• 3 months ago
First broadcast 23rd February 2010.

Compilation of the best bits from this and the previous series of Newswipe.

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TV
Transcript
00:00Hello, I'm Charlie Brooker and you're watching a special compilation episode of Newswipe,
00:28which starts with a brisk and dare I say it amusing look at how the job of TV news journalists
00:33has grown more sophisticated over the years.
00:36Early news reports were painstakingly constructed using cumbersome equipment, which meant the
00:40resulting films themselves were often quotidian, murky, shoddily framed snooze-fests about
00:45brown rivers and closing factories.
00:48As technology improved, news reports became snazzier, more mobile, more visually playful.
00:52Before long, a standard news report visual language established itself, one that's immediately
00:57recognisable to anyone.
00:59Me has this report.
01:01It starts here with a lacklustre establishing shot of a significant location.
01:07Next a walkie-talkie preamble from the auteur pacing steadily towards the lens, punctuating
01:12every other sentence with a hand gesture and ignoring all the pricks milling around him
01:16like he's gliding through the fucking matrix, before coming to a halt and posing a question.
01:21What comes next?
01:23Then something like this, a filler shot designed to give your eyes something to look at while
01:27my voice babbles on about facts.
01:29Sometimes it'll slow down to a halt, turn monochrome, and some of those facts will appear
01:33one by one on the screen.
01:35This is followed by the obligatory shots of overweight people with their faces subtly
01:39framed out, after which the report is padded out with a selection of lazy and pointless
01:43vox pops.
01:44I usually get some inane chatter from people.
01:45I think they do have too much.
01:46I think what we want to hear is actually what's happening and not what other people think
01:53I hate these silent sound bites.
01:57I don't want some punter's opinion, usually.
02:01No.
02:02Another bit of dull visual abstraction to plug another gap now, before the report segues
02:05gracefully into a bit of human interest courtesy of some dowdy man opening letters in a kitchen
02:09and explaining how he's been affected by the issue.
02:12When I'm watching the news, I don't really, you know, there's a person talking to me,
02:16telling me what's going on, and I don't really listen to what they're saying.
02:19It's just news.
02:21It's just news.
02:22He, unfortunately, was boring, so to wake you up, this is an animated chart.
02:26This is a silhouette representing the average family, and this is a lighthouse keeper being
02:29beheaded by a laser beam.
02:31As we near the end of the report, illustrative shots of pedestrians and signs and a pipe
02:36at a window.
02:37And then the final summary, ending on a whimsical shot of something nearby, accompanied by a
02:42wry sign-off.
02:43If you're lucky, a bit of wordplay fit for a king, or in other words, a regent's treat.
02:48Charlie Brooker, Newswipe, London.
02:51Snow is a substance that falls from the sky on occasion.
02:54Here's how the news covered it this year.
02:57Temperatures across the land plunged to Hollyoaks IQ level, and Nick Griffin's dream of an all-white
03:02Britain was finally realised.
03:04The rolling networks covered it in much the same way they'd cover an alien invasion.
03:08They rapidly dispatched journalists to all 18 corners of the nation, where they stood
03:12around looking cold and uncomfortable, a bit like hungry homeless people forlornly staring
03:16through the window of an upmarket restaurant, a diner sitting indoors in the warmth.
03:21You could be forgiven for thinking that snow was a brand new, never-before-seen phenomenon.
03:25Sky helpfully explained where it came from, for the benefit of dimbo dumbos.
03:30To have snow, the layers of the atmosphere below cloud level must be cold enough to keep
03:35the flakes from melting.
03:37We were also shown that snow is a cold, white, watery powder, which can, in large quantities,
03:41render roads impassable and make pavements more slippery than usual.
03:45Mainly though, we learned that snow is a disloyal, deceitful substance responsible for causing
03:49conditions that can only be described as treacherous.
03:53Treacherous conditions on the roads, as even tractors battle with the ice.
03:57The few cars that did brave it, the going was treacherous.
04:00Minor roads continue to be treacherous.
04:02Treacherous ice.
04:03Meanwhile, back in the kingdom of Narnia, the state of Britain's slippery pavements
04:07was providing bulletins with plenty of tittersome, you've-been-framed style slapstick.
04:11This spot in Bristol claimed two victims in very quick succession.
04:16All they had to do was pop a camera next to an icy bit of pavement, hit record, sit
04:20back and let the hilarity commence.
04:23It's still dangerous for Dublin pedestrians.
04:25He's probably in hospital now.
04:30Slippery pavements were a huge concern for many journalists as they pandered to some
04:34of the moaniest people in Britain.
04:36The pavement should be gritted like the roads.
04:39People leave their cars at home because they can't get off their drives and so forth and
04:42so on.
04:43It must be gritted like the roads.
04:46Last year, during a cold snap, the news largely contended itself with showing viewers snowy
04:49shenanigans.
04:50There was still plenty of that this time and very charming it was too, but overall the
04:55emphasis was firmly on the negative.
04:58More schools are out.
04:59Now the snow puts A-levels and GCSE exams at risk.
05:03Record demand for gas and electricity strains supplies and pushes up prices.
05:08We explore how much the appalling weather will cost you.
05:11Yes, to the miserable newsmongers, the snowfall was little more than a collection of new things
05:15to worry about.
05:17They worried whether shopkeepers would run out of bread and pastries.
05:19Last packet of croissants.
05:20Just got a few bits of normal Kingsman stuff.
05:25They worried whether their viewers knew how to defrost a frozen pipe.
05:28Basically, once you locate the pipe, just turn the hairdryer on.
05:32They even worried whether baboons could comprehend what was happening.
05:36It's a shame we can't talk to the animals and tell them what all this cold white stuff
05:41is.
05:42No.
05:43No it isn't.
05:44They worried about the supply of grit.
05:46We're in big problems with grit.
05:48They were obsessed with the notion we might run out of grit, thereby killing everyone
05:51in Britain.
05:52The news went live to every variety of gritting depot you could imagine.
05:55There were boring gritting depots, dull gritting depots, tedious gritting depots, underwhelming
06:01gritting depots, undermanned gritting depots, manned gritting depots, indoor gritting depots,
06:07outdoor gritting depots, murky gritting depots, sexy gritting depots.
06:12Everywhere you looked, the news was taking it up the gritter.
06:14No wonder they lost all sense of perspective.
06:16With more snow and ice forecast, is Britain sliding toward chaos?
06:20While the reporters stood around looking miserable, concerned and serious, real people were having
06:25a laugh.
06:26They were frolicking, tumbling, sledging and arsing around in the background, precisely
06:30the sort of frivolity Alastair Stewart has no time for.
06:32The bad weather has indeed brought great acts of humanity, but as we just saw, it's also
06:36been an excuse for spectacular stupidity.
06:39With its doomy mantra of treacherous conditions, chaotic roads, perilous pavements, arctic
06:44winds and plummeting mercury, the news did its melodramatic best to turn the winter wonderland
06:48into a story of death from the skies.
06:51It was a tale of woe, peril and treachery the general public just weren't buying.
06:55What about this travel chaos, the misery across Britain, snowbound Britain?
07:00Doesn't matter, does it?
07:02The beginning of 2010 was dominated by the tragic earthquake in Haiti.
07:06We took a look at how the news covered it.
07:09Recently, the news has been filled with scenes of unimaginable horror and unbearable suffering.
07:14On the whole, the reporters themselves have been remarkably stoic in the face of events
07:17that would traumatise anyone.
07:19Some actively stepped in, leading to astonishing scenes like this, in which CNN health correspondent
07:24and neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta cared for an injured baby in the street.
07:29Modern news always needs to fashion events into a compelling narrative and the Haiti
07:33story was no different.
07:34Once it had shown us distressing scenes of overrun hospitals and rubble for several nights,
07:39it needed a fresh angle.
07:40And so began the search for signs of conflict.
07:42Obviously, a massive aid effort organised at short notice in a country whose infrastructure
07:47has been destroyed is going to be a logistical nightmare and there was much coverage criticising
07:51the slow distribution of aid.
07:53But one of the things holding up the aid was the fear of violence, which the news also
07:56seemed fascinated by.
07:58The moment footage of sporadic but inevitable scuffles arrived, it was seized on as evidence
08:02that the whole of Haiti was about to descend into barbarism.
08:06With aid struggling to get through, the country is spiralling out of control.
08:10Haiti now is not just a tinderbox of simmering desperation and anxiety.
08:16It's possibly just one step from something very ugly indeed.
08:20At times the news seemed to frame the threat of violence not as a possibility in any society
08:24that's hit by massive disaster, but as something unique to Haiti itself.
08:29There's this ugly undercurrent, sadly, within Haitian history, which has the ability to
08:35return, it has the ability to quite literally fight for survival, hence you're seeing not
08:40just doctors and aid workers on the streets, but riot police too.
08:44The ugly undercurrent in Haitian history presumably distinguishes it from Britain, a nation whose
08:49own history consists of millennia of uninterrupted peace.
08:52Still, whatever, here's some angry foreigners.
08:55I don't need that mother****** Spanish guy right here now, that's Haiti now.
09:00We don't want that mother****** Spanish right here.
09:03What he says is hard to understand.
09:05It almost doesn't matter.
09:07If you say so.
09:09Sky occasionally seemed curiously disapproving of people forced to scavenge for anything they
09:13could find.
09:14They scramble over an assault course of destruction to get at anything they can.
09:19Watch this.
09:22And this.
09:24Perhaps the US military should.
09:26They don't seem to think there's a problem.
09:28Yeah, well, maybe they've got a clearer idea of the bigger picture than you have.
09:32Just a thought.
09:33In fairness, dislocation could be a factor here.
09:36The reporter wasn't in Haiti, but in Britain, revoicing images seen on a monitor.
09:40Images are always open to interpretation.
09:42Take this shot from another Sky News report.
09:45These people aren't even vainly hoping for food.
09:48They're fighting over cardboard boxes to use as shelter.
09:53Are they fighting or are they throwing the boxes to try and break and flatten them to
09:59use as shelter and sunscreens, as we saw them doing in other reports.
10:03Check out the guy in the green T-shirt and his mate in the stripy blue top.
10:07They're clearly having a laugh, batting these boxes around.
10:10Surely that's the very definition of being good-natured in a crisis.
10:13Sky weren't the only ones to focus on the violence.
10:16On the BBC's News at Ten, George Alagiah stood live in the street to say...
10:20There have been increasing signs of tension and anger on the streets here,
10:24but I think to call it all criminality or looting,
10:26I think that would be an exaggeration.
10:28But apparently reporter Matt Fry hadn't got that memo.
10:31Looting is now the only industry here, and this is the new rush hour of Port-au-Prince.
10:36Anything will do as a weapon, a hacksaw, a stick,
10:40and of course all the machetes and guns that you can't see.
10:43It's just a foretaste of things to come.
10:46The occasionally feverish tone of some of the coverage
10:49angered DJ and world music guru Andy Kershaw so much
10:53that he wrote a furious article for the independent newspaper about it,
10:57accusing the media of treating the Haitians like savages.
11:00Perhaps surprisingly, some of the most measured comments
11:03about the use of violent footage came from Fox News.
11:06We've seen video of sporadic violence,
11:09but the camera can sometimes enlighten us and it can sometimes distort the truth.
11:13Yes, there are these isolated incidents of violence,
11:16and the cameras tend to gravitate towards those
11:19and highlight them, magnify them because of that.
11:21The people of Haiti really are dealing with this with an admirable dignity and sense of calm.
11:26Just to be clear, the vast majority of BBC ITN
11:29and Sky's coverage of the disaster has been exemplary.
11:32They also undoubtedly helped raise a lot of money
11:35by repeatedly plugging the appeal details.
11:37Everywhere you looked, there was a message telling you to call deck.
11:40It was a bit like looking at post-it notes on Ant's fridge.
11:43Speaking of aid, in the wake of any major catastrophe,
11:46people ask why God didn't intervene.
11:48This time, however, Sky were there to capture the glitzy moment
11:51God himself turned up and announced he was going to do something about it.
11:54I don't know who's available, but I will get a record out within seven to ten days.
11:59ITN feverishly watched as Simon Cowell
12:01assembled a charity single after someone less powerful than himself.
12:04Some bloke called Gordon Brown, apparently, asked him to help out.
12:08We were told an impressive roster of top stars,
12:11including Jalouse and Lion Girl, would appear on the single,
12:14so Sky's Cade Burley seemed most excited at the prospect
12:17of one phallocentric performer sticking his oar in.
12:20It's nothing like a bit of rod, is there?
12:22The song picked was R.E.M.'s Everybody Hurts,
12:24a soaring and soulful number about the possibility of hope,
12:27but a choice that caused heated debate on the set of Live From Studio 5.
12:32The song, it's quite deep, isn't it?
12:34It's a little bit sad.
12:36I thought it might have been more of an uplifting, inspirational kind of song.
12:39Something like Come All Eileen, yeah?
12:41By the time they put all the footage and that on it,
12:44it might as well make you cry, wouldn't it?
12:46Yeah, it probably will.
12:47I think it's a little bit too sad.
12:49How can it be too sad, though, for what's happened?
12:51But it's such a sad thing that's going on.
12:53I think perhaps people need something a little bit uplifting,
12:55a little bit inspiring to say, you know,
12:57we can get through this, we're going to help out and all come together,
13:00and instead I'm just like, God, it's just so depressing, really.
13:05God, it is depressing.
13:07Oh, wait, look, don't miss Joe Swash.
13:13While the children debated Simon's song choice,
13:15across the pond, even bigger stars than Joe Swash
13:17were gathering for a glittering live two-hour telethon.
13:20The line-up included literally every musician you could ever want to hear,
13:23and still, Hollywood did its bit too.
13:26Brad Pitt being down, looking like a man from the future.
13:30In fact, the cream of Movieland was there,
13:32manning the most star-studded call centre in history.
13:35There was Steven Spielberg off Jurassic Park, he was there.
13:38Pretty Woman, Julia Roberts.
13:40Even Taylor Swift off the VMA Awards.
13:43Hello, this is Taylor Swift.
13:44Oh, you're Taylor, I'm really happy for you, I'm going to let you finish,
13:47but Beyonce had one of the best videos of all time!
13:51One of the dominating news themes of 2009 was the recession,
13:55which, as we all know, is now completely over.
13:58Sky News got plenty of mileage out of it,
14:00literally, when they sent one of their stars
14:02on an investigative bike ride around the UK.
14:05It looked like this.
14:10Finance and transport, and Sky News' Dermot Murnaghan
14:13traverses the south-west of England on a bike,
14:16seeking out tales of financial woe
14:18in a series of reports called, amazingly, The Economic Cycle.
14:22Apart from getting a sore arse,
14:24he found plenty of sorrowful and jobless real people to talk to
14:27in what was surely designed to be the most heart-tugging reportage of the year.
14:31Trouble is, he didn't always seem to find
14:33quite as much financial misery as he wanted.
14:35What happens, you know, if the sun doesn't shine,
14:38if it pours with rain, or the tourists just don't come
14:41because they haven't got the money?
14:43How much longer can you last?
14:45Well, I think we can last, I think people are realising
14:47that they're not going abroad, and I think they're realising
14:50that our country, and certainly Cornwall,
14:52is just such a stunning place.
14:54Next!
14:55Just talking to Ian out there, I mean,
14:57it's fingers crossed, isn't it, for this season?
14:59You don't know how it's going to pan out, do you, Sydney?
15:02It's looking good, though.
15:04Why do you say that?
15:06Bookings are up 50% this time last year,
15:09and we're having a lot more enquiries.
15:11Oh, God!
15:12How are you being treated by your banks?
15:14Are they saying, look, Tony, Julie, we understand times are hard,
15:18do you need a bit of extra cash here, or are they saying something different?
15:21I think it's haven't been too bad, I've not had a problem.
15:23Right, yeah, fascinating.
15:25Brilliant, great, great, brilliant.
15:27Oh, Jesus!
15:28How are things holding up in this economic downturn for you?
15:31It's not too bad, actually.
15:33It's looking good for the coming season.
15:35Right. Oh, this is bullshit!
15:37Why are you optimistic?
15:39Look, I don't want to underplay recession,
15:41but guys like you and the newspapers
15:44do love a lousy story about how we're going to hang the handcart.
15:48Yeah, yeah. Thanks. Fascinating.
15:50In many ways, what's happening, I think, is a really good thing.
15:53Whatever!
15:54You know, sometimes you see something on the news
15:56that makes you realise the crossover between current affairs
15:59and celebrities really has gone too far.
16:01I'm John. I'm Edward.
16:03And you're watching Sky News.
16:05For the latest, I'm John Edward.
16:07Stars are everywhere.
16:09They're invited to explain public health campaigns.
16:11You're here to tell us that pale is good.
16:13Pale is great. Yes.
16:15It's a good message to all of you.
16:16They're patiently asked their expert opinion on Gordon Brown's chances.
16:19I think he's dogged enough to try and stick it out.
16:23But if the momentum keeps on going the way that it does,
16:26he won't be able to survive.
16:28They even queue up to flog any old toot on the Andrew Marr show.
16:31From one Australian megastar to another.
16:33Rolf Harris. I'm going to be talking to Rolf in a moment.
16:36But first, a quick blast from Christmas In The Sun,
16:38his latest musical foray.
16:46Yeah, it's making current affairs look a bit shit, really.
16:49Celebrities, of course, get an easy time of it
16:51compared to politicians.
16:53Put Sky's well-respected Adam Bolton opposite a politician
16:56and he won't shy away from asking difficult questions.
16:59But stick a star on his island and tickety-tock,
17:01it's bum-kiss o'clock.
17:03Now Sir Anthony Hopkins is showcasing his own paintings
17:06at exhibitions in London and Edinburgh.
17:08Yes, it seems Sir Hannibal's done some painting,
17:11so marvellous even noted critic Adam Bolton struggles to describe them.
17:14They're sort of two sorts, it seems.
17:16They're realist landscapes
17:18and then they're the more sort of fantastical dreamscapes.
17:22To be fair, that is probably the ninth best painting
17:25of a purple elephant I've seen since primary school.
17:28I just follow my instinct. I paint in a childlike way.
17:31I don't have a sense of... I have no training in perspective.
17:36No.
17:37So I just paint as a...
17:39Rich man with time on his hands?
17:41Did it help you playing Picasso?
17:43Has that helped you as an artist?
17:45Yes.
17:46Jesus, Bolton's being so deferential,
17:48it's as though he's mistaken him for some kind of ancient forest god.
17:51Sir Anthony Hopkins, wolfman, Thor and artist.
17:53There, a lot to look forward to. Thank you very much indeed.
17:56Thank you very much. Thank you.
17:595 News is the logical extension of all this starry ring-licking.
18:03Often it's not like a news bulletin at all,
18:05more like watching a boy reading Heat magazine off on autocue.
18:08For our latest celebrity report,
18:10Louise Redknapp explains how she's hoping to give glamour a good name.
18:14Hi, I'm here in Selfridges in London
18:16where we're preparing for the really, really great garage sale.
18:19The sole benefit to using Louise Redknapp as a celebrity reporter
18:22is it helpfully marks the ultimate low.
18:24I mean, really, nothing could possibly be worse than that.
18:28Tiger 4!
18:30OK, if you like gentlemen, you're going to love tonight's show.
18:32Yes, you are, because we're going to be hearing from the boys later on,
18:34plus all the stars from the National TV Awards.
18:36We'll be asking if you would choose laughs over looks
18:39and we'll also be hearing from Simon Cowell.
18:41We're live from Studio 5!
18:43I take that back.
18:45Yes, live from Studio 5 is the first news programme
18:48broadcast directly from hell.
18:50Hosted by a large-breasted duckling, an incoherent footballer
18:53and a 200ft wall of searing white tooth enamel,
18:55it's a nightmarish parade of one lightweight item after another,
18:58like being force-fed marshmallows by a bastard in a glittery hat.
19:01Incredibly, this actually counts towards 5's news output,
19:04the stuff it has to broadcast as part of its public service remit.
19:08Still, they do cover the issue.
19:10Issues like, are hairy legs horrid?
19:12Why on earth would you not shave your legs? I just don't get it.
19:15Is Ricky Gervais funny or hilarious?
19:18And should you give money to the homeless or just f*** them off?
19:21Well, give them a sandwich, give them the time of day,
19:23they're human beings, but don't give them cash on the streets.
19:26Sometimes there's so much heated debate, you can't even hear it.
19:29But there is a weird double standard that goes on.
19:32That's what you think, there's a weird double standard that goes on.
19:35I remember getting a... That is curtain loss.
19:39And also there's a strange double standard that goes on.
19:42Largely, though, Studio 5 covers celebrities
19:44and it really cares about their well-being.
19:46David Hasselhoff. What can we say to Hoff? What's going on with this fella?
19:49Reports from America say he's been taken to hospital
19:51because of his drunken, drinking again, even.
19:54Now, apparently, 17-year-old daughter Hayley had to raise the alarm
19:58when she found him totally sozzled at his home in LA.
20:01It's the second time she's had to do this.
20:03Why does he keep doing this to his daughter? He's got to get a grip on him.
20:07Still, if you want entertainment news,
20:09where better to look than an entertainment news show?
20:12But surely if you're an entertainment news show,
20:14you should at least attempt to deal with the news aspect
20:17and not just act like an unconditional arse-kissing machine.
20:20For instance, those of you with long memories will recall last week
20:23we told you the story of Dappy from the group N-Dubs,
20:26who'd made headlines by sending threatening texts,
20:28even though he was helping front a government anti-bullying campaign at the time.
20:32He and his group were dropped from the campaign,
20:34which was quite big news in the tabloids,
20:36although live from Studio 5 didn't seem that interested.
20:39No idea why.
20:40Coincidentally, the following week, the band were guests on the show.
20:44They were interviewed live on air and quizzed for five and a half minutes
20:47with not one mention of the text story.
20:50Instead, they were asked which Brit nomination they wished they'd got.
20:53Best Group, Best Breakthrough. Best Breakthrough as well.
20:56There were other equally probing questions.
20:58So what have you all been up to, enjoying yourselves?
21:00Holidays. Lovely holiday.
21:03Sent any texts recently?
21:05Still, it's not surprising they were treated like kings,
21:07because when you do ask difficult questions, as IT ended last year
21:10when they questioned the band's suitability
21:12to front the anti-bullying campaign in the first place,
21:15you quickly get your knuckles wrapped.
21:17By putting yourselves up as a champion for children...
21:19We don't put ourselves up as that.
21:21You have by taking this role as ambassadors.
21:23But bullying, for me...
21:24From what I'm seeing right now,
21:26you're putting my band in a very, very uncomfortable position by attacking them.
21:29I don't feel I'm attacking them, I'm asking them how they can justify
21:32selling lyrics to children which are so explicit.
21:35That's a perfectly justifiable...
21:36We're not here about that.
21:38We're here about an anti-bullying campaign.
21:40It may not seem important,
21:41but as celebs get increasingly involved with issues,
21:44they're also increasingly able to get away with the sort of thing
21:46a spokesperson never would.
21:48The relationship between stars and the press is a one-way street.
21:51Put us on your show, plug us silly,
21:53but don't act like journalists or we won't come back
21:55and neither will any of our other showbiz friends.
21:58But perhaps the worst thing about all this celeb slurping
22:01is it's boring.
22:02I mean, who really gives a toss about sunny-as-gold boots?
22:05It can sometimes be entertaining when the news gets a famous person on,
22:08especially if they genuinely grill them.
22:11Just ask the Newsnight viewers who watched in astonishment
22:14as Mr Issues himself, Stingford Stingington Sting,
22:17wandered unwittingly into the Paxman Thunderdome.
22:20Do you ever feel uncomfortable
22:22travelling between your various homes in various continents
22:26at enormous carbon costs?
22:29Do you ever feel uncomfortable about that?
22:32I think it's an amusing red herring for the media
22:36to blame celebrities for the global crisis we're in.
22:40You're not being blamed for it,
22:42you're just being accused of hypocrisy, that's all.
22:44The economy can be a difficult thing to understand,
22:46especially when the news has tried to explain it to you.
22:49Have a look at this.
22:50Every day there's been baffling new terminology to learn,
22:53with the latest being quantitative easing,
22:55the Bank of England's recent attempt to stop the economy
22:58tumbling into a great big bin full of bums.
23:01Now, unless you speak fluent jargon,
23:03it's not immediately clear what quantitative easing actually is.
23:07In fact, as Newsnight found out
23:09when they hit the streets to ask human beings,
23:11even Brainiac Moss from the IT crowd doesn't know what it is.
23:15Er, the easing of quantitiveness.
23:20Thank God, then, that the news is on hand
23:22to describe exactly what quantitative easing is
23:25in easy-to-follow metaphorical steps.
23:27Put simply, quantitative easing is a tool
23:30for fixing a blockage in an economy that isn't running smoothly.
23:33There you go, it's a sort of spanner, made of money.
23:36But how does it work?
23:38Well, I suppose you twist it into the stock market.
23:41It's like creating money out of thin air
23:43or filling up a petrol tank with imaginary petrol.
23:47That is what most economists agree is needed
23:50to get any recovery started.
23:53Oh, God, he isn't making any sense.
23:55What I need is someone who can't help but speak
23:58in profoundly simple terms.
24:00Hello, welcome to 5 News, I'm Natasha Koplinsky.
24:03I'm pre-emptively chuckling cos I reckon she's about to tell us
24:06it's designed to encourage the banks and us to get lending and spending.
24:11It is designed to encourage the banks and us to get lending and spending.
24:15Our chief correspondent Jonathan Samuels
24:17investigates whether these measures will help an economy
24:20that's been going off the rails.
24:22Why, Natasha, that almost sounds like a cue for a bad railway metaphor.
24:27The economy at the moment seems to be like a runaway train.
24:31Great, all right, let's see you run with this one.
24:34The government's been pulling lots of levers behind the scenes
24:37to try and slow down the economic crisis,
24:40but it's got to such a stage now that they're trying a different track.
24:44Just tell me how it works.
24:46It's called quantitative easing.
24:48The idea is to pump more money into the economy.
24:51And get banks lending again.
24:53Toot, toot, the economy's made of trains.
24:56We once had a model economy.
24:58The government hopes the latest measures
25:00will mean we soon see light at the end of the tunnel.
25:03As anyone with eyes, ears and a brain knows,
25:06politicians don't always come across too well on TV
25:09and they're often their own worst enemy,
25:11as any viewer who's sat through a party political broadcast will tell you.
25:14Without interviewers holding them to account,
25:16politicians can easily seem stuffy or complacent.
25:19I think we can be fairly satisfied the way things have gone lately, don't you, Ram?
25:22Yes, but we've got through our programme very well
25:24and I've just come from the house and we're right up to date.
25:27Or weird and creepy.
25:29We believe in Britain.
25:32We're all in this together.
25:34Good luck to you all and good night.
25:37Or bolshy and needy.
25:39Stand firm.
25:41Don't be swayed.
25:42Give us a chance.
25:44Or young and sexy.
25:46Neil Kimmel's greatest asset is his youth.
25:49Or grey and boring.
25:54Or Scottish and boring and sitting at a desk.
25:57Good evening.
25:58Good God, it's footage of Gordon Brown in the womb.
26:01You'd be better off with Labour.
26:03And when they're not telling you you're better off with Labour,
26:06they're telling you the economic situation is getting better more quickly
26:09than anybody thought this time last year.
26:11There's no doubt that the economic situation is getting better
26:14and it's getting better more quickly than anybody thought this time last year.
26:18Even when politicians simply try and drum up support,
26:20they come across like a weird cult.
26:22I just came to realise that if I believed in those principles
26:25and I supported what the Labour Party was doing,
26:27then I should really join up and play a part in trying to change things.
26:30Yes, no matter how many zhuzhi modern TV techniques they employ
26:34to pass themselves off as normal people,
26:36politicians seem doomed to come across as snake oil salesmen or pricks.
26:40Maybe they could do with help from someone who really knows how TV works.
26:43Somebody a bit like Simon Cowell.
26:45Yes, entertainment deity Simon Cowell recently outlined his plan
26:48to redefine political TV in a revealing and ominous interview
26:51on the BBC's heavyweight news night.
26:53You've said in the past that the X Factor could have other applications.
26:58What about some kind of political engagement for the X Factor?
27:02Yeah, because it's the sort of thing I'd like to watch.
27:06There are so many really, really, really hot topics.
27:11Like what?
27:12Well, for instance, should we or should we be in Iraq and Afghanistan?
27:17If you actually asked most people in the country, why are we there?
27:22I couldn't even tell you.
27:24Simon might like to know that an X Factor-style political show
27:27has been tried before in the form of ITV's snazzy political bear pit Vote For Me,
27:31which had all the usual talent show ingredients, a shiny studio,
27:34a panel of expert judges, an eager amateur line-up and a phone vote
27:37in which, to the channel's embarrassment,
27:39was won by extreme right-winger Rodney Hilton Potts.
27:42Thank you very much. Finally, candidate number one, Rodney,
27:45tell us one thing you care about. Your time starts now.
27:50Our pensioners didn't fight two world wars to save this great country,
27:56to have it swamped with immigrants.
27:58Vote For Me wasn't a hit, but then it didn't have a red telephone in the middle.
28:02We would have a red telephone in the middle,
28:06which is, at any time, someone from number ten can call in.
28:10But I think something like that would be a good way for me
28:13to get involved in politics in my own way, which is, it would be controversial,
28:18the public would eventually make the decision.
28:21You know, I dread to think what a controversial political X Factor
28:24in which the public gets to decide might look like.
28:29He's the most divisive politician in Britain today.
28:35He denied climate change.
28:38He denied the existence of black Welshmen.
28:42There's no such thing as a black Welshman.
28:45He denied six million dead.
28:48I'm not a racist, no.
28:52It's time...
28:54That was a lynch mob.
28:56..to face...
28:58..Nick Griffith!
29:02Well, that's all we've got time for in this compilation edition.
29:06Go away.
29:11Coming up next tonight, Mark Lawson settles in for a chat
29:14with the star of our all-new Corridors of Power season drama on expenses,
29:18actor Brian Cox.
29:31BELL RINGS