It was pre-covid, such interruptions hadn't happened before so he was embarrassed by not knowing what to do but was about to become common. During covid the whole family appeared to discuss how everyone was working from home with child interruption
You don't have to call the cops if you're in a small car accident here. Most likely, they will have moved on to a spot where it is safe to stop and exchange insurance details
As someone who used to work claims at a car insurance company - do not call the police for minor car accidents. Please do move your vehicles out of the way of other cars and take down details.
There was the occasion where they interviewed someone in the studio, thinking he was an guest... it actually turned out he was someone who'd come for a job interview and had been mistaken for the guest, mic'd up, led to the studio and put live on air.
Many of these are from when the BBC first began its 24 hour rolling news, with automated cameras. The scheduled News programmes are much more efficient and professional…most of the time. The Far East correspondent whose daughter…and then baby…. And then wife crashed into the interview kept us all entertained during Covid. It was one of those bloopers that just kept on giving. Lovely stuff!
yea we don't get our coppers involved in a car accident unless there is reason to. like on a busy motorway, or if there is injury. for a simple 'fender bender' you swap information and go on your way
In the UK if you have a minor shunt like that in traffic you just go and find somewhere safe to stop and exchange details. Emergency services would typically only be called if there was a serious accident, or if there was something else going on, like the other driver started acting threatening towards you or seemed to be drunk. There is a criminal charge here for leaving the scene of an accident, but it only applies if you don't do one of the following: (a) stop in a safe place and give the other driver(s) your information, or (b) call your local police station to report the accident within 24 hours.
I used to love that program along with points of view, people writing in to tell them how terrible they were. Back in the "good old days" when they still had a sense of humour.
@@BulldogMack700rs "Auntie's Bloomers" and the competition's "It'll Be Alright On The Night" were great British broadcasting blooper shows! Both sadly missed, along with their best presenters, Terry Wogan and Denis Norden.
@@seanfair1975 there was that time a reporter said it on live TV twice before stopping herself with "Jeremy CU...... ahem...... Mr Cun.... Mr HUNT. Hunt. Jeremy Hunt's new policry...."
It's the BBC Newsroom... Notice the cameras DON'T have cameramen - mostly on tracks, fixed position and computer / operator controlled - from another room.... 😂😂😂
If I remember correctly the one that kept showing static images and kept saying breaking news was down to a software fault and it needed to be restarted which took several minutes
That's right. The system crashed literally as they went onto air. There is a back up system that should have cut in but that crashed too. Network had handed control of bbc one over to bbc news team in broadcasting house. The reason Huw just sat there was they had no clue whether this was being broadcast on bbc one and the news channel (which it was). All they could do was sit and wait for the system to reboot itself.
Watch the segment where a man was interviewed and asked his opinion on a matter. He turned out to be someone who had come in for an interview. It's a funny clip. We pay for the new Mic as BBC is paid for by the public. There is a licence fee which we are obliged to pay even if we never watch the BBC! Thanks for another great video.
The interview with the kids interrupting was Prof. Robert Kelly, an expert on Korea, on Mar 10 2017. There are other interviews where he and his wife and kids follow up, even last year. It really was hilarious and one of those "life's like that" moments.
Happened to us many times at work - when the new 'crew' for the new 'bulletin' during the same day forgot to load-up the new set up in automation hilarious results ensue 😂😂😂😂
Simon McCoy was the absolute boss of dry humour. You could watch a whole video of just him being sarcastic about things like waiting days for a royal baby to be born. Shame he went to GBeebies.
The woman in the last clip is Natasha Kaplinski, a news anchor who won the first ever series of Strictly Come Dancing (Dancing with the Stars for US viewers) in 2001, hence the reference to the dance floor.
Regarding the presenter with the hairbrush out and purse on the desk, does she have someone to do that for her? This is the BBC so no, no she doesn't 😆
In fairness, the motion controlled cameras work much better these days. They had a lot of bloopers when they first installed them on the BBC News set. Teething troubles. They clearly needed to learn how to use the new system and got it wrong an awful lot at the beginning. There was chaos for a few weeks, when first installed. But it's pretty much perfect now.
The one with the breaking news stings was absolute torture. The vision switcher, automation, and a lot of other things in the gallery had crashed seconds before they went on air on the main BBC1 network and also News24. Because of the tally light on the camera Huw had a good instinct to know he may be on air and being seen, so he decided to just sit quietly until someone told him they were ready to go. It turned out to be the correct decision. I miss Huw, absolute pro, and it's a shame he has exploded his entire career.
Both Tomasz Schafernaker (from BBC Weathr) and Amy Garcia (from Look North) have their moments. In Tomasz's case it is him being suddenly on air doing something hilarious. THe time he managed to sneak I am feeling very windy into a serious weather forecast and actually be referring to the storm that was heading towards the UK, well played sir, well played. THe absolute funniest was Siri joining in to correct him, when even the gallery cracks up and is heard on air you know it is fantastic, someone from off screen asked if that's his watch, and Tomasz confirmed it was and that Siri must have been listening. The other great one was Tomasz goofing around thinking he wasn't on air only too be caught giving the finger to someone he was joking around with and suddenly be caught mid bird with an oh crap what did I do... look. To be fair he apologized for the latter two and went on wih the forecast, but he has been overcome by giggles as well and had to laugh his way through a forecast before because of antics that never make it to camera, I'm assuming it's people in the studio making him laugh or in his earpiece doing much the same. Does not help Tomasz does not fit the ultra serious stuffy weather forecaster type the BBC has had in the past that would never laugh or show emotion. Tomas does and he is loved for it.
There was a classic in 1988 when the BBC news room was stormed by Gay Rights Activists in protest of a law "banning the promotion of homosexuality in schools" (Aside - yes, this has been an ongoing fight since 1988 and before). They were loud, not violent and the feed was cut quite quickly, but a newsreader restrained one and, lacking other options before the police arrived, sat on her. This prompted the headline "Beeb man sits on Lesbian".
Tom Donkin? That's interesting. A Reverend Arthur Donkin - who was cox for either the Cambridge or Oxford rowing team in the late 1800s - was our parish vicar and married Julia Honoria Pratt who was William - Boris Karloff - Pratt's sister. Very rarely to I see that name come up so I have to ask the question, any relation to Arthur and, by marriage, to Boris - or William? Hm. An investigation, perhaps.
This was the clean version. I was expecting to see Tomasz Schafernaker sticking his finger up at the newsreader and Nina Hossain accidentally mispronouncing Jeremy Hunt's last name.
Hey jj, you should watch Paul whitewick, especially the 5p toll bridge that's about 3.5 cents, that is set in law and actually makes a profit even though it's in the middle of nowhere. A 300 year old bridge with a set toll, it's only 8 mins long, and I watched it even though I knew about the bridge, because Paul and his wife Rachel make videos about UK transport routes that make me, a born and bred brit realise that I know nothing about our transport history, he goes right back to iron and bronze ages, but makes it interesting and fun. And you do have to filter a bit to find the odd hidden joke, way fewer than map men and more subtle (yeah us brits and out subliminal humour and sarcasm 😂) Gary
There was a headline recently, the other day in fact about safety reports having a car crash in it. No I am not making that up. It's not even the first time, or even on that road. On July 29th, a BBC camera crew were filming and caught a Seat colliding with a tesla and everyone was unhurt. Makes the point that the road is that dangerous really, and then some too.
The only time police are called is if one of the cars is damaged and can't move(or you can't push it out of the way) or there are injuries...otherwise we sort it out ourselves- at least here in Scotland!
the cars bumping into each other, probably were pulling over somewhere safe to assess the damage, roads are too small to just stay in lane and hold up all the traffic, if your car can still move and isn't smoking, then yeh. best move it to the curb or something.
I noticed some people mentioned the licence fee. The BBC'S total income is £5.73 billion the biggest part of that is £3.74 billion from the tv licence fee. Useless or interesting information you decide.😊.
I don't know a single person that watches 'news' on the BBC. In Britain there is an awful tabloid newspaper called The Sun. Well the BBC is pretty much the broadcast equivalent.
The studio with the newsroom in the background (studio e) and the one which looks similar (studio c) had automatic cameras when they opened them. Apparently the big issue is once the camera is told do something there is no way to stop it. So the presenter is told to be on the catwalk but the desk option is the camera. It was the first set that cameras were included in vision as part of the set design. There's a great video of martine Crowell vs the cameras showing all the times the cameras went awol on her ua-cam.com/video/cKDrL4YBmvw/v-deo.htmlsi=ZwzSwXE4DOi2uDjK
My favourite this year was when Maryam Moshiri did a countdown, but the camera switched to her half a second before she was ready, so it looked like she was giving viewers the finger! ua-cam.com/video/sxxUjP2jDoM/v-deo.html
Many roving reporters will be in the country they are talking about but in a studio. There may be many reasons for this. However they will show an image in the background. I think the tiger cub was in a suitcase, It was an xray taken at an airport. Yes the news comes from the one set. Every time. That is the news set. And of course they're pros. They've been doing it for years and are household names. I doubt these clips all happened in a short period of time.
Unlike America, if its safe to move your car out of the way after an accident you do, as quick as possible. We don't need to wait for approval to do the obvious. They will have both pulled up down the next side street.
I believe the BBC not only got rid of human-operated cameras to save money, they also replaced live studio directors with automation. It looks like they replaced the camera operators with automated robotic cameras in 2013, announced a plan in 2022 to replace them with new AI-controlled cameras, and then in 2023 we got the headline "BBC in news studio move after AI-controlled cameras almost crash".
@@joshua.910 I`ve got plenty of grip thanks. I found it funny, so I have a sense of humour but you expect more from the Bullshite Bumbling Corporation don`t you?.
WAIT! Did they have a crash when reporting on the Ant form Ant and Dec's numerouse driving problem. Also people think that one with the kids is from COVID but it was from like 2010 or something crazy long ago
There English they will move there cars on the side of the road after they have a crash if possible there’s no need to block the road for others, they will not take the opportunity to be the centre of attention!!
You have no right to judge someone by a 1 minute segment on TV. And anyway, where the heck is the so called "contempt"? He was doing an interview on national tv! I'm sure most people would be a little tense in that situation.
Maybe it didn’t come across well, but he was doing a live interview, probably nervous and had probably said just stay out of the room. He was wishing the ground would open up and swallow him. I saw them interviewed and they all came across as a really sweet family.
The media went in on him for disrespecting 'the nanny' and even having a nanny until it came out some days later that the nanny was actually his wife who just happened to be asian
You know the saying about " assume"? Just look up the actual footage, the interviews with the family, etc. This was hilarious, and they were trying to keep going with the interview There was absolutely no contempt involved.
Why “god bless that guy” he interrupted that segment thinking he was funny… whilst acting troubled and annoying. If the news correspondent was speaking on news of deaths or murder you wouldn’t find it funny. Sick of this shit. It’s only funny for some. That dude didn’t give a rats arse what he was interrupting as news. 🙄
@@stevebrown1974 True though. It's garbage for the money. BBC should fund itself on the free market along with other broadcasters and not extort mandatory payments.
@@vallejomach6721 Then speak to the Government - its them who decide how much the fee is and where the money goes. Some of the licence fee goes towards the upkeep of all the transmitters around the country (along with other broadcasters paying too) to allow BBC and commercial TV stations and radio to broadcast. It is also helping to fund the broadband roll out. This from the Licence fee website "Part of the fee also contributes towards Freeview and Freesat, and towards the UK broadband rollout, funding local TV channels and S4C, the Welsh language TV channel". So not all of the money is spent on the so-called garbage you think the BBC produces. In fact only about half of what you pay goes to make BBC TV programmes.
@@vallejomach6721 Then speak to the Government - its them who decide how much the fee is and where the money goes. Some of the licence fee goes towards the upkeep of all the transmitters around the country (along with other broadcasters paying too) to allow BBC and commercial TV stations and radio to broadcast. It is also helping to fund the broadband roll out. This from the Licence fee website: Part of the fee also contributes towards Freeview and Freesat, and towards the UK broadband rollout, funding local TV channels and S4C, the Welsh language TV channel. So not all of the money is spent on the so-called garbage you think the BBC produces. In fact only about half of what you pay goes to make BBC TV programmes.
The BBC could have a million Bloopers, and yet your find the distain for them runs deep in many of us watching this. The is nothing funny about being" FORCED " to pay their wages and let them retire on a index linked pension with our money.
We're not 'forced' to pay anything. I don't have TV reception (just use my TV as a screen for watching DVDs) and don't access any live BBC programmes online. There is more than enough great stuff on UA-cam for me to enjoy.
The bit where the kids invade the room seems cut. Im sure there is a bit where the mum crawls in on her hands and knees to pull the kids out.
Might have been the nanny 😅
@@carolross6583It was the mum. I can remember them talking about it a month later.
Yeah, don't know why they cut that out, it was the best bit.
@@carolross6583He caused confusion because he treated her like a servant, not even thanking her.
It was pre-covid, such interruptions hadn't happened before so he was embarrassed by not knowing what to do but was about to become common. During covid the whole family appeared to discuss how everyone was working from home with child interruption
You don't have to call the cops if you're in a small car accident here. Most likely, they will have moved on to a spot where it is safe to stop and exchange insurance details
In addition to which, there were a dozen police just across the road and the whole thing was caught on camera!
As someone who used to work claims at a car insurance company - do not call the police for minor car accidents. Please do move your vehicles out of the way of other cars and take down details.
There was the occasion where they interviewed someone in the studio, thinking he was an guest... it actually turned out he was someone who'd come for a job interview and had been mistaken for the guest, mic'd up, led to the studio and put live on air.
I saw that one, haha!
Guy Goma
@@pickanapple That's him!
The criminal thing about it was, not only did he not get the job, he didn't get paid an appearance fee either.
@@aecides3203that’s out of order
Many of these are from when the BBC first began its 24 hour rolling news, with automated cameras. The scheduled News programmes are much more efficient and professional…most of the time. The Far East correspondent whose daughter…and then baby…. And then wife crashed into the interview kept us all entertained during Covid. It was one of those bloopers that just kept on giving. Lovely stuff!
When he said "This poor guy" about Huw Edwards. If only he knew...
And as of today, Aug 4, BBC are trying to scrub any mention of Huw from their archives which I don't agree with at all.
they'd just moved to an automated camera system, things went awry for a couple of weeks, but has been perfect in recent years.
yea we don't get our coppers involved in a car accident unless there is reason to. like on a busy motorway, or if there is injury. for a simple 'fender bender' you swap information and go on your way
Yeah, theyre also moving out of traffic, which is the logical (read: anti-american) thing to do
The funny thing about that car crash is that the celebrity Ant McPartlin was in court for drink driving.
In the UK if you have a minor shunt like that in traffic you just go and find somewhere safe to stop and exchange details. Emergency services would typically only be called if there was a serious accident, or if there was something else going on, like the other driver started acting threatening towards you or seemed to be drunk. There is a criminal charge here for leaving the scene of an accident, but it only applies if you don't do one of the following: (a) stop in a safe place and give the other driver(s) your information, or (b) call your local police station to report the accident within 24 hours.
You don't have to phone the police within 24 hours - you should probably be calling your insurance company though.
the ones where it completely malfunctions and just keeps showing random clips in silence always make me laugh so hard
The BBC has been known as Aunty. They used to have a show called “Aunties Bloomers”. A programme of bloopers years ago.
I used to love that program along with points of view, people writing in to tell them how terrible they were. Back in the "good old days" when they still had a sense of humour.
@@BulldogMack700rs "Auntie's Bloomers" and the competition's "It'll Be Alright On The Night" were great British broadcasting blooper shows! Both sadly missed, along with their best presenters, Terry Wogan and Denis Norden.
@BulldogMack700rs Judging by these their sense of humour seems fine now.
The best ones are when people mess up Jeremy Hunt's name lol
But DO they mess it up?? Do they??? 🤔
😂😂
@@titanium_di2402 lmao no. No they do not 😂
@@titanium_di2402 they're not wrong though are they when they call him the alternative name 😉
@@seanfair1975 there was that time a reporter said it on live TV twice before stopping herself with "Jeremy CU...... ahem...... Mr Cun.... Mr HUNT. Hunt. Jeremy Hunt's new policry...."
My favourite was when the guy said it and sounded like he was choking for the next minute as he desperately tried not to laugh
It's the BBC Newsroom... Notice the cameras DON'T have cameramen - mostly on tracks, fixed position and computer / operator controlled - from another room.... 😂😂😂
And they had a habit of going rogue.
Just shows that sometimes humans work better than computers !
It makes it easier for them to abuse children
@@sarahbrooks1801
100% AGREE... 👍👍👍
If I remember correctly the one that kept showing static images and kept saying breaking news was down to a software fault and it needed to be restarted which took several minutes
That's right. The system crashed literally as they went onto air. There is a back up system that should have cut in but that crashed too. Network had handed control of bbc one over to bbc news team in broadcasting house.
The reason Huw just sat there was they had no clue whether this was being broadcast on bbc one and the news channel (which it was). All they could do was sit and wait for the system to reboot itself.
Watch the segment where a man was interviewed and asked his opinion on a matter. He turned out to be someone who had come in for an interview. It's a funny clip. We pay for the new Mic as BBC is paid for by the public. There is a licence fee which we are obliged to pay even if we never watch the BBC! Thanks for another great video.
The interview with the kids interrupting was Prof. Robert Kelly, an expert on Korea, on Mar 10 2017. There are other interviews where he and his wife and kids follow up, even last year. It really was hilarious and one of those "life's like that" moments.
The way the daughter waltzed into room was fantastic.
I've been watching you for a while, and I have to say you're one of my favourite reactors to watch. Keep up the great work buddy 👍 ❤
Hahah. I haven't watched the news in decades but now I see what I've been missing it might be worth watching sometimes!
Happened to us many times at work - when the new 'crew' for the new 'bulletin' during the same day forgot to load-up the new set up in automation hilarious results ensue 😂😂😂😂
6:11 was so funny, I thought, "is a cat sitting on the control panel?"
Naga, the girl with the black hair, is just as funny on and off camera.
how do you know?
@@grog159 She did a live broadcast where i live and was chatting with the crowd for ages.
Funny???? She is pretty obnoxious.
Awful woman tbh
Keep it up bud loving your channel.
Simon McCoy was the absolute boss of dry humour. You could watch a whole video of just him being sarcastic about things like waiting days for a royal baby to be born. Shame he went to GBeebies.
“Who’s going to pay for that mic Mike?”
The British public 🥴
You make it sound like the only income the BBC have is the license fee.
The woman in the last clip is Natasha Kaplinski, a news anchor who won the first ever series of Strictly Come Dancing (Dancing with the Stars for US viewers) in 2001, hence the reference to the dance floor.
I thought it was Kate Silverton.
Regarding the presenter with the hairbrush out and purse on the desk, does she have someone to do that for her? This is the BBC so no, no she doesn't 😆
They didn't in 2020-2021 due to COVID reasons
Who's paying for a new mic?
The Taxpayer!
Dammit, Mike!
Utterly hilarious !!! u make it even more so
Bloopers = payday! The presenters end up getting more coverage and it works to their benefit especially if they handle the problem like champs
5:10 the irony of this news story being covered about a car collision and it then a random one happens on live tv 🤣
In fairness, the motion controlled cameras work much better these days.
They had a lot of bloopers when they first installed them on the BBC News set. Teething troubles. They clearly needed to learn how to use the new system and got it wrong an awful lot at the beginning.
There was chaos for a few weeks, when first installed. But it's pretty much perfect now.
The one with the breaking news stings was absolute torture.
The vision switcher, automation, and a lot of other things in the gallery had crashed seconds before they went on air on the main BBC1 network and also News24. Because of the tally light on the camera Huw had a good instinct to know he may be on air and being seen, so he decided to just sit quietly until someone told him they were ready to go.
It turned out to be the correct decision. I miss Huw, absolute pro, and it's a shame he has exploded his entire career.
Its in the British national psyche to Keep Calm and Carry On
Both Tomasz Schafernaker (from BBC Weathr) and Amy Garcia (from Look North) have their moments. In Tomasz's case it is him being suddenly on air doing something hilarious. THe time he managed to sneak I am feeling very windy into a serious weather forecast and actually be referring to the storm that was heading towards the UK, well played sir, well played. THe absolute funniest was Siri joining in to correct him, when even the gallery cracks up and is heard on air you know it is fantastic, someone from off screen asked if that's his watch, and Tomasz confirmed it was and that Siri must have been listening. The other great one was Tomasz goofing around thinking he wasn't on air only too be caught giving the finger to someone he was joking around with and suddenly be caught mid bird with an oh crap what did I do... look.
To be fair he apologized for the latter two and went on wih the forecast, but he has been overcome by giggles as well and had to laugh his way through a forecast before because of antics that never make it to camera, I'm assuming it's people in the studio making him laugh or in his earpiece doing much the same. Does not help Tomasz does not fit the ultra serious stuffy weather forecaster type the BBC has had in the past that would never laugh or show emotion. Tomas does and he is loved for it.
There was a classic in 1988 when the BBC news room was stormed by Gay Rights Activists in protest of a law "banning the promotion of homosexuality in schools" (Aside - yes, this has been an ongoing fight since 1988 and before). They were loud, not violent and the feed was cut quite quickly, but a newsreader restrained one and, lacking other options before the police arrived, sat on her. This prompted the headline "Beeb man sits on Lesbian".
Tom Donkin? That's interesting. A Reverend Arthur Donkin - who was cox for either the Cambridge or Oxford rowing team in the late 1800s - was our parish vicar and married Julia Honoria Pratt who was William - Boris Karloff - Pratt's sister. Very rarely to I see that name come up so I have to ask the question, any relation to Arthur and, by marriage, to Boris - or William? Hm. An investigation, perhaps.
I like his calm sounding comments.
The BBC cut back on presenters.
BBC News tonight read by the empty chair.
This was the clean version. I was expecting to see Tomasz Schafernaker sticking his finger up at the newsreader and Nina Hossain accidentally mispronouncing Jeremy Hunt's last name.
Hey jj, you should watch Paul whitewick, especially the 5p toll bridge that's about 3.5 cents, that is set in law and actually makes a profit even though it's in the middle of nowhere. A 300 year old bridge with a set toll, it's only 8 mins long, and I watched it even though I knew about the bridge, because Paul and his wife Rachel make videos about UK transport routes that make me, a born and bred brit realise that I know nothing about our transport history, he goes right back to iron and bronze ages, but makes it interesting and fun. And you do have to filter a bit to find the odd hidden joke, way fewer than map men and more subtle (yeah us brits and out subliminal humour and sarcasm 😂)
Gary
There was a headline recently, the other day in fact about safety reports having a car crash in it.
No I am not making that up. It's not even the first time, or even on that road. On July 29th, a BBC camera crew were filming and caught a Seat colliding with a tesla and everyone was unhurt.
Makes the point that the road is that dangerous really, and then some too.
The only time police are called is if one of the cars is damaged and can't move(or you can't push it out of the way) or there are injuries...otherwise we sort it out ourselves- at least here in Scotland!
Hi, love your videos and I’m I right in thinking I saw you on the new series of criminal minds?
the cars bumping into each other, probably were pulling over somewhere safe to assess the damage, roads are too small to just stay in lane and hold up all the traffic, if your car can still move and isn't smoking, then yeh. best move it to the curb or something.
They should just sit at the chair 🪑 just incase 😂
Brilliant video from the United Kingdom of a America😢😢😢
I noticed some people mentioned the licence fee. The BBC'S total income is £5.73 billion the biggest part of that is £3.74 billion from the tv licence fee. Useless or interesting information you decide.😊.
I don't know a single person that watches 'news' on the BBC. In Britain there is an awful tabloid newspaper called The Sun. Well the BBC is pretty much the broadcast equivalent.
You remind me of Eric Stoltz
No not mess with Naga.
Some of the Irish bloopers are funny too
The automatic csmeras are not foolproof.
Big Blooper Corporation
6:42 I saw that live😊
The studio with the newsroom in the background (studio e) and the one which looks similar (studio c) had automatic cameras when they opened them. Apparently the big issue is once the camera is told do something there is no way to stop it. So the presenter is told to be on the catwalk but the desk option is the camera. It was the first set that cameras were included in vision as part of the set design. There's a great video of martine Crowell vs the cameras showing all the times the cameras went awol on her
ua-cam.com/video/cKDrL4YBmvw/v-deo.htmlsi=ZwzSwXE4DOi2uDjK
Of course it's the same set. It's the BBC News set!
I wonder what you'd make of Jonathan Pie? I mean, he _is_ satire, but still...
My favourite this year was when Maryam Moshiri did a countdown, but the camera switched to her half a second before she was ready, so it looked like she was giving viewers the finger!
ua-cam.com/video/sxxUjP2jDoM/v-deo.html
My wee brother mostly produces that stuff.
It certainly looks like somebody mostly produces it. Perhaps they should get someone who can fully produce it.
Many roving reporters will be in the country they are talking about but in a studio. There may be many reasons for this. However they will show an image in the background. I think the tiger cub was in a suitcase, It was an xray taken at an airport. Yes the news comes from the one set. Every time. That is the news set. And of course they're pros. They've been doing it for years and are household names. I doubt these clips all happened in a short period of time.
Unlike America, if its safe to move your car out of the way after an accident you do, as quick as possible. We don't need to wait for approval to do the obvious. They will have both pulled up down the next side street.
If you want a laugh, look for Naga Munchetty's interview with UK rapper and celebrity chef Big Zuu. It's wonderfully cring-worthy.
See the clip when the transport minster ia announcing a new motor way a19 n a car skiddsoff
Bring back cameramen!.
😊😊😊😊
Cameramen fault
The BBC has become one big blooper.
I believe the BBC not only got rid of human-operated cameras to save money, they also replaced live studio directors with automation.
It looks like they replaced the camera operators with automated robotic cameras in 2013, announced a plan in 2022 to replace them with new AI-controlled cameras, and then in 2023 we got the headline "BBC in news studio move after AI-controlled cameras almost crash".
I'm pretty sure the BBC has never done anything to save money.
Christopher
tv license fee well spent....
And we pay a license for that !!!!!
Oh get a grip of yourself😂
@@joshua.910 I`ve got plenty of grip thanks. I found it funny, so I have a sense of humour but you expect more from the Bullshite Bumbling Corporation don`t you?.
You don't have to.
Money well spent...this is fantastic entertainment 😆
WAIT! Did they have a crash when reporting on the Ant form Ant and Dec's numerouse driving problem.
Also people think that one with the kids is from COVID but it was from like 2010 or something crazy long ago
1.2kth
There English they will move there cars on the side of the road after they have a crash if possible there’s no need to block the road for others, they will not take the opportunity to be the centre of attention!!
That creep treated his kids snd his wife with contempt.
Hugh?
You have no right to judge someone by a 1 minute segment on TV. And anyway, where the heck is the so called "contempt"? He was doing an interview on national tv! I'm sure most people would be a little tense in that situation.
Maybe it didn’t come across well, but he was doing a live interview, probably nervous and had probably said just stay out of the room. He was wishing the ground would open up and swallow him. I saw them interviewed and they all came across as a really sweet family.
The media went in on him for disrespecting 'the nanny' and even having a nanny until it came out some days later that the nanny was actually his wife who just happened to be asian
You know the saying about " assume"? Just look up the actual footage, the interviews with the family, etc. This was hilarious, and they were trying to keep going with the interview
There was absolutely no contempt involved.
Why “god bless that guy” he interrupted that segment thinking he was funny… whilst acting troubled and annoying. If the news correspondent was speaking on news of deaths or murder you wouldn’t find it funny.
Sick of this shit. It’s only funny for some. That dude didn’t give a rats arse what he was interrupting as news. 🙄
1304th
For the licence fee they have the audacity to charge people for a newsreader should come round your house and tell you the news in person.
Hahaha the most ridiculous comment I've read in a long time.
@@stevebrown1974 True though. It's garbage for the money. BBC should fund itself on the free market along with other broadcasters and not extort mandatory payments.
@@vallejomach6721 Then speak to the Government - its them who decide how much the fee is and where the money goes. Some of the licence fee goes towards the upkeep of all the transmitters around the country (along with other broadcasters paying too) to allow BBC and commercial TV stations and radio to broadcast. It is also helping to fund the broadband roll out. This from the Licence fee website "Part of the fee also contributes towards Freeview and Freesat, and towards the UK broadband rollout, funding local TV channels and S4C, the Welsh language TV channel". So not all of the money is spent on the so-called garbage you think the BBC produces. In fact only about half of what you pay goes to make BBC TV programmes.
@@vallejomach6721 Then speak to the Government - its them who decide how much the fee is and where the money goes. Some of the licence fee goes towards the upkeep of all the transmitters around the country (along with other broadcasters paying too) to allow BBC and commercial TV stations and radio to broadcast. It is also helping to fund the broadband roll out. This from the Licence fee website: Part of the fee also contributes towards Freeview and Freesat, and towards the UK broadband rollout, funding local TV channels and S4C, the Welsh language TV channel.
So not all of the money is spent on the so-called garbage you think the BBC produces. In fact only about half of what you pay goes to make BBC TV programmes.
The BBC could have a million Bloopers, and yet your find the distain for them runs deep in many of us watching this. The is nothing funny about being" FORCED " to pay their wages and let them retire on a index linked pension with our money.
And nothing funny about sex scandal after sex scandal while sneering at everyone and everything else
We're not 'forced' to pay anything. I don't have TV reception (just use my TV as a screen for watching DVDs) and don't access any live BBC programmes online. There is more than enough great stuff on UA-cam for me to enjoy.
BBC News. Oxymoron
BBC bloopers? The clue is given in the name the _BRexit_ Broadcasting Corporation - it's been screwing up for years!
(Pssst , that isn't its name)
The BBC were pretty much against Brexit, they took a socialist stance on it.
@@IIChristisKingII Sounds like the BBC did a good job of being neutral. Confirmation bias kicking in.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
What?? That’s not the name, and brexit was a good thing