Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Submit Guest Post

Krishnan Guru-Murthy reveals why he finally said ‘yes’ to ‘Strictly Come Dancing’

Produced by BBC Studios, the popular show will return to BBC One and BBC iPlayer this month.

Krishnan Guru-Murthy reveals why he finally said ‘yes’ to ‘Strictly Come Dancing’

Krishnan Guru-Murthy, who is best known as the lead anchor of Channel 4 News, has revealed what led him to finally sign up to compete on the popular dance reality show Strictly Come Dancing.

Produced by BBC Studios, the popular show will return to BBC One and BBC iPlayer this month.


“They have been asking for quite a few years. I didn’t pay much attention or give it much thought. We met for a coffee in June, and I – as I had before – said that I wasn’t interested,” Krishnan told a publication. “In the past, I have either been feeling really obese, not very well, or worried about my health. But this year I was caught at a good moment: I’m feeling a little healthier, and have lost a bit of weight, entirely coincidently.”

He continued, “I couldn’t even fob them off by saying I’d do it next year – it would be impossible for me to do it during general election. I rang my wife and told her I was thinking of saying yes. She thought it was a good idea – which had never happened.”

Krishnan, 53, suffers from a genetic heart condition called Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy. However, he insisted that he felt the need to take part in the intense ballroom competition before he becomes “too decrepit” to compete in the future.

“I even asked my cardiologist if I might drop dead live on BBC One," he told another publication. “No, was his answer. But he couldn’t give me an absolute guarantee. I have to be careful of raising my heartbeat into the red zone; that final 15%. I shouldn’t go there. It’s where people with my condition drop dead."

Add EasternEye As Your Trusted Source
preferred source on google news

More For You

Midjourney accuses Disney, Universal and Warner Bros. of withholding AI documents

The studios say the lawsuit is about protecting copyrighted characters, not preventing the development of AI

Getty Images

Midjourney accuses Disney, Universal and Warner Bros. of withholding AI documents

Highlights

  • Midjourney is asking the court to require Disney, Universal and Warner Bros. to disclose more details about their AI use.
  • The AI company argues internal records could support its defence in the ongoing copyright case.
  • The studios say the lawsuit is about protecting copyrighted characters, not preventing the development of AI.

Midjourney has argued that the Hollywood studios suing it over copyright infringement may be using artificial intelligence in ways similar to those at the centre of the legal dispute, as it seeks broader access to their internal AI records.

In a new court filing, the AI image-generation company asked for Disney, Universal and Warner Bros. to produce more documents during the discovery process, saying the material could strengthen its defence.

Keep ReadingShow less