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UK : Auntie mistake cabbie for computer expert and give him on-air interview!

Forums Life Computers, Gadgets & Technology UK : Auntie mistake cabbie for computer expert and give him on-air interview!

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  • LOL – just shows how bad journalism/organisation skills are getting – surely anyone who researches tech news should know who Guy Kewney is? Everyone who was interested in computers “back in the day” should know who Guy Kewney is.. (proper bearded old hippy type “old skool” computer expert BTW)

    I’m sure the (real) Guy Kewney was on some BBC programme only a few months ago – I remember him being the don back when Apple IIs were top end technology…

    Quote:
    [FONT=arial,helvetica,sans-serif]BBC gets wrong Guy – and gives cab driver five minutes of fame[/FONT]

    [FONT=Geneva,Arial,sans-serif]Patrick Barkham
    Saturday May 13, 2006
    The Guardian

    [/FONT]Just get the guy, any guy, and stick him in front of the camera is, some fear, the philosophy of rolling television news. For BBC News 24, however, the bloke in reception waiting patiently to pontificate on a courtroom verdict turned out to be the wrong Guy.

    Guy Kewney, a computer expert, was waiting outside a BBC Television Centre studio to discuss the high court ruling on the Beatles’ Apple Corps v Apple Computer on Monday morning. As he watched the news in reception, he was amazed to see “Guy Kewney” pop up on screen. Unlike the white, bearded technology columnist for IT Week, this “Guy Kewney” was black, and appeared stumped when asked about the US computer giant and its tussle with the Beatles over the Apple trademark.

    “Were you surprised by this verdict?” he was asked. “I’m very surprised at the verdict,” he gamely replied. “Because I was not expecting that when I came.”

    A BBC insider said the wrong Guy was a minicab driver, waiting to pick up the real Guy. When the producer went to collect the computer expert from a different waiting area, he called out “Guy Kewney” and the driver said “hello”. He was then whisked upstairs to meet the BBC’s Karen Bowerman, who asked the first question on live TV.

    There is only one Guy Kewney in Britain on the electoral roll. As the real Mr Kewney explained in his blog, the accidental impostor at first seemed “puzzled that anybody might imagine that the lawsuit had consequences”.

    The BBC said: “Unfortunately we did make a mistake and the wrong guy was briefly interviewed on air before we cut to our reporter.”

    General Lighting wrote:
    LOL – just shows how bad journalism/organisation skills are getting – surely anyone who researches tech news should know who Guy Kewney is? Everyone who was interested in computers “back in the day” should know who Guy Kewney is.. (proper bearded old hippy type “old skool” computer expert BTW)

    I’m sure the (real) Guy Kewney was on some BBC programme only a few months ago – I remember him being the don back when Apple IIs were top end technology…

    I think standards at the beeb have been slipping a lot recently. The apprentice was great but it’s one huge ad for Sir Alan Sugar and his companies so it has no place being on their channel, Eastenders’s become completely laughable and their news programs are appallingly biased and continually used to promote itself!

    Site wrote:
    I think standards at the beeb have been slipping a lot recently. The apprentice was great but it’s one huge ad for Sir Alan Sugar and his companies so it has no place being on their channel, Eastenders’s become completely laughable and their news programs are appallingly biased and continually used to promote itself!

    what is even more laughable is that there are several pictures of Guy Kewney on the BBC website; he is a regular contributor to one of the World Service’s website.

    His beard is thinner and somewhat less impressive than I remember it to be and his taste in clothes rather toned down (ISTR he was the butt of many a joke about his dress sense and this was from a community of 1980s IT workers! 😉 ) but I suppose he must be getting on now.

    Either way it would be very difficult to mistake him for a black man – as amusing as the incident is it also shows a sort of contempt for the subject matter – a “don’t care” attitude; hardly surprising people think the science/technology coverage on the BBC is dumbed down!

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Forums Life Computers, Gadgets & Technology UK : Auntie mistake cabbie for computer expert and give him on-air interview!