Page 75 - Katherine Ryan press pack 2015-20
P. 75

Why are women so lousy at presenting? They must be, or at least one of them would

               have nudged their way into the top 12 most highly paid presenters at the BBC. As it
               is, only two women - Claudia Winkleman and Vanessa Feltz - make it into the top 20.

               Winkleman, ranked 13th on the list, earns £370,000 - 380,000 (not including
               her Strictly salary as that comes under the BBC Studios arm), which is a fifth of what

               Gary Lineker - at No 1 on the salary list with £1.75million - earns. Who knew he was

               five times better at his weekend job?


               The BBC claims progress - the number of women paid £150,000 or more increased

               from 14 to 22 in the year up to 31 March - 34% of the overall list. The aim is for the

               list to be 50/50 men and women by 2020. Jane Garvey of Woman’s Hour has
               declared the pace of change to be “glacial.”



               Meanwhile, Channel 4 did its bit for the gender opportunity gap tonight with the first
               ever all-female edition of 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown. Regular presenter

               Jimmy Carr was replaced by Katherine Ryan for the night, Roisin Conaty, Jessica
               Hynes, Sara Pascoe and Lolly Adefope were the captains and players and Morgana

               Robinson was in Dictionary Corner, hilarious in character as Eastenders actress

               Natalie Cassidy. Rachel Riley and Susie Dent continued in their regular expert roles,
               making the female tally eight.



               There haven’t been that many women on a comedy panel show since The Cheeky
               Girls appeared in the line-up round on Never Mind the Buzzcocks.



               There have certainly never been that many on Cats Does Countdown - which up

               until December last year had featured 73% male guests. The one-woman-per-show
               rule rules. When you look at it that way, one show out of 97 so far “celebrating 100

               years of women’s suffrage” looks a bit daft.


               The important thing is that the line-up didn’t make a blind bit of difference. It was still

               the same old Cats does Countdown - funny, silly, full of quick wit, slow arithmetic and

               time-bending feats during the challenges - with the added bonus of watching Britain’s
               finest female comedians sparring off each other, rather than off four men, for a
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