you can. see you, cameron. cheerio. well, that is the interview, but after the broadcast it got many millions of views on social media and continues to. cameron, when you hear that again, what do you think? what a shame that we have to endure such idiocy in our media spaces. it really is crazy he still has a platform, really. is that how you see it? i mean, do you think, despite the way the interview went, would that be counted as ultimately a successful media appearance for you? what is your rationale when you decide who to do an interview with? yeah, i mean, off the back of that, i think a lot of people realised what we re up against. he clearly had his agenda for how he wanted the interview to go, just drilling into what i do for a living. i can only imagine the sort ofjobs or not jobs that he was hoping that
after the firm s new boss, elon musk, let users decide whether he should be allowed to return to the platform. 15 million twitter users voted and nearly 52% backed the former us president s return. mr trump was banned fromtwitter after the january 6th riots. now on bbc news, the media show. hello how should journalists cover climate protests? the climate conference, cop27, ended this week. but you might have seen more about the activists who threw oil on a gustav klimt painting in vienna or the protesters who brought the m25 to a standstill. in an era of apparently increasing action, what s the media s role? and by giving the latest stunt publicity, is it fanning the flames? i m joined by cameron ford, who s a carpenter and spokesperson for insulate britain. and richard felgate, a documentary maker
deep down they have fear too about our planet changing with the climate so rapidly. and they have children and loved ones. and i know that even though their whole angle is to anger, they are also human beings who have got complex emotions around this really tricky situation we find ourselves in. and genuinely, i want to open that up with them. well, i ve got wolfgang blau in the studio here. cameron s interview went viral and now that clip has an advert on it which presumably makes money. is the current vogue for direct action, actually good business for the media industry? media likes events, and that is a big challenge for all climate journalism. when you ask a typical newsdesk editor who decides what to put on air or what to put on the front page of still printing, what are the filters?
they are human, they have got deep down they have fear too about our planet changing with the climate so rapidly. and they have children and loved ones. and i know that even though their whole angle is to anger, they are also human beings who have got complex emotions around this really tricky situation we find ourselves in. and genuinely, i want to open that up with them. well, i ve got wolfgang blau in the studio here. cameron s interview went viral and now that clip has an advert on it which presumably makes money. is the current vogue for direct action, actually good business for the media industry? media likes events, and that is a big challenge for all climate journalism. when you ask a typical newsdesk editor who decides what to put on air or what to put on the front page of still printing, what are the filters?
police have named the suspected gunman who s been arrested. a murder investigation has begun after two children died and a woman was left critically injured in a fire at a flat in nottingham. now it is time for the media show. hello how should journalists cover climate protests? the climate conference, cop27, ended this week. but you might have seen more about the activists who threw oil on a gustav klimt painting in vienna or the protesters who brought the m25 to a standstill. in an era of apparently increasing action, what s the media s role? and by giving the latest stunt publicity, is it fanning the flames? i m joined by cameron ford, who s a carpenter and spokesperson for insulate britain.