Paul Yarrow: News Nuisance or Man on Mission?

Paul Yarrow has lurked in the background of some 100 British TV broacasts.

August 3, 2010— -- While a BBC reporter describes a house fire on live TV, a man shambles into the back of the frame, pulling a shopping basket behind him.

The man is Paul Yarrow and this is what he does. Yarrow, 42, has made more than one hundred television appearances, loitering behind reporters as they broadcast to Britain.

Yarrow never says anything. He never gestures. He never even smiles. He's now been christened "The News Raider" by the British press and is mercilessly mocked for his appearance.

He is a little overweight, he is losing his hair and he always wears the same beige sweater for his bizarre cameos. Bloggers desperately search for him on the airwaves while cameramen desperately try to keep him out of their shots -- changing their angles and zooming in.

But he's a pro. He moves with them. He peers over shoulders. He knows what he's doing.

"One fat guy [who] just wanted to get on telly," is the damning analysis from Russell Howard, a comedian with a show on the BBC that pokes fun at the news. (Telly is British slang for TV.)

But does Yarrow really just want to get on telly? When I called him up, Yarrow claimed to be camera shy and overwhelmed by his newfound celebrity. After some gentle persuasion, he agreed to meet for fish 'n chips and a cup of tea to explain his motives.

"I'm known as the balding fat man," he told me with a sigh. "Quite rude, the press."

Yarrow said his appearances are a silent protest, a campaign that began three years ago.

So he's not just doing this to be funny?

"I was actually being serious," he said. "But of course, the way I look, the shape I am gives that sort of comical edge."

Yarrow claims he is protesting against the pervasive beauty one sees on television news. He doesn't object to the great hair, white teeth and trim physiques of news reporters. He objects, he says, to media bias against the unattractive when it comes to capturing news events.

The 'News Raider': Getting his Moment on TV

Yarrow claims that people like him are kept off-camera and never asked their opinions. "They tend to bypass people like me," he says of reporters. "Making me feel sort of invisible."

So how did all this start? Well, Yarrow said that, like many Londoners, he has always campaigned for what he believes in. He attends demonstrations. And at these demonstrations he began to notice a trend. Apparently, cameramen would ask him to move out of their shots.

Once, he says, he was asked to give a placard he was holding to someone more photogenic. And, he says, the reporters never talked to him. "They walked past me," he explained. "And would take the microphone to the very next person alongside me."

That, says Yarrow, is why he wants to be on TV. He's making a stand for the average man in the street who doesn't look great on camera but just might have something to say. All of Yarrow's appearances have been on British television. Well, apart from one last month when he wandered into a live shot on the satellite channel Al Jazeera. But that, Yarrow told me, was by mistake.

My impressions of the News Raider are that he is charming, sane and sincere. He says he cares full-time for his ailing mother. He has been honored for the campaigning work he does in his South London community. He is a good guy. Eccentric, perhaps. But so what?

Yarrow has been lambasted by many in the British media as a charlatan and, of course, just a fat guy who wants to be on telly. His treatment, perhaps, underlines his own point: that if you're a little different, then the media might not take you seriously.

Or, perhaps this whole storm in a teacup might, in fact, make a far less profound point: That a large man loitering silently in the back of a live shot is just funny as hell.

Watch the full story tonight on 'Nightline' at 11:35 p.m. ET

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