He started as a broadcaster before going to university and is now celebrating 25 years at Channel 4 News. He discusses the BBC, bias, war reporting – and what he learned from his father

Krishnan Guru-Murthy is in the ITN basement in central London – one of the two sites where Channel 4 News is produced – in front of a huge plate of biscuits that he has no problem not eating. He has gone sugar-free and lost 11kg (1st 10lb), he says with pride.

It’s a snapshot of the peculiar challenges of a TV anchor. You have to worry about whether or not the video footage pouring in from the Turkish earthquake is real while you worry about whether or not you are looking a bit jowly; you have to be trenchant but not opinionated, which is the tightrope newscasters talk about most often, but the one on which Guru-Murthy seems most relaxed; and, if you want the career he has had – a quarter of a century on the same show – you need people to like you without ever making popularity your aim.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Hanky-panky in the Tardis! How a writer’s divisive Doctor Who movie spent 25 years being hated by fans

The 1996 TV movie is possibly the Time Lord’s most controversial on-screen…

The Royal Hotel review – feminist thriller starts strong but can’t stay the course

Julia Garner and Jessica Henwick are both impressive in an uneasy Australia-set…

Nigel Farage rejects idea of rejoining Tory party under Rishi Sunak

Former Ukip leader does not rule out political return after stint on…