Television newsrooms are "created by men, largely for men", a senior female BBC editor said yesterday, as some of the most prominent women in broadcasting lined up to condemn sexism and ageism in the industry.
Penny Marshall, the BBC's education editor, told a parliamentary hearing that she was almost the "last woman standing" of her generation of female journalists. Out of nearly 30 women who began their careers at the same time as she did, there were "five left", she said.
Ms Marshall told the Lords Communications Committee on women in news and current affairs broadcasting that she was determined to give evidence, despite currently undergoing treatment for breast cancer, because as "one of so few women who have lasted" she is so angry about the treatment of female colleagues after they pass 50.
Miriam O'Reilly, the former Countryfile presenter, also gave evidence. She told the peers of an allegation that she had been "blacklisted" by BBC management since an industrial tribunal in 2011 ruled that the broadcaster had discriminated against her on the grounds of age.
Ms O'Reilly, who said the blacklisting allegation by a senior figure in broadcasting was being investigated by the National Union of Journalists, provided the committee with details of statements from six former BBC female colleagues who claimed they had been victimised because of their age. One said older female journalists were "likened to a nanny or schoolmistress, elderly woman or strident old battle-axe", whereas their male peers were "permitted to be ugly, grizzly, fat, old and peculiar". She added that the women had signed confidentiality agreements as part of their pay-offs, which prevent them from talking about their experiences.