Sunday, September 12, 2010

The tip of Dimblebys 16-hour stint? Honey

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He is 71 but has the appetite of a man thirty years younger. David Dimbleby, anchor of the BBCs choosing coverage, arrived for work on the sunrise of choosing day, proposed report at 10pm and one after another until 4pm on Friday.

Admittedly he did have a two-hour mangle at 6am but what kept him going for the superfluous sixteen hours on air?

Huge enthusiasm, a couple of sandwiches, a little coffee but not as well most differently you have to go to the loo and a lot of honey, pronounced one of the BBC choosing team.

Honey? Yes, it gives him appetite and helps keep his voice going.

Dimbleby has been the BBCs main anchor given the emergence of Thatcherism in 1979. That creates eight elections in a row. He was behind at the college of music yesterday morning, carrying at slightest had a nights nap at his Sussex farm. At noon, bright-eyed and purple-tied, he was presenting a programme on the efforts to form a government.

Only Nick Robinson, the BBCs domestic editor, was on shade some-more over the past 3 days. An enthusiastic figure who customarily functions a 12-hour day regardless, was on air for twenty-five hours from 10pm on Thursday dusk until 11pm on Friday.

He had a really couple of mini-breaks in that period, but no sleep, pronounced a colleague. He thrives on adrenaline.

Jeremy Paxman, interviewing MPs and domestic pundits in the choosing studio, put in an 18-hour change from 10pm on Thursday.

Paxman, who turns 60 on Tuesday, had a couple of accessible spats with Dimbleby the man he hopes in the future to attain as the choosing night anchor. But dont gamble on that indispensably being at the subsequent election.

The politicians themselves put in likewise prolonged hours, of course, with Gordon Brown pronounced to have snatched about dual or 3 hours nap on both Thursday and Friday night.

Attending the VE Day rite in Whitehall yesterday he looked exhausted. Perhaps he will nap improved in a bed alternative than the one he has been occupying for the past 3 years in Downing Street.

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