That clearly though didn't seem to be a thought running through the mind of TF1's prime time news anchor Gilles Bouleau recently as he interviewed France's former, former first lady Bernadette Chirac.
Gilles Bouleau (screenshot from Le Petit Journal report) |
The woman with the impossible "hair don't" was invited into the studio in her capacity as president of la Fondation Hôpitaux de Paris – Hôpitaux de France which, every year, organises Opération Pieces Jaunes to collect that unwanted small change we all have in our wallets, purses or pockets, to help children in French hospitals.
Bernadette Chirac (screenshot from Le Petit Journal report) |
Anyway there was Chirac, in the studio with ageing French rocker Johnny Hallyday sitting beside her and Bouleau clearly determined to take a less than original approach to the questions he posed.
In fact his style and, more importantly, content bore a striking resemblance to the interview he conducted at around the same time last year.
Virtually word for word, Bouleau repeated the same questions, eliciting more or less the same sort of response.
Ah. That's real probing and exhaustive journalism at its best "copy and paste".
Take a listen to what those ever vigilant folk over at Le Petit Journal on Canal + put together (it's in French naturally but even if you don't understand a word you'll be able to hear that Bouleau asks more or less - maybe more "more" than "less" - the same questions 12 months apart).
20h de TF1: Gilles Bouleau se copie-colle par LeHuffPost
Perhaps the 51-year-old was taking too literally the words he uttered at one point that, "small change has been given a second life for almost 24/25 (2013/2014 interviews) years," in believing the same was true of his interview.
Bravo.
1 comment:
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