Andrew Neil ‘almost had breakdown’ at GB News
Veteran presenter, who quit after eight shows, says
technical faults and other problems ‘would have killed him’ if he had carried
on
Nadeem
Badshah
Fri 24 Sep
2021 23.18 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2021/sep/24/andrew-neil-almost-had-breakdown-at-gb-news
Andrew Neil
has revealed that he came close to having a breakdown while at GB News and
believes “it would’ve killed me to carry on” due to the technical problems at
the channel.
The veteran
broadcaster, 72, resigned last week from his role as the rightwing network’s
lead presenter and chairman after weeks of speculation about his future.
Neil was
the face of GB News before it went on air in June, but left after presenting
just eight programmes in three months because of technical hitches, the loss of
senior staff and differences of opinion over its political direction.
On walking
away from his £4m contract, the former BBC presenter told the Daily Mail: “It
was a big decision but I frankly couldn’t care if it was £40m. This would have
killed me if I’d carried on.”
Neil said
he suffered stress and sleep deprivation due to technical issues in the early
days. He told the newspaper: “It just went from bad to worse. There was one day
we spent the whole day preparing the programme and fixing up a number of
interviews down the line [remotely], because that was the business model.
“At one
minute to eight [his flagship show was broadcast live at 8pm], I sat down,
earpiece in, microphone on, only to be told by the director we had no external
communications, so I had no guests.
“I was in
despair. Unlike other shows, where there are two anchors, so they can talk
rubbish to each other, I was on my own.”
Neil said
the “stress was just huge” and that by the end of the first week, he felt like
leaving.
“It was
really beginning to affect my health. I wasn’t sleeping … I had a constant knot
in my stomach. When I did wake up, I’d feel fine, then remember all the
problems I had with GB News, and this knot would come and wouldn’t leave me for
the whole day.”
The
Guardian reported last week that although the terms of his departure were
unknown, multiple GB News sources claim the process was the subject of lengthy
legal wrangling after the deterioration in his relationship with the station’s
chief executive, Angelos Frangopoulos.
In response
to Neil’s comments, a spokesman for GB News said: “At no point did Andrew raise
concerns of the editorial direction of GB News moving to the right. As with all
companies, decision-making rests with the board, and GB News is no different.
As a member of the board, Andrew had the same rights and abilities to raise
concerns, and he was privy to all decisions.
“The launch
date of GB News was set to accommodate Andrew’s own travel plans. Indeed,
contrary to management’s wishes, it was Andrew who insisted the launch date be
announced, failing which he refused to travel to London for it.”
The
spokesman added: “The terms of his departure were properly negotiated and
documented, with Andrew taking legal advice throughout. The fact that he has
chosen to ignore these terms and make his departure unnecessarily contentious and
public is a decision he will have to live with.”


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