Farmers criticise me for dumbing down, says Countryfile’s Adam Henson

Countryfile star Adam Henson has said he has been criticised by the farming community for “dumbing down” technical terms.

The TV star and author said he tries to take the criticism on board, while also making the show appealing to the widest possible audience.

He told the Press Association: “Sometimes the farming community might criticise me for dumbing it down a bit and not using proper farming technical terms, but what we have to remember when we are making television is we are not talking to experts. It might be an eight or 80-year-old in a flat in Coventry who doesn’t know anything about farming. We have to keep it broad.

BBC Countryfile Live
Matt Baker, left, with Adam Henson (Joe Giddens/PA)

Speaking on the first day of Countryfile Live at Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire, Henson added: “The farming community would love the whole of Countryfile to be all farming and all about agriculture and food production and the price of wheat, but we all know the BBC make programmes to put bums on seats and get people watching and it would be dull for those who aren’t interested in farming.”

BBC Countryfile Live
BBC Countryfile presenters Adam Henson, John Craven, Charlotte Smith, Tom Heap, Anita Rani, Matt Baker and Ellie Harrison today opened the 2017 edition of BBC Countryfile Live (Justin Goff/Goffphotos.com)

“I think what it shows is the power of the media and to the farmers (I’d say), what we need to do is recognise that and celebrate that and get engaged in the fact that millions of people are tuning in every week to watch Countryfile, and my little slot is very popular, and that there is an opportunity for the agricultural community to talk to the press more.”

Henson said the live event provides him with a valuable opportunity to meet the viewers, but also for the viewers to learn from farmers.

He said: “In the farming areas we have farmers with ‘Ask the farmer’ T-shirts on so we have got pig farmers, dairy farmers, beef farmers, sheep farmers, chicken farmers and they are there with their T-shirts on, so people come up to them and ask them questions about their lives, their jobs, food production, and I think that is really important, that communication and engagement.

“Farmers have travelled all over the country to be here specifically to meet the public.”

Countryfile Live is at Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire until August 6.

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