The Scottish Mail on Sunday

My TV colleagues? A bunch of failed actors, blasts Paxo

- By Chris Hastings ARTS CORRESPOND­ENT

JEREMY PAXMAN has launched a scathing attack on his fellow TV presenters, branding them a bunch of ‘failed actors’.

The former Newsnight host is particular­ly critical of Nicholas Witchell, the BBC’s Royal Correspond­ent, who he describes as a ‘buttoned-up presenter who had written a book about the Loch Ness Monster’.

Paxman, 66, poured scorn on Witchell in an interview to promote his autobiogra­phy, A Life In Questions, which is published next month. After describing newsreader­s – Channel 4’s Jon Snow aside – as ‘failed actors’, the star recalled how one producer said cuttingly of one excitable newsreader: ‘Stick a fresh battery in the news bunny.’

Asked if that comment was a reference to BBC News anchor Huw Edwards, Paxman replied icily: ‘I have no comment to make.’

The father of three also has little time for former fellow Newsnight presenter Jeremy Vine, who he once described on air as a ‘Mini-me’ or ‘sorcerer’s apprentice’. Reminded he had once used the disparagin­g remarks, he said: ‘Did I? Good.’

Paxman said he did not miss his days at the helm of the flagship current affairs programme and admitted he hadn’t been very impressed by the great and the good who had frequently crossed his path.

He has also spoken for the first time about his battle with depression. In a foreword to the book, he reveals how he was once dependent on antidepres­sants and friends tell how, as a student, he stood on a bridge and said: ‘It is completely and utterly meaningles­s, isn’t it?’

Paxman told The Times: ‘I don’t see any reasons to be ashamed of saying I’ve suffered depression. I didn’t exactly have a breakdown but it was pretty like one.’

The presenter also admitted hating his father Keith, who once introduced his son to golf club friends as ‘one of those homosexual communists from the BBC’.

In his autobiogra­phy, Paxman recalls The Mail on Sunday’s revelation­s from 2008 that he emailed Sir Stuart Rose, then boss of Marks & Spencer, to raise concerns about the quality of the firm’s underwear.

He writes: ‘I was getting dressed in the gym one morning when, as I put my leg through my Marks & Spencer Y-fronts, the elastic came away from the cotton. I emailed Stuart Rose that afternoon to warn him of what might be a looming crisis. He replied immediatel­y, saying, “Come to lunch. Not just any lunch, an M&S lunch. Bring your pants.”’

The entertaini­ng account duly appeared in the MoS and Paxman’s complaint ‘went global’.

 ??  ?? VINE Did I call him Mini Me? Good
VINE Did I call him Mini Me? Good
 ??  ?? EDWARDS An excitable news bunny? No comment
EDWARDS An excitable news bunny? No comment
 ??  ?? WITCHELL Buttoned-up Loch Ness monster man
WITCHELL Buttoned-up Loch Ness monster man
 ??  ?? ATTACK: Jeremy Paxman lays into BBC colleagues – and also reveals a battle with depression
ATTACK: Jeremy Paxman lays into BBC colleagues – and also reveals a battle with depression

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