Martin Bashir photograph

Martin Bashir

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Gender Male
Age 61
Date of birth January 19,1963
Zodiac sign Capricorn
Born Wandsworth
London
United Kingdom
Height 168 (cm)
SpouseDeborah Bashir
AlbumsBass Lion
Movies/Shows Martin Bashir
Mike Bassett: England Manager
Dateline NBC
Panorama
Nightline Prime
NightlinePrime -- Secrets of Your Mind: Why We Do What We Do
Living with Michael Jackson
Reviews www.imdb.com
Networks MSNBC
Education King Alfred's College
Notabl creditAn Interview with HRH The Princess of Wales
Siblings Tommy Bashir
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID410245
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Martin Bashir Life story


Journalist Martin Bashir first made a name for himself in America with his 2003 British documentary "Living With Michael Jackson," which provided exclusive access to the pop icon. That launched a journalism career in the U.S. for Bashir, which has landed him at MSNBC with this daily, afternoon news program. On this self-titled show, Bashir uncovers the hidden side of the day's top news stories and events. The experienced interviewer also discusses news stories with the people that are being talked about. … MORE

BBC reaches settlement with murdered girl's mother over clothes lost by Martin Bashir

BBC reaches settlement with murdered girl's mother over clothes lost by Martin Bashir
Oct 5,2023 11:21 am

...By Ian YoungsEntertainment & arts reporterThe BBC has reached a settlement with a woman who said Martin Bashir had borrowed but failed to return her murdered daughter s clothes...

Netflix adds disclaimer under The Crown's trailer for series five

Netflix adds disclaimer under The Crown's trailer for series five
Oct 21,2022 7:01 am

... It includes a recreation of Princess Diana s 1995 interview with Martin Bashir...

Five challenges the BBC faces as it turns 100

Five challenges the BBC faces as it turns 100
Oct 17,2022 10:11 pm

... Frequent scandals - Jimmy Savile; Martin Bashir s Princess Diana interview; many others - have eroded the public s trust in the BBC...

Diana Panorama interview: BBC settles with Earl Spencer aide

Diana Panorama interview: BBC settles with Earl Spencer aide
Oct 4,2022 11:30 am

...By Steven McIntoshEntertainment reporterThe BBC has reached a settlement with Earl Spencer s former head of security, after his bank statements were forged by Martin Bashir to help secure an interview with Princess Diana...

BBC to pay damages to former royal nanny Tiggy Legge-Bourke

BBC to pay damages to former royal nanny Tiggy Legge-Bourke
Jul 21,2022 12:40 pm

... A probe into the Panorama programme found journalist Martin Bashir used fake documents to gain access to Diana...

BBC pays damages to ex-producer over Martin Bashir's Princess Diana interview

BBC pays damages to ex-producer over Martin Bashir's Princess Diana interview
Jun 28,2022 6:45 pm

...The BBC has paid " a significant sum" and apologised to a former producer who tried to raise concerns about Martin Bashir s interview with Princess Diana...

Martin Bashir Diana interview: BBC pays compensation to aide Patrick Jephson

Martin Bashir Diana interview: BBC pays compensation to aide Patrick Jephson
Mar 17,2022 6:06 pm

...The BBC has paid a " substantial sum" in damages to the former private secretary of Diana, Princess of Wales, for the " harm caused to him" over Martin Bashir s Panorama interview...

The Crown: Netflix series hit by £150k Doncaster antiques theft

The Crown: Netflix series hit by £150k Doncaster antiques theft
Feb 24,2022 2:45 pm

... The series will reportedly dramatise her headline-making 1995 Panorama interview with Martin Bashir as well as other key events...

Five challenges the BBC faces as it turns 100

Nov 17,2021 12:07 am

By Amol RajanMedia editor

As The Bbc celebrates its 100th anniversary, our Media editor looks ahead at The Challenges it faces, from competition from streaming services to reaching Young People on TikTok.

Great institutions, like great literature, are often born from existential angst, as urgent responses to The prevailing horrors of their era. As with TS Eliot's The Waste Land , released in 1922, so with The Bbc .

When Lord Reith - Shot in The Face in World War One - became The Bbc 's first General Manager , he had The National interest at heart. A Scottish engineer in post-war London, he wanted to deploy The latest technology to rebuild a country ravaged by war.

Today few people would suggest building a public Media institution. Fewer still would fund it through a licence fee, seen by some as tax on households. And yet, as The plaudits for its coverage of The death of Queen Elizabeth Ii demonstrate, The Bbc often remains world-class.

For a century, The Bbc has been there for Britons at The big moments in national and international life. Churchill's war broadcasts; Queen Elizabeth's coronation; The World Cup in 1966; A Man on The moon; The Fall of The Berlin Wall ; Ed Balls doing Gangnam Style on Strictly Come Dancing .

Most People in Britain found out about these things through The Bbc . But bringing The country together is now harder than ever, partly because of how Britain has changed, but mainly because of how The Media has changed.

For 100 years, The Bbc has used The latest technology to secure its emotional contract with The People . It was born in The era of radio, and gave us The First glimpse of TV. A series of technological Revolutions - The Internet , smartphones, Social Media - have irreversibly weakened The Bbc 's grip on our culture.

These Revolutions connect The Major challenges The Bbc faces today. Here are five.

Trust

Trust is easily destroyed, but not easily created. Frequent Scandals - Jimmy Savile ; Martin Bashir 's Princess Diana interview; many Others - have eroded The Public 's trust in The Bbc .

And this is The Age Of disinformation. In a world where lies spread faster than truth, The belief that accuracy is sacred has diminished. Social Media has been catastrophic for The News trade.

This is an opportunity for some journalists, who spend time, money, and effort ascertaining The Truth , something Most People still believe in. But declining trust is a threat to The Bbc . People won't pay for something they don't trust.

Cost

The Bbc 's direct competitors include companies like Netflix valued in The Hundreds of Billions - it will struggle as its funding is capped at around £5bn. The Bbc is obliged to do stuff they don't do (news, radio, religious programming), it's tightly regulated and comes under relentless political pressure.

Streaming services have also driven up staff and programming costs. Ultimately, The Bbc will have to do less, which means it will have to Work Out what it can do that Others can't.

Reaching Young People

There is a stark generational divide in consumption of BBC content.

Britons aged between 16 and 24 spend more time on TikTok alone than watching broadcast television. In The Past decade, The amount of time they spend watching terrestrial TV has fallen by two-thirds.

The Bbc 's worst nightmare is irrelevance. Losing Test Cricket to Sky is One thing, losing Bake Off to Channel 4 is another. But there are limits. At The big moments, The Bbc needs to remain indispensable. For now, it is.

But The Road to irrelevance is paved with TikTok videos, Netflix dollars and Spotify playlists.

Universal appeal

A related, but separate, issue is universality.

To retain The licence fee, The Bbc must appeal to All - or at least, as close to All as possible. This is why Director-General Tim Davie has prioritised restoring The Bbc 's fragile reputation for impartiality.

In a country as digital, diverse, and divided as modern Britain, appealing to All is extremely difficult. An institution that nurtures Antiques Roadshow must also grow The Audience for 1Xtra. Critics call this " imperial ambition".

But even as The Bbc acknowledges it is going to have do less, and Focus On providing what The Market cannot, its current funding model depends on proving it appeals across generational, geographic and gender divides.

Politics

The Bbc has always infuriated governments, of All hues. Today, there are two big differences.

First, The hostility from government is much more relentless, thanks in part to Social Media and today's Culture Wars .

Second, The Bbc 's most committed enemies can use The streaming revolution to make their case, by saying The licence fee is no longer fit for purpose. Their agenda is ideological; their argument is based on technology.

There remains a strong objection in principle to The licence fee: namely, The Threat of criminal sanction.

Today, those who take this view can add a strong objection: it is unfit for The era of YouTube and Instagram.

Together, these challenges present an existential threat.

Only a brave soul would bet on The Bbc 's current funding model surviving The Next few decades.

But as recent weeks have shown, it remains widely cherished And Able to do some useful things exceptionally well. Its current leadership has a plan to address The Challenges .

Even as it slowly shrinks, The Bbc has to use The latest technology to secure a new contract with The People , persuade them it is worth paying for, and keep opponents at bay.

This centenarian's best Hope is to go back to The enlightened vision of that lanky son of a Preacher Man who founded it. As Lord Reith knew in 1922, quality, not quantity, is The Bbc 's best Hope .



Source of news: bbc.com

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