OpinionChris Cook
premium

I need some top racing more than ever - just as a distraction from all this chaos

author image
Chris CookRacing Writer of the Year

When April rolls around, it will be 30 years since derision was aimed at Sir Martyn Lewis, the face of BBC News at the time, for suggesting the news agenda was overly inclined towards the distressing, upsetting and scary, and that more space should be given to stories likely to raise the spirits. "Why is the news so gloomy?" was a question he said viewers put to him "with depressing regularity".

Reports from the time suggest – surprise! – that journalists across print and broadcasting did not take kindly to being told they were doing things wrongly. "If it bleeds, it leads," has long been the industry maxim and, as I recall, people rallied round it like a flag.

"Even if it makes people slit their wrists, we have to tell it the way it is," was the response from Peter Sissons, also a BBC newsreader, while corporation veteran Jeremy Paxman dismissed Lewis's argument as "nonsense" and suggested he should be editing a paper in Burma, overseeing stories about army majors being sent on bee-keeping courses.

Read the full story

Read award-winning journalism from the best writers in racing, with exclusive news, interviews, columns, investigations, stable tours and subscriber-only emails.

Subscribe to unlock
  • Racing Post digital newspaper (worth over £100 per month)
  • Award-winning journalism from the best writers in racing
  • Expert tips from the likes of Tom Segal and Paul Kealy
  • Replays and results analysis from all UK and Irish racecourses
  • Form study tools including the Pro Card and Horse Tracker
  • Extensive archive of statistics covering horses, trainers, jockeys, owners, pedigree and sales data
Subscribe

Already a subscriber?Log in

inChris Cook

iconCopy