Gavin Esler
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Gavin Esler (born Glasgow, February 27, 1953) is a BBC television presenter.
Gavin Esler is currently one of the five main presenters on BBC Two's flagship political analysis programme, Newsnight. He joined the programme in January 2003, replacing Jeremy Vine, who left to take over from Jimmy Young on Radio 2.
Esler also presents Dateline London most Sunday mornings at 11am on BBC News 24. The programme is also broadcast on BBC World. Esler also hosts Radio 4 factual series, Four Corners along with fellow Scottish broadcaster, Anne MacKenzie. This is broadcast on Monday afternoons.
Educated at George Heriot's School, Edinburgh, Esler gained a BA in English and American literature from the University of Kent and a further MA in Anglo-Irish literature from the University of Leeds in 1975[1]. He first entered journalism on the Belfast Telegraph in 1976.
Following this Esler joined the BBC in 1977 as Northern Ireland reporter, and extended his role upon joining Newsnight in 1982. Esler was then made Washington correspondent and later chief North America correspondent for the BBC, in charge of shaping coverage across the whole continent for the corporation, and covering both the earlier George H. W. Bush and Clinton administrations.
He delivered coverage for the BBC's rolling news service BBC News 24 (which he was involved in from its outset) on the Clinton/Lewinsky scandals. His report on the military build up in the Aleutian islands as part of the Reagan administration's New Maritime Strategy earned him a Royal Television award.
Esler also spent several years during the mid 1980s as presenter of BBC One's regional news programme for London and the South East of England - Newsroom South East.
Esler's journalistic credentials extend further across the globe, however: he has reported for news and documentary programmes across Europe, Russia, China and North and South America.
Esler is the author of three novels - Loyalties, Deep Blue and The Blood Brother. He has also written a book on American discontent, The United States of Anger, published in October 1997 (Penguin). He writes a regular column for The Scotsman, The Independent and other publications.
He is married with two children and his hobbies include camping, hiking and skiing.
[edit] Criticism
In a 2004 eulogy for Ronald Reagan in the Daily Mail, Gavin Esler wrote, "Ronald Wilson Reagan embodied the optimistic belief that problems can and will be solved, that tomorrow will be better than today, and that our children will be wealthier and happier than we are." Journalist John Pilger noted, "When even Gavin Esler eulogises Ronald Reagan, we're in trouble". [2]
In 2005 Gavin Esler interviewed George Galloway on Newsnight on the subject of the London bombings. The BBC was reported to have received hundreds of complaints about Esler's interview. The criticism was that Gavin Esler's questioning was "rude and aggressive". [3]
[edit] References
- ^ University of Leeds. Who's been here | Media. Retrieved on 2007-01-06.
- ^ John Pilger Reading List. Retrieved on 2006-10-12.
- ^ Ungallant to Galloway?. Retrieved on 2006-10-12.