BBC Breakfast reporter forced to apologise over Gene Hackman blunder: 'Let's get that straightened out'
BBC Breakfast presenter Charlie Stayt was forced to apologise about a technical glitch in their report about Gene Hackman.
The Oscar-winning American actor, 95, and his wife Betsy Arakawa were found dead in their Santa Fe home in New Mexico along with their dog on Wednesday afternoon.
BBC Breakfast aired a pre-recorded segment about the police investigation into the tragedy on Friday, which ended on a photo of Hackman.
Due to a technical blunder, the image stayed onscreen after the segment ended and Stayt moved onto the next topic - a controversial BBC documentary about Gaza that was narrated by the son of Hamas leader.
Viewers continued to see the image of Hackman as Stayt said: 'The BBC has apologised for serious flaws in the production of a documentary about the war in Gaza...'
Realising the mistake, the broadcaster, 62, looked flustered and said: 'Apologies. Let's just get... that bit straightened out.'
The photo was taken off the screen but there was another issue as it was replaced too quickly with a reporter in Kyiv waiting to present the report on the Gaza documentary.
The reporter could be seen talking at the screen with no audio, before being taken off and flashing up again.
The gaffe was picked up by viewers at home, with one joking on X: 'Work experience trainee producing #BBCBreakfast this morning?'
Police have said Hackman and his wife's death is currently an active investigation but they do not believe foul play was a factor at this time and revealed that detectives found two surviving dogs at his home.
The alarm had been raised by a maintenance person doing pest control at the property, who was concerned because he had not seen the couple, police said.
Hackman's body was found in a mud room, and his wife was found next to a space heater in a bathroom, detectives said.
The acting legend's daughter Elizabeth Jean Hackman has broken her silence on the tragedy, claiming they could have died from carbon monoxide poisoning.
She told TMZ that while she and the rest of her family are not sure of her father and step-mother's cause of death, they believe it could be due to inhaling toxic fumes.
New Mexico Gas Company tested gas lines in and around the home after the bodies were discovered, according to a search warrant, and while no signs of problems were found, a detective noted that people exposed to gas leaks or carbon monoxide may not show signs of poisoning.
Hackman and Arakawa suffered 'no external trauma' and had been 'deceased for quite a while', according to Santa Fe County Sheriff Adan Mendoza.
Further ruling has been left to the Office of the Medical Investigator.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
22 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Gen Z's Important Message on Why Women Need To 'Zoom Out' Goes Viral
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A 25-year-old woman who spent years picking apart photos of herself before posting—or deleting—them has shared a powerful message on Instagram, racking up more than 3.4 million views. Emma-Kirsty Fraser posted a candid photo of herself laughing with a friend alongside the caption: "ZOOM OUT, I beg. I think it's quite terrifying when you realize how much brainwashing it took to get you to zoom in and criticize yourself in so much detail?" The National Organization for Women (NOW) found that 53 percent of American girls say they are unhappy with their bodies by age 13. By 17, that number jumps to 78 percent. It is a statistic that resonates deeply with Fraser, who deleted nearly every photo of herself taken between the ages of 17 and 21. Two screenshots from the viral video showing a close-up of Fraser's arm and the full image, of Fraser and her friend. Two screenshots from the viral video showing a close-up of Fraser's arm and the full image, of Fraser and her friend. Instagram/@ordinaryemm_ "I used to delete group photos if I thought I looked 'bad,'" Fraser told Newsweek. "I wish I hadn't. It was never about how I actually looked—it was how I felt about my body. Thankfully, that's changed, but I'll never get those photos back." In the video, Fraser zooms in on her arms, chin and legs before cutting back to the full image with the text: "Imagine the brainwashing required to get us to see this … instead of this." Fraser, who comes from South Africa, said she had a moment recently where she almost fell back into old habits. "I was at an event and got some photos back, and for a tiny second, I nearly zoomed in on myself," she said. "Then I just looked at the full picture and thought, 'Wow, I've come a long way.'" Just a few years ago, Fraser added, her appearance felt like the most important part of her identity. "Physical appearance was the most-important thing to me," she said. "I thought it was the most-interesting thing about me and that I had to uphold some sort of reputation for being disciplined, strong, skinny etc. "I was always viewing myself through this critical lens," Fraser added. She traces much of that mindset back to growing up around body-obsessed media and behavior. "It started with trash magazines," Fraser said. "And older generations picking apart their bodies in front of us didn't help." These days, she takes a more balanced approach. "I try to stay neutral," she said. "I don't let myself stare too long in the mirror. I don't go up close to analyze my face anymore. I realized no one else is looking at me that way—and, even if they were, I'm more than my body. And my body's more than how it looks." Fraser credits sport for helping shift her perspective. She said: "Sport reminded me that my body can do cool things. That's what I want to remember when I look back on my life. I want to have those photos—and the memories—to show for it." Fraser's video has drawn almost 30,000 likes and a flood of supportive comments. "At every point I was like, what is she talking about? Yeah, I see her arm?" one commenter wrote. "I assume you're pointing out imperfections, but I literally don't see them." Another posted: "The fact I saw this picture and ONLY thought about how it was such a beautiful candid and captured your vibe perfectly." And a third added: "Crazy part? What am I even looking at? The tattoos? Then I realized … it really is so sad. Instead of living and laughing with friends, we're worrying about this stuff."


Fox News
2 hours ago
- Fox News
LA riots, years of protests lead Republicans to seek federally criminalizing blocking traffic
In the wake of anti-ICE protesters and rioters trapping drivers in Los Angeles and other cities in recent days, Republican lawmakers want to make blocking streets a federal crime. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., will seek this week to make it a federal crime to obstruct or create intentional traffic. The "Safe and Open Streets Act" is a direct response to the "radical tactics of anti-ICE protesters who have intentionally blocked roads and highways across the country," Tillis said. Lawbreakers could face fines or up to five years in prison. Video from Los Angeles showed rioters blocking expressways and city streets alike, at times violently attacking or confronting local and federal officers. Under California law, it is a misdemeanor to "willfully and maliciously obstruct the free movement of any person on any street, sidewalk, or other public place" – an ordinance rarely enforced during recent protests. Tillis' own state has not been immune to such blockages, as protesters shut down a busy portion of NC-147; Durham, North Carolina's freeway, during rush hour in November 2023. Those protesters were seeking to "Free Palestine" and objecting to the Western response to the Oct. 7 massacre by Hamas of Israeli and American citizens. Immigration-related protests also cropped up recently on a main thoroughfare in Greensboro. "The emerging tactic of radical protesters blocking roads and stopping commerce is not only obnoxious to innocent commuters, but it's also dangerous and will eventually get people killed. It needs to be a crime throughout the country," Tillis told Fox News Digital. Tillis added that the "radical" anti-immigration enforcement protesters must face the "full weight of the law" if they endanger public safety. Sen. Ted Budd, Tillis' Tarheel State counterpart, will be joining the effort, saying in a statement that emergency personnel being held up by such blockages put the public in further danger. "The First Amendment protects the right to assemble and protest peacefully, but it does not permit such behavior," Budd said. In another recent incident, pro-Palestinian protesters blocked the Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike in Virginia – where Interstates 64 and 95 converge and carve through the city. In that incident, protesters threw ladders and laid chicken wire across the Rocky Mount-bound lanes of the highway to grind rush hour to a halt at the city's downtown "Boulevard" exit. "Blocking major roads to stop traffic flows is nothing short of lawlessness that should not be tolerated," said Sen. Marsha Blackburn of neighboring Tennessee. "These activists are not only intentionally creating a dangerous situation for themselves, but perhaps for a citizen who is awaiting an ambulance or a hard worker who will lose their job for being late," she said in announcing her co-sponsorship of Tillis' legislation; calling out "Hamas sympathizers" such as those in Richmond and Durham. Focusing again on Los Angeles, co-sponsor Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., said that he watched the riots for "nearly a week" as California officials "did nothing" until President Donald Trump stepped in. "[D]omestic terrorists assaulted ICE and law enforcement officers, set fire to cop cars and blocked the streets, all while Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass sat on their tails and did nothing," the former Auburn coach said. "This is a prime example of what happens when lawlessness goes unpunished." In New Orleans, where protests such as the anti-Trump "No Kings Day" event last week have been massive but more orderly, Sen. Bill Cassidy added that he supports Tillis' bill because people have the right to have their voices heard but not to "undermine people's livelihoods."


San Francisco Chronicle
2 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Olympic sprint finalist Knighton at sports court for appeals in doping contamination case
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) — United States sprinter Erriyon Knighton went to court Monday to defend his claim he was contaminated in a positive doping test case that risks a ban from the next world championships. A two-time Olympic finalist in the 200 meters aged just 21, Knighton was cleared to run at the Paris Summer Games last year only after an American tribunal ruled he was not at fault for the positive test for trenbolone, a steroid used in livestock farming. The World Anti-Doping Agency and track and field's Athletics Integrity Unit have challenged that ruling in combined appeals to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. CAS has scheduled the appeal hearing for two days and said a verdict is likely within several weeks. The U.S. track and field national championships start July 31 in Eugene, Oregon. They are trials to pick the U.S. team for the 2025 worlds that open Sept. 13 in Tokyo. Knighton's attorney Howard Jacobs suggested last year Knighton could be 'collateral damage' in an ongoing feud between WADA and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, fueled by how a case of alleged contamination of Chinese Olympic swimmers was handled by the global watchdog. USADA prosecuted Knighton's original case after he tested positive in March last year and accepted the 'no-fault' ruling based on the explanation the contamination was by oxtail from a bakery in central Florida. The USADA investigation included obtaining the meat and testing it, plus interviews with the manager of the bakery, Knighton, his girlfriend and his mother. They backed up the athlete's claim of contamination. In the Chinese case, an explanation of contamination with a banned heart medication in a hotel kitchen in 2021 was accepted without evidence backing the theory. WADA lawyers and officials decided the agency was unlikely to win any appeals brought to CAS without being able to gather independent evidence in China during the COVID-19 pandemic. Knighton is the sixth-fastest 200 runner in track history with a personal best time of 19.49 seconds set in 2022. Usain Bolt's world record is 19.19. He placed fourth in the 200 at past two Olympic Games, and took one silver medal and one bronze from the past two editions of worlds.