Who do we Blame?

Tomasz Schafernaker wasn’t aware that he was looking disappointed live on-air. This was because he got no response from the technical crew after saying, ‘Hello.’ Due to the silence, the meteorologist thought he was off-air, and his sad facial expression tells it all.
Funnily, Tomasz started wandering in the media room, picking his nails and clothing, not knowing thousands of eyes were already watching him. We wonder how he felt when he realized ‘BBC’ had not given him notice that he was already being broadcast. Of course, no one is to blame because technical difficulties do happen, and unfortunately, they occurred on Tomasz’s day of reporting.
The Show Must Go On

It was unexpected when ‘BBC’ went through what seemed to be the most prolonged technical difficulty that had never happened before. Millions of viewers were tuned in on that day as the anchor, Hugh Edwards, conducted the channel’s biggest show, ‘BBC News at Ten.’
Believe it or not, the presenter wasn’t aware of anything. He was sitting at his desk comfortably reading through his notes. At the same time, the viewers waited for almost three minutes as the channel kept maneuvering between showing the presenter and some other video clips. After a while, everything was back to normal, and Hugh swiftly started the show like nothing of a big deal had happened.
Well, That Is Not Rodney Stanger

When on-air bloopers happen about a serious matter like that of trying to expose a suspect, it can be a little bit difficult to save. We applaud the quick thinking of the ‘Channel 3’ presenter who kept her calm in this particular case and acknowledged the elephant in the room. “Well, no, this is not Rodney Stanger obviously,” she said.
This happened when a hamster’s photo was put up during a segment about a missing girl. The police had speculations of who the perpetrator could be; a man by the name Rodney Stanger. Nonetheless, it was when the channel should have aired the man’s image that the poor rodent’s picture went up instead.
