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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, December 17, 2000 |
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BBC caught on the wrong foot
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, DEC. 16. Much to the delight of its many detractors, the
BBC's reputation for (alleged) infallibility suffered some
bruises on Friday when it turned out that an old footage it
planned to pass off as that of Mrs. Cherie Blair dressed up as a
`punk' was so much ado about nothing. It was all wrong. There
never was a Cherie Blair in that footage, ``punk'' or otherwise.
Yet the BBC was so sure that it could spot the Prime Minister's
wife even on a sepia print that it handed over the footage to
Mirror which on Friday splashed it as an `exclusive' with an
appropriately saucy text.
``This is Mrs. Blair looking more like Siouxsie Sioux of the
Banshees than a future Prime Minister's wife,'' it cooed
comparing her to the punk starlet Siouxsie Sioux of the Banshees.
Within minutes Downing Street was on the phone denying that the
`punk' in question was Mrs. Blair, and a little later the `real'
woman in the footage, a Ms. Julie Fitzgerald, emerged from the
shadows to join in the fun. She said it was a dance routine she
had done for a charity show when she worked for the Greater
London Council in 1985. How come she got to be mistaken for Mrs.
Blair astounded her. For, as she told The Guardian, the only
similarity she shared with Britain's first lady was that ``We're
both female and of a similar age.'' The Mirror of course promptly
laid the blame on the doors of Bush House saying it had accepted
the pictures in good faith. Clearly, when they came with a
certificate from the BBC who could have dared challenge their
authenticity. The BBC, with a grace that still marks it out from
other outfits in business, apologised for the error explaining
that it had picked it up from the Greater London Council archives
on the belief of its production team that the `punk' dancer in
the footage was Mrs. Blair-to-be.
The footage was to have been a part of BBC's Christmas offering
`Before They were Famous' which would show would-be celebrities
in embarrassing or unconventional situations.
In the event, it was the BBC which ended up with egg all over its
face. What, et tu Brutus?
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