19 comments

  • mmsimanga 13 hours ago
    On South African national TV the interviewee's chair broke. Still cracks me up to this day. https://youtu.be/XnHIeXQCfog?si=u4kzKfPLKSNGbBf_
    • opium_tea 4 hours ago
      The caption declaring him chairperson is absolutely perfect.
    • dude250711 8 hours ago
      Because of their composure, it almost looks like an intended format: you have 20 seconds to make your point before the chair collapses.
      • nxobject 37 minutes ago
        Honestly? A political interview show with gags like that would lighten things up. A few "crime is everywhere!!!" politicians would do very well with a whoopie cushion.
    • londons_explore 11 hours ago
      There must have been some maintenance crew who had been asking for a bigger budget for months...

      I wonder if they assisted the chairs downfall...

    • hermitcrab 8 hours ago
      That gave me a good laugh on a Monday morning. Thanks.
  • ebbi 18 hours ago
    His facial expression when the presenter was introducing 'him' is absolute gold! When I first watched it, I actually thought it was a skit - it being BBC, the animated facial reactions, the presenter trying to navigate his (non)-answers.
  • haritha-j 3 hours ago
    Thery claim this is a masterclass in how to keep your cool under pressure, but that really doesn't appear to be the case? Surely, if you realise you're not the person that's supposed to be interviewed, the correct thing to do would be to make the presenter aware of this rather than mislead the audience? not saying this is not a good response or that I would've done better, but to herald this is as the correct course of action seems a bit far.
    • adjejmxbdjdn 1 hour ago
      The entire interview went by and no one realized anything was wrong.

      I’m not sure how a disruption of a live interview would be any better, especially given that he only realized something had gone wrong when the presenter was introducing him on live TV.

    • nxobject 39 minutes ago
      I do think about what I would have done – maybe I would quietly leaned into the ear of the presenter and mentioned something.

      But, also, I wouldn't take any chances if I was trying to get hired there...

    • whycome 2 hours ago
      So you would want to make the large organization that you’re hoping to work for look bad?
    • bstsb 2 hours ago
      i would agree if it weren’t for his presence on live TV! at that point it seems too awkward and late to mention something
    • sandworm101 1 hour ago
      No. This is the masterclass in keeping your cool during a BBC interview:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mh4f9AYRCZY

      The old people here might remember the term "to Kramer into a room", which definitely applies to this clip.

  • meken 4 hours ago
    Love the story and the article. The only nit I have with it:

    > “His answers are… understandable, and maybe in some ways more digestible than we would get from an expert,” he said.

    This does not reflect his actual responses? The interviewer keys off his most emphatic sounding words to keep the conversation flowing, but his answers are generally inscrutable.

    He did a great job given the cards he was dealt though.

  • sxzygz 2 days ago
  • spenczar5 2 hours ago
    > A correction was made on May 6, 2026: An earlier version of this article misstated the country where Guy Goma grew up. He is from the Republic of Congo, not the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    Right guy, wrong Congo! You can't even make this stuff up.

  • zdw 18 hours ago
    This seems to have happened about a year before "The IT Crowd" episode "Smoke and Mirrors" aired.

    In that episode Moss, one of the IT denizens, goes to a TV studio where he is mistakenly put on a news program and interviewed about a war.

    I wonder if they're related...

  • toast0 14 hours ago
    I hadn't seen or heard of this one. It reminds me a bit of this classic c-span moment: https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2014/12/16/371232190...
    • swores 6 hours ago
      Are you just sharing "this is something else on a TV program that amused me", or am I being dense in my failing to spot anything that's similar between the two situations?
  • rchaud 16 hours ago
    One of the first viral videos in the early years of Youtube. This was at a time when the Internet was just small enough that a single video could organically circulate around the whole world and be universally appreciated for its ridiculous yet endearing nature, by adults and kids alike.
  • rmason 2 days ago
    For those without a NYT subscription:

    https://archive.is/xZgBI#selection-505.0-505.55

    • cocoacat 17 hours ago
    • binaryturtle 17 hours ago
      But this needs a Cloudflare subscription, or something? I can't open it either. :)
      • bstsb 1 hour ago
        it’s a fake Cloudflare interstitial, actually using reCAPTCHA. seems like the owner has some sort of vendetta against Cloudflare after the DNS stuff
        • dotBen 48 minutes ago
          I'm familiar with the beef he has with CF, but why put up the fake cloudflare interstitial to me the end user who is just trying to use his service. I remain confused...
      • lamonade 8 hours ago
        try vpn. i think archive.is blocks at least Finland
        • baobabKoodaa 5 hours ago
          "blocks" is a generous way of putting it. it puts you into an infinite recaptcha loop. i would rather just see a message saying i am blocked.
  • travelmalta 1 hour ago
    He's had a book written on this now. That's great but I'd like a book about Guy Kewney instead. The guy was a genius. I remember reading his columns in the computer magazines, a real inspiration.
  • heldrida 17 hours ago
    Related HN posted earlier: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48074260

    A book was released…

  • manyturtles 14 hours ago
    I wish I could have seen Guy Kewney's face when he saw this. Sadly now passed, he had a charmingly irreverent sense of humor around Ziff-Davis UK back in the day.
    • fakedang 8 hours ago
      Well he didn't take it lightly and was very upset. They apparently did a pre-recorded version of his answers that the producers of that segment specifically told the night shift to air online, but the night shift didn't, which further exasperated him.

      https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=VO0kaSHAOSE

  • dagi3d 11 hours ago
    Did he eventually get the job he was initially applying?
  • PUSH_AX 9 hours ago
    They didn't give him the job in the end!
  • mkoryak 15 hours ago
  • ares623 16 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • recursive 16 hours ago
      We're human supremacists. We would take risks to rescue stranded hikers, but not as much to rescue a stranded e bike. We eat animals but not humans. Humans are special to humans.
    • DoktorDelta 15 hours ago
      He didn't boil a lake in the process
      • recursive 1 hour ago
        Not a great line of argument. Humans are producing plenty of heat.
  • renticulous 8 hours ago
    Just goes onto show how fragile the trust network between humans is overall. Today, journalism is all about "trusted sources", "official sources", "my birdie told me".
    • GJim 7 hours ago
      Oh dear.

      If you bothered to read the story behind this, you would know the chap had the same name as the 'real' person being interviewed who was waiting in a different reception area. Our man got called forward by mistake, he was a quiet chap who didn't want to rock the boat and so (very amusingly) got interviewed by an unknowing presenter.

      To claim this is about fragile trust, rather than a silly mistake, is bollocks.