Young people with eating disorders are notorious for being able to hide them. The father not catching his daughter's problem earlier shouldn't beat himself up, and that interviewer needs to tone it down. Sure, dad may have been in denial that his beloved daughter wasn't perfect, but I can promise that the girl was doing whatever she could to keep her dad from finding out.
Exactly. Plus the Dad discussing on National TV that he did not see it at first may help other Dads see the signs. His appearance was support for his daughter and he was saying his impact in not realizing it. What a douche the male reporter was to not only blame the Dad but to one up him and say he would have seen it in his kids. ( better parent syndrome). Ugh.😢
This was interesting. Definitely react to more "UK" content. Graham Norton compilations are very funny. Easily the best celebrity talk show in the US or UK.
Richard Madely was absolutely horrid to that poor father. Unbelievably crass, arrogant and thoroughly horrid. Once seen, this particular incident will never be forgotten or forgiven by me, at least. I think many others, (like Kabir,) were completely horrified.
I'm definitely not a fan of Jeremy Clarkson. He definitely upset a lot of car girls during an interview on Australian tv. He said, "I don't understand why women even watch Top Gear!" Oh well, I always preferred Richard Hammond, of whom I was one of many female fans.
that interview with Grace Jones...who set up those chairs? I used to be obsessed with her when I was younger, she was magnetic. I am sad there was so much rudeness and disrespect directed to toward her.
The problem with the Russell Harty-Grace Jones thing is the set design. This is why a talk show normally has the host on one side and the guests on the other, so that no-one has their backs turned to anyone.
I watched the whole Russell Harty show live at the time and Grace Jones had an atttitude some the very beginning when she was interviewed first on the show. It turned angry when the seating setup meant poor Harty took a battering from Grace Jones. It funny that ever since this happened it has always been used as a example of bad behaviour of a star like Jones. This is the first time I have ever heard it being used as bad behaviour of Russell Harty, bit of P. C. rewriting of history here.
Just to give some context to the Grace Jones / Russell Harty interview. Harty had already interviewed Grace Jones & he was trying to interview his second guest. Jones kept butting in as she didn't want to be ignored. Harty then turned his back slightly to block her out, hoping she would take the hint. She didn't, she just got more angry, so she hit him. Whoever placed his chair in the middle of two interviewees was partly to blame. Also, although I don't like Laurence Fox much, the woman he insulted had been insulting him for months on Twitter. Her tweets usually ended with that she would never shag Fox. Even when she replied to somebody else's post, she would say that Fox wouldn't shag them either. I think that's why Fox stated he would never shag her, in retaliation. He shouldn't have said it, but she was not the innocent party.
I was going to say, he is well known for saying outlandish and sarcastic things completely deadpan. He is so used to being in front of cameras saying crazy lines for obvious entertainment value that it is virtually impossible to tell when he is being serious or not if you don't have the context of the pattern of things he says elsewhere when it is obviously a joke but he still manages to sound completely serious.
It's not just the internet. It started with cable TV, when literally anyone could be a news reader on TV. Before that (when there was only network TV) you had to be good at it to do that job. The internet expanded on that, therefore making it worse.
It's all about the huge egos of these people who think they can say whatever they want because they feel superior. That and a lack of consideration for the feelings of other people make these clips so difficult to watch.
Not sure what the rules are for broadcasting in the UK, since the BBC is government owned (right?). There is quite the discussion here about "news" programs versus "opinion" programs. Often, they're almost indistinguishable, which means people might think they're hearing factual news, instead they're getting a slanted opinion (left/right/Democrat/Republican - each channel has its core audience). Once upon a time, I wanted to be a news reporter. Became a minister instead. Glad for that.
I love this world where were supposed to be perfect human beings. No flaws, no faults, no opinions. We play this game where we hold everyone to a standard we couldn't even live up to. People are too sensitive
I’m kind of tired of “neutrality” or “impartiality” being held as the standard for news. That’s not what we need, we need objectivity. If I say I’m 1.6m tall, and I’m actually 1.5, we don’t need neutrality. The truth isn’t “somewhere in the middle.” I’m lying. The news should be saying that.
I don't think that guy talking about eating disorders was trying to be mean. I think he was saying that over the years he had done a lot of research on it and he feels like that he would have seen the signs earlier based on that knowledge. I feel like he was actually trying to reassure the father that it would take someone with knowledge of the disorder to see the signs and so the father shouldn't feel bad that he didn't see them. Of course, you can have all the knowledge in the world about something and still miss the signs when it is happening to someone, but I don't think the man was trying to be mean.
Young people with eating disorders are notorious for being able to hide them. The father not catching his daughter's problem earlier shouldn't beat himself up, and that interviewer needs to tone it down. Sure, dad may have been in denial that his beloved daughter wasn't perfect, but I can promise that the girl was doing whatever she could to keep her dad from finding out.
Mental problems are hidden so often and so easily.
Exactly. Plus the Dad discussing on National TV that he did not see it at first may help other Dads see the signs. His appearance was support for his daughter and he was saying his impact in not realizing it. What a douche the male reporter was to not only blame the Dad but to one up him and say he would have seen it in his kids. ( better parent syndrome). Ugh.😢
This was interesting. Definitely react to more "UK" content. Graham Norton compilations are very funny. Easily the best celebrity talk show in the US or UK.
100%
I need your “Hi, Guys” on my ringtone. Lol
Richard Madely was absolutely horrid to that poor father. Unbelievably crass, arrogant and thoroughly horrid. Once seen, this particular incident will never be forgotten or forgiven by me, at least. I think many others, (like Kabir,) were completely horrified.
Hi Kabir, I would think that Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, would be able to afford a comb! Maybe some hairspray?
that first commentator probably thinks she's all that and the bag of chips & the quarter water.
How does Boris always look like he just woke up, threw something on, and walked outside?
He looks like Arthur Weasley 😂
I’m sure it’s very carefully calculated
That female anchor is very arrogant. As you said she fits the hard to work with type.
There are gamers who make millions of dollars and prizes.
I'm definitely not a fan of Jeremy Clarkson. He definitely upset a lot of car girls during an interview on Australian tv. He said, "I don't understand why women even watch Top Gear!" Oh well, I always preferred Richard Hammond, of whom I was one of many female fans.
that interview with Grace Jones...who set up those chairs? I used to be obsessed with her when I was younger, she was magnetic. I am sad there was so much rudeness and disrespect directed to toward her.
That First Lady reporter looks like curious George.
The problem with the Russell Harty-Grace Jones thing is the set design. This is why a talk show normally has the host on one side and the guests on the other, so that no-one has their backs turned to anyone.
@@wendymotogirlI think you just did!
I watched the whole Russell Harty show live at the time and Grace Jones had an atttitude some the very beginning when she was interviewed first on the show. It turned angry when the seating setup meant poor Harty took a battering from Grace Jones. It funny that ever since this happened it has always been used as a example of bad behaviour of a star like Jones. This is the first time I have ever heard it being used as bad behaviour of Russell Harty, bit of P. C. rewriting of history here.
Just to give some context to the Grace Jones / Russell Harty interview. Harty had already interviewed Grace Jones & he was trying to interview his second guest. Jones kept butting in as she didn't want to be ignored. Harty then turned his back slightly to block her out, hoping she would take the hint. She didn't, she just got more angry, so she hit him. Whoever placed his chair in the middle of two interviewees was partly to blame. Also, although I don't like Laurence Fox much, the woman he insulted had been insulting him for months on Twitter. Her tweets usually ended with that she would never shag Fox. Even when she replied to somebody else's post, she would say that Fox wouldn't shag them either. I think that's why Fox stated he would never shag her, in retaliation. He shouldn't have said it, but she was not the innocent party.
Jeremy Clarkson is going to Jeremy Clarkson.
I was going to say, he is well known for saying outlandish and sarcastic things completely deadpan. He is so used to being in front of cameras saying crazy lines for obvious entertainment value that it is virtually impossible to tell when he is being serious or not if you don't have the context of the pattern of things he says elsewhere when it is obviously a joke but he still manages to sound completely serious.
I really don't know what they're teaching in Journalism Schools now-a-days. Everyone seems to be an editor.
It's not just the internet. It started with cable TV, when literally anyone could be a news reader on TV. Before that (when there was only network TV) you had to be good at it to do that job. The internet expanded on that, therefore making it worse.
A kid winning a video game isn't news, but as long as it got there, they should have treated it the same as any other "news story".
very true, men used to get away with a lot, and were even admired for being 'manly' for it.
It's all about the huge egos of these people who think they can say whatever they want because they feel superior. That and a lack of consideration for the feelings of other people make these clips so difficult to watch.
Not sure what the rules are for broadcasting in the UK, since the BBC is government owned (right?). There is quite the discussion here about "news" programs versus "opinion" programs. Often, they're almost indistinguishable, which means people might think they're hearing factual news, instead they're getting a slanted opinion (left/right/Democrat/Republican - each channel has its core audience). Once upon a time, I wanted to be a news reporter. Became a minister instead. Glad for that.
HAHAHA Humans being humans under stress or defense.
I love this world where were supposed to be perfect human beings. No flaws, no faults, no opinions. We play this game where we hold everyone to a standard we couldn't even live up to. People are too sensitive
I’m kind of tired of “neutrality” or “impartiality” being held as the standard for news. That’s not what we need, we need objectivity.
If I say I’m 1.6m tall, and I’m actually 1.5, we don’t need neutrality. The truth isn’t “somewhere in the middle.” I’m lying. The news should be saying that.
They’d say the news is lying and believe the liar anyway.
Gordon has always been a tool.
This should of been cringe vid
Mainstream media in the U.S. would fire newscasters that did these things. Ramsey and Clark are just awful people.
Grace Jones was drunk in that interview.
I don't think that guy talking about eating disorders was trying to be mean. I think he was saying that over the years he had done a lot of research on it and he feels like that he would have seen the signs earlier based on that knowledge. I feel like he was actually trying to reassure the father that it would take someone with knowledge of the disorder to see the signs and so the father shouldn't feel bad that he didn't see them. Of course, you can have all the knowledge in the world about something and still miss the signs when it is happening to someone, but I don't think the man was trying to be mean.
Maybe not. But he worded that thought in the worst possible way. It certainly made him look like a smug asshole
@@randellmainer oh, yeah, especially his follow up comment. And also think he is wrong and that he would not have seen the signs.
@@mandlerparr1 I wholeheartedly agree!