GB News

But GB News was playing for real; breakfast time is the battleground on which any new station must fight for ratings and we were assured it would be appointment television. Truthfully the only less palatable appointment I can imagine would be a root canal. Regardless of where you sat on the political spectrum this was unutterably awful; boring, repetitive and cheapskate. GB News is a British television news channel which launched on 13 June 2021.

In its presenter roster and announced features such as "Wokewatch", it appears set to lean heavily into culture wars and attack anything liberal or politically correct, and has been dubbed "anti-woke" by British media. It promises to conform to British television rules on impartiality but there is widespread suspicion that it intends to offer some partisan right-wing programming.

In April 2022, Rupert Murdoch's British news operation News UK launched a rival channel, TalkTV, after many delays. It also promised populist news produced from a right-wing perspective, prompting suspicions that the market for televised hate might be oversaturated and only one (at most) would survive.

Note: the phrase GB (for Great Britain) traditionally refers to the island divided into Scotland, England, and Wales, but not to Northern Ireland, which is geographically part of Ireland but politically part of the UK (United Kingdom). Nonetheless, GB News appears to be aiming to provide the full range of UK coverage.

Ownership and management
GB News was founded by Andrew Cole and Mark Schneider, businessmen who have close links to Liberty media empire (which in the UK also owns Virgin Media and 9.9% of ITV); Cole is a director of and on the board of Liberty Global. The libertarian Malone is known for his support of right wing causes, including Donald Trump, to whom he donated in 2017, and the Cato Institute, whose board he has served on.

Those investing money include:
 * Discovery, the TV group with links to Malone and Liberty. (Now part of merged media group Warner Bros Discovery and reportedly planning to sell its stake. )
 * Legatum, a private equity firm based in Dubai. It has links to Legatum Institute, a right-wing think-tank based in Mayfair, London, which was a prominent advocate for a hard Brexit.
 * , a hedge fund manager who formerly had links to the Lib Dems (in the right-wing, Orange Book faction), but supported Brexit and donated to Michael Gove's Conservative party leadership bid. He also created right-wing opinion website UnHerd.
 * , a commodities dealer and hedge fund manager who became a Tory peer and former Conservative party treasurer.
 * , a City trader and another former Tory treasurer.

Executives include the CEO Angelos Frangopoulos, formerly of Sky News Australia, and John McAndrew of the local Sky News. McAndrew, the director of programming, had a long career in mainstream TV reporting including for Sky News and Euronews, but quit GB News in July 2021 after reported differences over editorial direction.

It is headquartered in Paddington, London.

In August 2022, Discovery announced that it was planning to sell its stake in GB News, as part of a series of divestments following Discovery's merger with Warner Media.

According to Byline Times, "all of GB News' major shareholders are based outside of the UK". It's unclear how its international ownership and London HQ square with promises to report on the whole of the UK and focus on British people's interests.

Presenters

 * . Hired to be the central figure on-screen, until recently a BBC presenter, and formerly editor of the Sunday Times and editor-in-chief of The European (RIP) and The Scotsman. He presented 8 episodes of a nightly news program, with trolling segments entitled Wokewatch and Mediawatch. He then quit, blamed on a combination of technical issues and disputes behind the scenes. Despite claims to be standing up for Britishness, Neil's primary residence is in France.
 * , former Sky News presenter.
 * , former contestant on TV program The Apprentice.
 * , best known as satirical character Titania McGrath, is presenting a show.
 * , former BBC newsreader with apparently a cult following for his sense of humour; he presents features including a token "good news" story.
 * , TV historian. He has attracted controversy for his defence of historian David Starkey who has made a series of dubious comments about black people and British history that could be taken as racist, as well as Oliver's own opposition to Black Lives Matter protests.
 * , former Labour MP.
 * , veteran newscaster with a long history on ITV.
 * , British businessman, TV presenter, and member of the House of Lords, who presented a show answering viewers' questions from a tent in his garden; The Guardian's TV reviewer noted that he "had nothing to declare but his ignorance".
 * , former Sun showbiz editor.
 * , a journalist who later became Boris Johnson's spokesman as mayor of London and worked for Rupert Murdoch's News UK (owner of the Times and the Sun). He was taken off air on 16 July 2021 after expressing opposition to the racist abuse of black English footballers; he "took the knee" in solidarity and was vilified by viewers.
 * Nigel Farage, the right-wing anti-immigrant politician, who was hired to try and bolster ratings and give the channel a more hate-filled direction.
 * , a presenter better known for cosy daytime TV, hired as a morning-show replacement for ex-newsreader Simon McCoy who quit in December 2021.

It has reportedly tried and failed to hire, a broadcaster and journalist best known for his controversial show on LBC radio in London on which he has interviewed many senior politicians.

Two weeks after the channel launched, Neil announced he would step down from the main evening bulletin and be replaced by Colin Brazier.

Anti-lockdown
Several presenters were critical of the lockdown against COVID-19, including Dan Wootton accusing Britain of being a "bio-security state copying China". Wootton claimed lockdowns "have caused far more deaths and devastation than the government has ever admitted", although opinion polls show the British public generally supports lockdowns.

Defence of people who have sex with underage girls
Lady Colin Campbell (a posh British woman who has made a career as an expert on posh people) appeared on the channel to discuss Prince Andrew and his friendship with sex-trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. She sophistically argued that Epstein wasn't a paedophile but an ephebophile and claimed that Andrew was scapegoated to protect other clients with friends in higher places (higher than Buckingham Palace).

Opposition to wokeness and political correctness
It has from the start made its (partly imaginary) enemy the forces of wokeness, formerly known as political correctness, with features such as Neil's Wokewatch. had a focus on the idea that the police are more occupied in arresting people on Twitter and policing language than they are in tackling other crime. One example is the criticism of sportspeople "taking the knee" as a protest against racism; this is part of a wider attempt to paint Black Lives Matter as dangerous extremists, but ignores the generally positive public sentiment towards Black Lives Matter. This reached a new crisis in July 2021 after England's association football team lost the European Cup final and several black players were subject to racial abuse. Some on the station, notably Guto Harri, supported the players, but after Harri "took the knee" in solidarity, he was abused online by viewers and the station denounced his action as "unacceptable", with Harri being taken off air in response to the uproar from racist viewers.

Climate change "skepticism"
Although it doesn't seem to have launched into all-out climate change denialism, GB News has suggested that the COVID lockdown was the result of secret environmentalist conspiracy by the British government to try and reduce emissions. This ties in with a common right-wing conspiracy theory that environmentalism is all about the government imposing arbitrary controls on the population, because that's what evil big government does.

Stop Funding Hate
Anti-racism group Stop Funding Hate (no relation of Hope not Hate) has been campaigning to try and stop companies advertising with GB News, after previous campaigns against newspapers publishing lies about immigrants and refugees.

TV critics
The Guardian was critical of the quality of the programs, noting that its supposed commitment to covering all Britain's regions was limited to some PR puffery about regional airports. Their critic judged that it lacked the personnel to generate sufficient controversy to attract viewers, as well as being frequently rather dull.

In contrast, the Daily Telegraph praised its first night, despite noting that the "sound was often out of sync, one presenter suffered a microphone failure, Sir Alan Sugar disappeared one word into his interview and the sets looked as if they had been hastily cobbled together", calling the opening segment "vaguely North Korean", and criticising Wootton's lack of authority and trustworthiness. That was night one; the breakfast show was "unutterably awful; boring, repetitive and cheapskate."

Its first night ratings peaked at 336,000, a lot more than other rolling news channels, but much lower than the main channels and their news broadcasts. 52% of viewers were aged 65 or over, and 82% were from the ABC1 socio-economic groups (white-collar and professional).

However, after only a few weeks by the end of June, the viewing figures have completely fallen off with the average viewership reaching 25 000, which in television circles is virtually zero.

Not to be confused with...
Henry Bolton of UKIP founded an online thing called GB TV, but it has only put 3 videos online; this has nothing to do with GB News.