more employers than I have. It was like the prison doors opened; it took a while to adjust to being on the outside.”
It was at the University of Southampton, where he was president of the students’ union, and a friend was reporting for local radio on the warships leaving Portsmouth for the Falklands, that Sopel became fascinated by journalism: “It just seemed weird that a fleet was going to set sail, like something out of Nelson’s time.” He joined the BBC’s local radio station there in 1983. “I still don’t know what else I’d have done. I still love the thrill,” he says.
Sopel and his sister grew up at the Bernhard Baron settlement in east London, a huge building that included gyms, halls, a basement synagogue and rooftop play area for the large local Jewish community. His parents, both social workers, were also the wardens. It sounds an extraordinary place to live.
“It was,” says Sopel. “Obviously, when you’re in the middle of it and you’re being brought up there, it just seemed normal.” It had been set up in 1914 to turn new Jewish immigrants into, writes Sopel, “upstanding British citizens and patriots”. Perhaps it’s no wonder that six decades after he left the place, Sopel is still thinking about what it means to be British. “I think it’s a pride in the country. It’s about long, complicated history. It’s tolerance, irony, it’s a sense of humour, which I missed in America. I do not think that Britishness is about wearing union jack cufflinks and socks and posting pictures of a full English breakfast and saying, ‘When will I be banned from having that?’”
When he was 11, the family moved to Finchley, north London. His grandparents on both sides had fled Europe – from Poland and Russia. Did he grow up with a sense of his family’s persecution? “You know, every Jewish festival under the sun is a miserable kind of recollection of where we’re fleeing from,” he says with a wry smile. “So you’re aware of that, you’re aware of the second world war. But did I grow up conscious of being other? I didn’t really. It wasn’t until I joined the BBC, actually, and I was at the local radio station and some people seemed to find it exotic that I was Jewish, like they’d never come across a Jew before.”
There has been a huge rise in antisemitism. Has he experienced it? “I mean social media … but social media is a sewer. I don’t know whether these people are even real, whether it’s bots, or the algorithm promoting divisive comment.”
He worries about the rise of anger and intolerance, and the rise of the Reform party. “[They] are now in second place in 90 Labour seats … a lot of their grassroots support are even further to the right. You’ve got a Tory leadership contest where the party members [who will vote] are way to the right, much closer to Reform. So is the Tory party going to become a far-right, anti-immigrant party?”
Sopel finished his book before the riots in the summer. “There is unease, and there are people who want to take the law into their own hands, and there is some serious intolerance.” But he thinks it’s partly that the narrative on immigration has been so badly handled by politicians and the mainstream media, either on purpose or by well-meaning liberals. “What do I think about illegal immigration? It’s totally unacceptable. But there’s a lot of migration that contributes massively towards the economy and the UK.”
He is alarmed by “the decline of mainstream news”, and the rise of conspiracy theories – another thing he was surprised by when he came back to the UK. “I couldn’t believe how suddenly we’re embracing conspiracy theory – that just doesn’t feel like who we are. That’s a really alarming development, and it needs challenging.” With the people who feel alienated from power, he can almost understand it. “But when you get Liz Truss being the author of conspiracy theories [she blamed the “deep state” for her short-lived premiership],” he says, voice rising, “you think, ‘You are the establishment – what on earth are you talking about?’”
The News Agents – which is recorded around lunchtime, and aims to drop by 5pm on weekdays – has hit 100m downloads, and, depending which chart you look at, is usually in the top five podcasts. The team has just announced a first live show, at the Royal Albert Hall in London, political podcasters being like rock stars these days. Does he feel like a celebrity journalist now? “No! What does that mean anyway?” He knows what it means, I say (he’s trying to look mock indignant and modest, not entirely successfully). “I love the word veteran being attached to me. Christ, you’re so bloody old.” He smiles. “I’m just a hack following a story, and the adrenaline still flows when you’re on to a good story.”
Launched with much hype in 2022, The News Agents has brought Sopel a new audience. Just this morning, he was stopped as he walked his dog, by a young man out running. Didn’t he have that at the BBC? “I was popular with an older cohort, not younger ones.” Even so, The News Agents is one of a number of what the Guardian has called “dadcasts”, and what the Spectator described as the “rise and rise of the centrist bore podcast”. Chief among these is The Rest Is Politics, hosted by Alastair Campbell and Rory Stewart, but others, including Ed Balls and George Osborne’s Political Currency, have tried to get in on the boom. Becoming a podcast host is one way to launder reputations (I’m thinking of Osborne in particular, a man whose policies wreaked so much devastation on the most vulnerable). “Yeah, and people will try to do that – Farage going on I’m a Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here! Politicians have always tried to show their human side, to seem more engaging or authentic. But you can’t just make yourself authentic.”
Should Balls, the former Labour MP and shadow chancellor, now presenter on the ITV show Good Morning Britain, be interviewing Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, and his wife? “No, that’s ridiculous, that was preposterous.” We talk about whether the relationship between Westminster and journalists has become too cosy – and I point out he attended Osborne’s wedding last year. Does that not put him in a difficult position with the former chancellor? “No, because do you know why I went to George Osborne’s wedding?” says Sopel, suddenly combative. Because he’s friends with Osborne’s wife, Thea Rogers, a former BBC producer. “What would it say about friendship if you said, ‘I’m not coming to your wedding, even though you’re a dear friend, because you’re marrying a politician, it will look too cosy’? I think that would make me look utterly shallow.”
The July general election has been described as the “first podcast election” , seeing a boom in listening figures for political podcasts. Sopel thinks it’s because podcasts reach younger people especially, and they can cover the news in a different, more accessible way than, say, the Today programme. Should podcasts be regulated by Ofcom, particularly ones with a certain number of listeners or those claiming to be news? “I have no fear of it – it’s something that may come.”
Sopel sees strong benefits from being unleashed from BBC impartiality rules, though. During the Brexit campaign, he was covering then-president Barack Obama’s visit to the UK. He was told by his BBC bosses to add something in, incongruously, about Nigel Farage, simply for “balance”. He did, but says, “I emailed people about it afterwards and said, ‘I think this is crazy, we’ve got this wrong.’ Was it impartial to do ‘some say this, some say that, only time will tell who’s right’? If something is untrue and is demonstrably untrue, why don’t we say it’s untrue? Otherwise, how are we helping the listener, the viewer, to understand? Doing the podcast, we’ve got a lot more freedom.”
The BBC seems to be in crisis, not least because of the recent conviction of Huw Edwards, its news anchor, who pleaded guilty to making indecent images of children. Last year, Sopel defended Edwards several times, on TV as well as on his podcast, before the full criminality of his behaviour had been revealed. Did Edwards ask him to do that? “No, he didn’t ask me to do anything. I’ve known Huw a long time, but we weren’t mates, hadn’t seen each other socially.” At the time, he stresses, “the police came out and said there was nothing to it. I thought, if there’s nothing to it and he sent a couple of inappropriate texts, he’s just got a complicated private life.” That turned out to be way off the mark, but Edwards’s conviction wasn’t related to those initial allegations. “You do what you do for the right reasons,” says Sopel. “I’m not going to defend anything that he’s done. It’s absolutely abhorrent.”
The BBC is commissioning an independent review of its workplace culture, and its licence fee remains under threat. The funding model, thinks Sopel, “is fundamentally broken, but I do think the BBC is our most fantastic cultural institution and an absolute jewel in the crown, compared to what is in America, or what GB News would like to do.”
An optimistic, if naive, view is that after the chaotic period detailed in Sopel’s book, perhaps things are more settled now, and may even – please – improve. For all his freebies, Starmer surely isn’t anything like as self-serving as Johnson, or as reckless as Truss? But Sopel remains wary. In the US, he thinks Kamala Harris “is marginally ahead”, but points out it’s “going to be on a knife edge. I wouldn’t bet the house on it.” His view is that we can’t be complacent about the things we’d really be better off keeping, whether it’s the BBC or democracy itself. “This is not to catastrophise,” he says, “but if you look at the great sweep of history, liberal democracy is the exception, rather than the rule, and you’ve got to guard it. When you see forces at play that are undermining democracy, that causes me some anxiety.”
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Prince Harry screams and swears his way through surprise Jimmy Fallon appearance
Prince Harry unexpectedly showed up on Jimmy Fallon’s US talk show – and his appearance left him screaming and swearing.
Harry was invited to walk through a “haunted” maze with the host, and the result was broadcast on Thursday night’s episode of The Tonight Show (26 September).
Based on Fallon’s nightmares, the maze is a New York-based attraction set to feature several rooms filled with actors jumping out at attendees.
These actors brought Halloween to life for the pair a month before it opens to the public.
The Tonight Show’s YouTube page said: “Brace yourself for 10 spine-chilling rooms that bring Jimmy’s worst nightmares to life with sinister characters and scares around every corner. Enter if you dare!”
At one stage in the clip, Harry questioned if one of the monsters was a panda before an actor suddenly jumped out in front of the Duke of Sussex, which prompted him to scream and swear before erupting into nervous laughter.
“You’re afraid of pandas,” Fallon said as Harry protested: “No, I’m not!”
At another point, a werewolf jumped out in front of the pair, and without thinking, Harry put his hand on Fallon’s stomach in fear. Fallon admitted: “That actually got me!”
One moment saw the actors temporarily break their characters to express shock that they had just scared a member of the royal family.
The scares did not end when the duo posed for a picture after they had walked through the maze, with yet another actor screaming behind them for one last fright.
The duke previously appeared on the Tonight Show to promote his bombshell 2023 memoir, Spare, which is coincidentally being released in paperback for the first time next month.
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During the appearance, Harry, who has had an interesting few years since stepping down as a working member of the royal family in 2020, admitted that he feels “the presence of his mum” now more than ever.
“I’ve said quite a lot recently in different interviews that I’ve really felt the presence of my mum, especially in the last couple of years,” he said.
“I detail in the book my brother and I talking at her grave and how he felt as though she had been with him for a long period of time and helped set him up with life and that he felt she was now moving over to me.”
The video arrived amid a solo visit to New York that has seen Harry, who recently turned 40, promote several philanthropic causes close to his heart.
Harry’s packed schedule of engagements in the Big Apple began with a dinner hosted by the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Sunday (22 September), which highlighted the impact of violence on children’s mental health.
He also appeared at The Diana Awards on Monday (23 September), set up in memory of the late princess, which honours young people making a significant difference in the lives of others.
“I’ve said it years ago, and I’ll say it again – the younger generation are, not putting too much pressure on you guys, you are what give me hope,” Harry said. “The courage that you have gives me hope, because every single one of us need courage in order to really move the dial and create positive change in today’s world, probably more so now than ever.”
He added, “I know that my mum would be incredibly proud of you guys – not just you, but all of the award winners.”
Jimmy Fallon’s Tonightmares is available to visit in New York until 31 October.
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Jeremy Clarkson is a great polar explorer like Captain Scott, historian says
JEREMY Clarkson is a great polar explorer like Captain Scott, a top historian claims.
Dr Linda Parker hailed his race to the North Pole on Top Gear in 2007 as a “watershed moment”.
Clarkson, 64, is now seen on his Diddly Squat Farm for Amazon Prime show Clarkson’s Farm.
But 17 years ago he and co-host James May raced 450 miles across frozen Canadian seas in a modified pick-up truck for a BBC Top Gear special.
Dr Parker, a polar expert, said they “pushed the boundaries of what’s possible”.
Clarkson’s “derring-do” was, she said, reminiscent of pioneers like Robert Scott and Ernest Shackleton.
She wrote in a magazine article: “The Top Gear expedition was a watershed moment in the development of polar research and exploration.
“Light-hearted and comedic as it was, Clarkson and May’s attempt was in many ways in the same tradition of the early pioneers.”
The pair beat their colleague Richard Hammond, who was on a traditional dog sled, to the magnetic North Pole.
Dr Parker said Scott would have loved “navigational aids and motorised vehicles” to reach the South Pole in 1912, adding: “Success meant everything.”
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🔈Paper DIY 🔈Rescued Titan Speaker WOMAN Pregnant – Squishy Surgery | Skibidi toilet blind bag
🍼Paper DIY 🍼 Rescued Titan Speaker WOMAN Pregnant 🔈 Squishy Surgery Doctor set blind bag | Roblox Titan baby ASMR
#roblox #speakerwoman #skibiditoilet #titan#Squishy Surgery #titanspeakerman
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Maggie Smith called ‘one of the greats’ as hilarious Harry Potter and Downton Abbey story resurfaces
An amusing Dame Maggie Smith anecdote about Harry Potter and Downton Abbey fans recognising her in public has resurfaced following her death, aged 89
The two-time Oscar winner has died in hospital, her sons Chris Larkin and Toby Stephens have revealed.
In reaction to the news, many fans have begun sharing their fond memories of the star, with one Graham Norton interview proving to be a favourite.
Smith who played Professor McGonagall in the Harry Potter series, told Norton in 2015 that she used to get noticed by a lot of “small people who said hello, which was nice”.
She added: “A whole different lot of people know me because of it. It was like I’d never existed before. One child asked me, ‘Were you really once a cat?’ and I heard myself say, ‘Pull yourself together, how could I have been!’”
For the uninitiated, McGonagall could transform herself into a cat in the films.
However, despite the success of the Harry Potter series, Smith told Norton that she only started to be recognised once Downton Abbey, where she played Violet Crawley, became a hit.
“It’s only since Downton that people seem to recognise me,” said the actor. “That’s television for you.
“I was in Waitrose the other day and a little boy was at the checkout with his mother and he kept looking at me. When I asked him, ‘Can I help you?’ he said, ‘No, it’s alright, it’ll come to me in a minute.’ It was so lovely.”
One post on X/Twitter, which featured the interview, called her “one of the undeniable greats of her time”.
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Reactions to the post showered Smith with praise. One fan wrote: “A Grand Lady, she will be missed.”
Another said: “She was a redoubtable woman and a superb actress who just seemed to get better with age.”
A third added: “She was so, so much more than *those* films btw. An Oscar-winning diva!!!”
In a statement issued via Smith’s publicist, they said: “It is with great sadness we have to announce the death of Dame Maggie Smith.
“She passed away peacefully in hospital early this morning, Friday 27th September.
“An intensely private person, she was with friends and family at the end. She leaves two sons and five loving grandchildren who are devastated by the loss of their extraordinary mother and grandmother.
“We would like to take this opportunity to thank the wonderful staff at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital for their care and unstinting kindness during her final days.
“We thank you for all your kind messages and support and ask that you respect our privacy at this time.”
Additional reporting by PA.
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The Wiggles: Fruit Salad TV | Episode 1: Team Work | Songs and Nursery Rhymes for Kids
Fruit Salad TV, a thrilling new musical program centered on the vibrant ‘Wiggle Town’ and its community, is specially crafted to delight preschool children. Making a groundbreaking move, The Wiggles have expanded their lineup to feature eight Wiggles for the very first time, promising to bring an even greater dose of fun and excitement!
Subscribe to our channels for more Wiggly videos:
Spotify 🎵 https://ab.co/TheWigglesSpotify
Apple Music 🎵 https://music.apple.com/au/artist/the-wiggles
Instagram 🔴 https://instagram.com/TheWiggles
TikTok 🟡 https://TikTok.com/@thewiggles
Facebook 🔵 https://facebook.com/thewiggles
Website 🌏 https://TheWiggles.com
FRUIT SALAD TV | CAST
Anthony
Anthony wears the blue Wiggles shirt. He sings and plays the guitar, drums, tin whistle and even bagpipes!
Tsehay
Tsehay loves to shuffle dance and say ‘g’day’ to everyone she meets. Her favourite colour is red.
Emma
Emma wears the yellow Wiggles shirt and is a wonderful dancer. She loves wearing her signature bows in her hair and on her shoes.
John
John’s favourite colour is purple. He loves getting strong and working out!
Evie
Evie wears blue ballet shoes, and her favourite colour is blue. She loves dancing, doing yoga and reading.
Kelly
Kelly likes to ride her skateboard around Wiggle Town. Her favourite colour is yellow.
Simon
Simon wears the red Wiggles shirt and sings with a beautiful deep bass-baritone voice.
Lachy
Lachy wears the purple Wiggles shirt and plays the keyboards, sings and dances.
Fruit Salad TV features all the wonderful members of the Wiggle Town community.
Captain Feathersword is a friendly pirate who has a feather for a sword. He is the captain of the
S.S Feathersword.
Officer Beaples is a dancing police officer who helps members of the community with road safety. Officer Beaples has a big smile and painted on moustache.
Dorothy the Dinosaur is a friendly green dinosaur who loves to eat roses.
Wags the Dog is a dancing dog. When he dances, he likes to shake his hips.
Henry the Octopus loves to twirl around and around in his tartan suit, bow tie and boater hat.
Shirley Shawn the Unicorn is non-binary and likes to say ‘scrumptious’. Shirley Shawn likes to eat apples and drive around Wiggle Town in a mini red car.
Bok the hand puppet is a timid character who displays emotions for children to empathise with.
Fruit Salad TV is an exciting new chapter for The Wiggles and premiered on YouTube in September 2021.
About The Wiggles
Children are our inspiration, Education is our goal, Music and Movement are our way!
With a remarkable 30 plus year legacy of lively performances, The Wiggles have earned a global reputation for their distinctive, high-energy songs, concerts, and videos. The Wiggles utilize the universal language of music to educate children, guiding them to better understand their world. Designed specifically for pre-K, preschool, kindergarten and nursery school age groups, The Wiggles’ shows are a unique blend of education, music, and movement, inspiring children to learn while having fun. Parents and children alike are invited to sing, dance, and laugh with The Wiggles as they strive to make learning an enjoyable and unforgettable experience for the whole family!
#TheWiggles #FruitSaladTV #TV #KidsSongs #NurseryRhymes #ChildrensMusic #EducationalSongs #LearningForKids #FamilyFriendly #KidsEntertainment
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