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BBC World's Samantha Simmonds: ‘We are just trying to get things right…we check everything’

Newsreader Samantha Simmonds tells Claire Cantor about her working life reporting on the pandemic

May 14, 2020 09:23
Samantha Simmonds takes a selfie before going on air -  with make up done by herself

ByClaire Cantor, Claire Cantor

4 min read

How’s your news consumption these days? Are you on a news detox for the sake of your nerves, or are you constantly clicking to catch up on the latest developments? Statistics? What if you were the national, daily bearer of bad tidings, passing on the grim story to the masses every day? This is the life of a news presenter that BBC World News journalist Samantha Simmonds knows only too well.

“This story has been around for months since we started covering the news about China,” says Simmonds. “Reading it day in and day out is tough. When lockdown first happened I was so worried.” She admits that reading the news has been upsetting at times. “This particular story really hits home because we all know someone who has been affected. And because we are all in lockdown, you can’t separate yourself [from the story] in the same way. But you to have to try your best not to let it get to you.”

Throughout this crisis, many of us feel that we have been kept in the dark and treated like children when it comes to the hearing the facts of Coronavirus or the Government’s plans for our future. How do the BBC news teams decide what is important for us to know? And how do they sift fact from fiction?