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View Full Version : BBC mistakes cabbie for expert on online music, live.


JERI
May 15th, 2006, 07:04 AM
He is the BBC's latest star - the cab driver who a leading presenter believed was a world expert on the internet music business.

The man stepped unwittingly into the national spotlight when he was interviewed by mistake on the corporation's News 24 channel.

With the seconds ticking down to a studio discussion about a court case involving Apple Computer and The Beatles' record label, a floor manager had run to reception and grabbed the man, thinking he was Guy Kewney, editor of Newswireless.net, a specialist internet publication.

Actually, he was a minicab driver who had been waiting to drive Mr Kewney home.

Baffled, but compliant, the driver was fitted with a microphone and allowed himself to be marched in to the studio. Cameras rolled, and he was quizzed live on air by consumer affairs correspondent Karen Bowerman - who missed the cabbie's panic-stricken expression when he realised he was being interviewed.

Despite knowing nothing about the case - a judge ruled that the computer company could continue to use the Apple symbol for its iTunes download service - the man gamely attempted to bluff his way through and, speaking in a strong French accent, sustained a (somewhat illogical) form of conversation. Meanwhile, the real Mr Kewney watched indignantly on a monitor in reception.

A tape of the exchange, broadcast on Monday morning, has become a classic among BBC workers.

It starts with the mystery man's horrified expression as Ms Bowerman introduces him as a technology expert, followed by his plucky attempt to answer her question on whether he was surprised by the verdict.

Yes, he says with feeling. It was a 'big surprise'. After an increasingly confusing exchange, the presenter cut with relief to the BBC's equally puzzled reporter outside the court, while the taxi driver was hurried out of the studio.

The BBC apologised, saying the mistake occurred because the man was wearing Mr Kewney's name tag. Mr Kewney said: "Everyone seems to think he was a taxi driver waiting in reception to take me home. But no one knows for sure."

He added: "There were several surprising things about 'my' interview. Judging by my performance, English wasn't my first language and I didn't seem to know much about Apple, online music or The Beatles."

He said the taxi driver "seemed as baffled as I felt". Last night, the driver's identity remained a mystery. None of the taxi firms regularly used by the BBC would admit to employing him.

hahaha, watch the cabbie's reaction (http://img.dailymail.co.uk/video/cabbie.wmv)

MoP
May 15th, 2006, 10:59 AM
Hahahahaha! Brilliant!

nacho
May 15th, 2006, 11:18 AM
This is awesome, his expression in the beginning is priceless. I love how he tries to play it cool throughout the interview.

Taj
May 15th, 2006, 06:35 PM
I saw this on Somethingawful, i love how he manages to bullshit his way through it AND the guy after him agrees!

0kelvin
May 15th, 2006, 06:57 PM
Looks like his identity has been mistaken twice now!

http://www.newswireless.net/index.cfm/article/2708

Turns out he wasn't actually a cabbie, he was an IT guy there for a job interview, who happened to also have the name Guy.



0kelvin

jonton
May 15th, 2006, 07:04 PM
lol!!!

this guy gets respects from me, to blag his way through the interview... he did brilliant.

his expression was pricless too.

DavePalumbo
May 15th, 2006, 07:18 PM
reminds me of that scene in the begining of Spies Like Us where Chevy Chase is answering questions at the press conference

Alcian
May 15th, 2006, 08:06 PM
Heh, the BBC suck. I hate the thought of paying th TV license fee. Im gonna throw my tv out my window... if it fits.

ArlandoBattle
May 15th, 2006, 09:11 PM
Hmm bingo:
OK, reset everything you've heard about my appearance on the BBC: they've found the "taxi driver" and (as I have constantly tried to explain to everybody) he isn't a taxi driver.

His name is Guy Goma - which goes some way to explaining why he (and the BBC receptionist) assumed that someone asking for Guy Kewney was asking for him.

And he wasn't there to pick up a fare, because he's not a cabbie. He's a Business Studies graduate, from the Congo, and he was there in reception because he was applying for a high level IT job with the BBC.

DavePalumbo
May 15th, 2006, 10:47 PM
he was applying for a high level IT job with the BBC

did he get it?

darth massacre
May 16th, 2006, 03:10 AM
Never mentioned. But you gotta hand it to him.....he may not know why he's on the program but what he said is actually very relevant. :teeth:

ArlandoBattle
May 16th, 2006, 07:01 AM
did he get it?

I do not know, but my intuition is leaning toward yes.
edit:
from cnn
Goma told the BBC his interview was stressful, but added he was prepared to return to the airwaves. He said he was "happy to speak about any situation," the BBC reported. Officials at BBC declined to comment on whether he would get the job he was applying fo

ronin684
May 20th, 2006, 05:48 AM
A quote from the sillicon.com story:

The cruellest irony is that if the item had included the real Guy Kewney nobody would have been at all interested. It would have been just another talking head on another 30 second slot on another rolling news item, quite possibly squeezed in between stories about the water shortage in Kent and the cabinet reshuffle.

too true. And IMO the guy deserves the job :). If he can deal with that situation he can deal with any situation. lol