Facebook Pixel 'BBC colleagues feel under attack, but they should feel proud of their work' | The Observer - newspaper - Bu hikayeyi Magzter.com'da okuyun
Magzter GOLD ile Sınırsız Olun

Magzter GOLD ile Sınırsız Olun

Sadece 9.000'den fazla dergi, gazete ve Premium hikayeye sınırsız erişim elde edin

$149.99
 
$74.99/Yıl

Denemek ALTIN - Özgür

'BBC colleagues feel under attack, but they should feel proud of their work'

The Observer

|

December 14, 2025

To stroll through Herne Hill and Brockwell Park in southeast London with Emma Barnett and Jeremy Weil is to see a seemingly ordinary London district anew: and for the two of them, that’s the whole point.

“When we moved here, before we had kids, we only ever turned left out of our house to go to Brixton, for lovely food and cocktails and whatever else was going on,” Barnett says. “Or we'd get on the Tube, and it was just 12 minutes to Soho, which is where I was living my life then.” But first one longed-for baby, and then another ~ and then Covid - opened up a whole new world.

On a drizzly autumn afternoon, Barnett and Weil are taking time out from their staggeringly busy lives to wander through the place they not only love, but which planted the seed of their company, Colour Your Streets. It’s a range of 175 colouring books and counting, each filled with a selection of local landmarks to colour in, closely focussed on the places we call home - from Barnsley to Basingstoke, Eastbourne to Exeter, and London boroughs that take in the whole AZ.

This is all pretty good going, especially when you consider Barnett’s side hustle as a presenter of Radio 4’s flagship Today programme. At 40, her career in the media has run ona relentlessly upward trajectory. She was the Telegraph's first digital editor and launched the paper’s Wonder Women section, but she really made her name in broadcasting, from Hit List on 5Live to taking over the BBC’s Woman's Hour on the show's ‘75th anniversary in 2021.

She moved to Today in May last year. Meanwhile, she’s written two books, Period: It’s About Bloody Time and Maternity Service: A Love Letter to Mothers from the Front Line of Maternity Leave. She’s now also the host of a BBC podcast, Ready to Talk, which features long, open conversations with the likes of comedian Chris McCausland, and Georgia Barrington, born without awomb, whose friend Daisy Hope helped her to have a baby.

The Observer'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

The Observer

The Observer

Operation Fubar: even Keir Starmer’s team players are abandoning the field of battle

The resignation of John Healey over defence spending has blown a hole in the prime minister’s survival strategy

time to read

4 mins

June 14, 2026

The Observer

Stamp duty’s a mad tax — it makes pay rises worthless

Imagine a 27-year-old English teacher working at a secondary school in Acton, west London.

time to read

2 mins

June 14, 2026

The Observer

The Observer

To get your head around Musk’s fortune, first understand his right-hand woman

The SpaceX president has spent the past 24 years making her boss’s dreams come true as the ‘adult in the room’.

time to read

2 mins

June 14, 2026

The Observer

If the bank levy is hurting growth, design it better

The claim last week by Santander's Ana Botin that the UK’s tax treatment of banks “makes no economic sense” is all too obviously self-serving.

time to read

1 mins

June 14, 2026

The Observer

The Observer

‘A very deep sense of duty’: Starmer’s work ethic endures despite the resignations

The defence secretary’s shock departure leaves the PM looking more isolated than ever. But he plans to fight on. Tom Baldwin reports

time to read

5 mins

June 14, 2026

The Observer

Young switched off by tracking devices and ‘self-optimisation’

It’s been nearly two weeks since Steven Bartlett declared on his Diary of a CEO podcast that drinking three glasses of wine had ruined his life.

time to read

2 mins

June 14, 2026

The Observer

The Observer

‘My foster parents taught me that if you are loved, you will be destroyed’

On a visit to his old foster home in Makerfield, the poet tells Rachel Sylvester about his time in care after being stolen from his mother, why St George’s flags don’t worry him and how he would give up everything to have a family

time to read

8 mins

June 14, 2026

The Observer

The Observer

SpaceX’s $2.1tn listing tests moonshot capitalism’s limits

Elon Musk’s venture has achieved a record-breaking valuation, but questions remain over investors’ connection to reality

time to read

2 mins

June 14, 2026

The Observer

The Observer

‘Jodie could be anyone’: the deepfake porn victim named campaigner of the year after law change

Jodie Campaigns among the activists recognised at the Sheila McKechnie Foundation Awards

time to read

1 mins

June 14, 2026

The Observer

The Observer

Alan Hale

The ‘fuzzy object’ the astronomer sighted in 1995 turned out to be a huge comet last visible from Earth in 2215BC

time to read

3 mins

June 14, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size