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Claudia Winkleman is being asked to fix a chatshow problem TV created

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Claudia Winkleman’s new BBC One chatshow is being sold as a celebratory moment for a presenter at the peak of her powers, but the job she has been handed is far less glamorous: cleaning up after decades of television decisions that hollowed out the genre she is now expected to save.

Networks drained risk from the chatshow – then hired Winkleman to hide the damage

The Guardian and BBC coverage of The Claudia Winkleman Show frame it as a natural promotion. After years anchoring Strictly Come Dancing and The Traitors, Winkleman has finally been given a series with her name above the door in the coveted Friday 10.40pm slot. The show is produced by So Television, the company behind The Graham Norton Show, and promises a familiar mix of Hollywood stars, music performances and studio audience warmth.

But critics in outlets from the Irish Times to UK tabloids have been blunter about what she is walking into. They point out that the modern chatshow is a tightly engineered publicity machine: guests on the same promotional trail tell near-identical stories on every sofa, pre-interviews shave off any genuinely awkward edges, and the episodes themselves are pre-recorded and edited with social clips in mind. The spontaneity that made the genre compelling in its heyday has been systematically removed by commissioners who wanted shareable moments without the risk.

Entertainment commentary has already noted that some viewers blame Winkleman for these compromises before a single rating is in. When lineups are criticised as underwhelming or the show’s time slot is attacked as “way too late,” the name that trends is hers, not that of the executives who scheduled the programme or the industry that turned celebrity interviews into pre-packaged content. The problem the show faces is structural, but the backlash is already personal.

BBC’s talent-retention politics set her up as the face of a risky bet

The decision to give Winkleman a chatshow is also tangled up with the BBC’s internal politics. Reporting in newspapers such as The Times and Express describes the series as part of a lucrative deal to keep her from being poached by commercial rivals after the success of The Traitors. She is reportedly being paid a seven‑figure sum and promoted as one of the corporation’s most valuable stars, with the chatshow functioning as a high‑profile vehicle that justifies that investment.

At the same time, coverage of the BBC’s finances has highlighted significant cuts to content budgets, with around £150m in savings being sought. That context matters: commissioning a glossy, studio-bound celebrity chatshow at a time of belt‑tightening is automatically controversial. If the ratings underwhelm or social buzz fizzles, critics will have an easy story to tell about money wasted on a vanity project.

Profiles in The Guardian emphasise that this launch is “the biggest week” of Winkleman’s career, but that only sharpens the asymmetry. If the show lands, executives can boast that they backed the right star. If it drifts into respectable but unspectacular numbers, it will be far easier for commentators and online audiences to say that Claudia Winkleman “failed to deliver” than to acknowledge that commissioners handed her a format already showing signs of exhaustion.

Viewers moved on while television doubled down on safe chat

The timing of this gamble is awkward because audience behaviour has already shifted. Research from Ofcom and YouGov shows younger viewers spending far less time with scheduled broadcast TV and far more with on-demand and short-form platforms. Many encounter celebrity interviews first as clipped segments on YouTube, Instagram or TikTok, not as part of a coherent, hour-long chatshow.

That shift has coincided with a boom in other kinds of entertainment that feel less scripted. Competitive comedy formats like Taskmaster and long‑running panel shows such as Would I Lie To You? succeed by leaning into mess, failure and genuine surprise, even as more traditional panel formats have themselves started to feel tired. Meanwhile, reality juggernauts and their celebrity spin‑offs – from I’m a Celebrity side shows to The Traitors and Love Island extensions – crowd schedules with programmes that deliver ongoing jeopardy and social media storylines.

Against that backdrop, a pre‑recorded, sofa‑based chatshow that exists mostly to move units for film studios and streamers feels out of step. Comment writers in Entertainment Daily and other outlets have already questioned whether audiences really want another conventional interview hour when their feeds are full of looser, stranger and more interactive content. Yet the on‑screen narrative will inevitably be simpler: if viewers do not show up in sufficient numbers, the host will be judged to have “lost” the audience.

What This Actually Means

The uncomfortable reality for the industry is that Claudia Winkleman has been hired as both solution and shield. By putting a widely loved presenter at the centre of a fragile format, networks can claim they tried everything before admitting that maybe the problem is not the host at all but the assumptions baked into the show’s design. If the series falters, criticism will land on the person whose name is in the title, not on the commissioners who spent years squeezing risk and unpredictability out of late‑night television.

For Winkleman, that means carrying reputational risk that extends well beyond this single commission. A lukewarm response to the chatshow could be used, unfairly, to question her drawing power even after The Traitors proved she can front truly modern, high‑stakes television. For viewers, it means another cycle in which disappointment with a cautious format is channelled into personal attacks on the presenter rather than pressure on broadcasters to think more creatively about what late-night conversation could be.

How did TV set Claudia Winkleman up to take the blame?

To see how Winkleman ended up in this position, you have to rewind through two decades of British chatshows. When Graham Norton replaced Jonathan Ross in the BBC’s flagship slot, the move was pitched as a bold reinvention: a host with sharper camp humour, looser interviews and a more chaotic energy. For a long stretch, that promise was real. Norton’s show felt like a party viewers were lucky to be invited to.

Over time, however, the gravitational pull of global publicity campaigns and risk‑averse commissioning turned that party into something more mechanical. Hollywood studios learned to parcel out talent across UK and US shows with military precision; publicists coached guests to hit the same beats on every sofa; production teams leaned on pre‑interviews and tight edits to keep things moving. The more television tried to guarantee “moments,” the fewer genuine surprises it delivered.

That is the environment Winkleman inherits. Her strengths – empathetic curiosity, quick timing and a willingness to sit in awkward silence – are exactly the qualities that could make interviews interesting again, but they are up against a system that treats unpredictability as a problem to be solved in the edit. If the structure of celebrity publicity does not shift, even a host as distinctive as Winkleman risks being reduced to a charming compere for pre‑packaged anecdotes.

What are viewers actually choosing instead?

While broadcasters have been tinkering with sets and guest lists, audiences have quietly built different habits. Short‑form video platforms have normalised watching a single two‑minute confession or chaotic panel‑show clip in isolation, without any obligation to sit through the rest of the episode. Streamers have trained viewers to binge serialised drama or reality arcs rather than drop in and out of stand‑alone interview shows.

In that landscape, panel and reality formats that generate ongoing storylines – Taskmaster’s season‑long arcs, The Traitors’ escalating betrayals, celebrity spin‑offs that extend an existing brand – feel more in tune with how people now follow television. A one‑off chatshow episode, even with a starry lineup, has to work much harder to justify its place on a Friday night when almost any moment worth seeing will be sliced into shareable clips by the next morning.

That does not mean the chatshow is doomed as a concept. It does mean that asking one presenter to turn a cautious, studio‑bound format back into event television is a tall order. If the BBC genuinely wants to protect Winkleman from being scapegoated, it will need to show it is willing to experiment with structure, guests and tone – and to own the results, good or bad, instead of letting all the fallout land on the woman in the sparkly jacket.

Sources

The Guardian; BBC; The Independent; Express; The Irish Times; YouGov; Ofcom

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