Posts Tagged ‘Mary Nightingale’

BBC’s Jane Hill Tops Poll Of Female Newsreaders

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

The BBC’s Jane Hill has come out on top in Up To Speed’s own popularity poll of British female newsreaders, with 18% of our blog’s readers voting her the best presenter.

BBC's Jane Hill Voted Your Favourite Female Newsreader

BBC's Jane Hill Voted Your Favourite Female Newsreader

We started the poll when BBC bosses were being accused of ageism by female newsreaders who felt they were dropped sooner than their male counterparts.
The results of the poll show our readers aren’t necessarily most impressed by the most highly paid or prominent women who read the news.

Hot on Jane’s heels was Susanna Reid, of BBC Breakfast, with 16% of the vote.

Katie Derham of ITV News came third with 9%.

In fourth place was Fiona Bruce, who is perhaps Britain’s most high profile news and programme presenter. Fiona received 7% of the votes cast by readers of the Up To Speed blog.

Two of Susanna Reid’s co-presenters on Breakfast, Kate Silverton and Sian Williams share 5= with 6% of the votes each.

Coming up just behind them in seventh place is another face from  the BBC and one of Jane Hill’s colleagues on rolling news, Joanna Gosling.

No fewer than five female anchors share the next slot with 4% of the vote each. So, in equal 8th place we have Mary Nightingale of ITV along with her colleague Nina Hossain, up against Natsaha Kaplinsky of Five and two more BBC presenters Mishal Hosain and Dani Sinha.

Newsnight presenter Emily Maitlis is holding her own against a brace of GMTV stars – Kate Garraway and Emma Crosby – for fourteenth equal place in the poll.

Kirsty Wark of Newsnight, ITV’s Julie Etchingham and Charlotte Hawkins of Sky each received 1% of the vote and shared 17th place.

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Vote For Britain’s Best Female Newsreader

Friday, December 11th, 2009


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Are British Female Newsreaders Facing Age Discrimination?

Friday, December 11th, 2009

A BBC newsreader has announced she is leaving Britain for China, because she feels there is a “culture of ageism” at the corporation, according to the Daily Telegraph.

Susan Osman, 51, has worked on the BBC News Channel, BBC World and on Points West, the regional news programme for the south-west.

Her decision comes two months after reports that the BBC was actively seeking to recruit a female presenter over the age of 50.

Earlier this year, Up To Speed gave details of the university backgrounds of many of the women who front the news as evidence that female British newsreaders certanly don’t deserve to be dismissed as so-called “auto-cuties”.

Today we’ve added to that research by giving the ages of 20 of the most successful female newsreaders. The average age is just over 40.  The authority, gravitas and appeal of newsreaders can have an important impact on the ratings used to judge the success of the programmes they present. And so, we thought it would also thought it would be interesting to run a poll of the twenty people on our list to see who you think is Britain’s Best Female Newsreader.

Anna Botting

Fiona Bruce

Emma Crosby

Katie Derham

Julie Etchingham

Kate Garraway

Joanna Gosling

Charlotte Hawkins

Jane Hill

Nina Hossain

Mishal Husain

Natasha Kaplinsky

Emily Maitlis

Mary Nightingale

Sophie Raworth

Susanna Reid

Kate Silverton

Dani Sinha

Kirsty Wark

Sian Williams

Average Age

42

45

32

39

39

41

38

34

40

36

36

37

39

46

41

39

39

30

54

45

40

SKY

BBC

GMTV

ITV

ITV

GMTV

BBC

SKY

BBC

ITV

BBC

FIVE

BBC

ITV

BBC

BBC

BBC

BBC

BBC

BBC

Oxford

Oxford

Leeds

Cambridge

Cambridge

Bath

Birmingham

Manchester

UCL

Durham

Cambridge

Oxford

Cambridge

Royal Holloway

Manchester

Bristol

Durham

Bristol

Edinburgh

Oxford Brookes

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Do You Have To Study English To Be A Journalist?

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

 

It may sound obvious, but if you want to become a journalist it really does help if you love words. Reading. Writing. That kind of thing.

 

And so it’s perhaps not surprising that in Up To Speed’s look at the undergraduate careers of 75 leading journalists, English came out on top. Twenty people on the list read English at university.

 

Among the newsreaders Natasha Kaplinsky at Five and Samira Ahmed  at Channel 4 News were at Oxford as was the Daily Mail columnist Melanie Phillips. ITV’s Julie Etchingham, Newsnight presenter Emily Maitlis and BBC Sport presenter Clare Balding were at Cambridge. Mary Nightingale, also at ITV, graduated from Royal Holloway, London.

 

English was also the subject of choice for many of the male faces on television. Jeremy Paxman, Andrew Marr, Sir David Frost, John Simpson and Edward Stourton all read English at Cambridge. Ian Hislop and the Channel 4 News reporter and presenter Alex Thomson both went to Oxford as did Evening Standard editor Geordie Greg whose first job on a south London weekly paper allowed him to list his credentials as Eton, Oxford and Deptford. Panorama presenter Jeremy Vine has an English degree from Durham, while Adrian Chiles went to Westfield College, London and Gavin Esler studied English and American Literature at Kent. The film reviewer Mark Lawson read English at University College, London.

 

However, the key to success for many of these people was the work they were doing when they weren’t studying English. Julie Etchingham combined her degree with a show on BBC Radio Cambridge and Jeremy Vine had an overnight music show on Metro Radio in Newcastle.

 

During their time at Cambridge, David Frost and John Simpson were both editors of Granta while Jeremy Paxman edited Varsity. Edward Stourton edited another student magazine called Rampage before joining ITN as a trainee. Clare Balding was President of the Cambridge Union.

 

At Oxford, Samira Ahmed was editor of Isis, while Ian Hislop went his own way with a college paper called Breaking Wind. He landed his job with Private Eye after interviewing his predecessor Richard Ingrams.

 

English may have come out on top in our survey, but hot on its heels was another subject, or cluster of subjects – politics, philosophy and economics. We’ll have more on that tomorrow.

 

 

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How Do You Become A TV Newsreader?

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

The latest volley in an unseemly row over TV newsreaders’ qualifications was fired by ITV anchor Mary Nightingale today.

 

She leapt to the defence of the glamorous so-called “auto-cuties” who read our nightly news bulletins, pointing out that most of them have brains as well as beauty.

 

Ms Nightingale was responding to the veteran newscaster Peter Sissons, who reportedly said that Five News’ £1m a year presenter Natasha Kaplinsky had “done very well out of her looks”.

 

Sissons, 66, who was shot in the legs while covering the Biafra war for ITN, said he believed all news readers should have earned their spurs as frontline reporters.

 

However, if you take a step further back in their careers, you’ll find that Kaplinsky and Sissons, broadcasting beauty and latter-day Boot of The Beast, have something in common.

 

They both went to Oxford. 

 

A few years ago some research by the Sutton Trust found that a whopping two-fifths of graduate journalists had spent three years studying beneath its dreaming spires.

 

This week, Up To Speed will be taking a closer look at the university days of some of Britain’s highest profile journalists to see how they made the transition from student to star reporter.

 

Looking at the backgrounds of 75 journalists we’ve found that 30 went to Oxford, 13 went to Cambridge and 32 went to other universities.

 

We’ll start tomorrow by looking at the single most popular subject from our list -  English.

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