What do you say about a BBC’s news correspondent’s life’s experiences? He comes across as a thoroughly nice man living through some appalling times.
A hair-raising, revealing and humorous glimpse behind the public dispatches of one of Britain's highest profile TV news journalists More than 20 years ago, author Graham Greene told a then ambitious rookie journalist, Gavin Hewitt, that a foreign correspondent must learn to freeze his conscience, to put his 'soul on ice'. In this absorbing volume of autobiography, Hewitt - now one of BBC News' top correspondents - shares a personal journey of learning to see much, but feel little, of becoming emotionally immune until faced with a life-threatening crisis. It also describes how television news is made and what happens behind the camera. There are moments of extreme fear and moments of humour and friendship too. It is a career in which he has rubbed shoulders with world leaders, royalty, rock stars and the mafia, and found himself arrested, accused of spying and in an army boot camp. Gavin Hewitt offers a real insight into what world figures are like once the camera is turned off. He tells the stories he could tell friends, but could never broadcast. He describes his life in news.
Gavin Hewitt is a journalist for the BBC. Having started his career in Canada, Hewitt began working for the BBC in 1984 on Panorama, a television documentary series. In 2000 he began work as a special correspondent for BBC News.