I recently went behind the scenes at Global News Hour Toronto with the new anchor team of Alan Carter and Farah Nasser, and I had such a great chat with them that I couldn't even fit it all in one blog post! Here, the anchors get personal about parenting, social media negativity, and if they think women on television are judged more harshly than men.
(Update: Farah began her leave of absence from the show earlier than expected - see video. She will continue to work behind-the-scenes and return in the new year.)
What are the
pros and cons of the Global News Hour schedule when you have kids at home?
Alan: The
major downside is that we’re on the air between 5:30 and 6:30, so that’s a
challenge as any parent would know, because I don’t normally get to eat with my
kids {Alan's daughter Ava is nine, son Wynn is seven}. Sometimes we push their dinner way back and I’ll have dinner with them at
7:30 and then send them to bed! There are things you can’t do – it’s tough for
me to get to early soccer games and things like that, but parents work all
kinds of schedules and I certainly wouldn’t single myself out as someone who
has a really challenging schedule. Other people have a lot worse. I do get some
flexibility in the mornings and get the chance to take them to school, so I try to cherish that as my time with them, but trying to spend
quality time with kids while getting them up and out the door to school is not
the easiest thing! I just try to focus on the times I can be with them.
Farah:
Sometimes I see my son for an hour after work and then have to put him to bed
but I think that’s very typical in the city. By the time you get home after
driving in rush hour, when you have a small child it’s hard to spend time with
them, but I’m pushing his bedtime now with this show. He’s watching me on TV
now, but he’s not crazy about it because he gets confused when we go to weather
and I disappear, so we’re trying to get him used to that! Before I was on
during the day so he would never see me on screen. Just being a working mom, and having
everything organized – like every working mom – is a challenge.
Alan with his kids
So your son
Kian is two and a half. What’s he into these days?
Farah: Oh, superheroes!
Batman, Superman. Wonder Woman - he calls her Ruby for some reason - and
airplanes. He’s at that age where he’s just such a funny storyteller, he makes
up stories about random things like how he took an airplane to Mississauga the
other day, stories about crocodiles biting him and all that kind of stuff.
When you
were expecting Kian you were actually pregnant with twins. Are you comfortable
speaking about that? {Note to readers: I
had checked this with the publicist first. I would never spring a question like
this on someone.}
Farah: Yes, with my
first pregnancy I was pregnant with twins. I lost my other son at 24 weeks and
I had to carry him because it was twins, so I couldn’t deliver him, so I
carried him to 32 weeks when my son was born. I was hoping to carry further and
have my son at term but that didn’t work out, so he was born at 32 weeks and I
had a bunch of complications from that. I needed blood transfusions, I was in
the ICU, I almost lost my own life. It’s so complicated when you’re carrying a
life and a death in your own body. So I had to deliver, and then we had a funeral.
It was a very difficult time in my life. I thought after that that I might not
want to go through this again, but I didn’t want pregnancy and childbirth to be
that memory. As a woman, one of the things for me anyway was
that I wanted to have a kid, even more than I wanted to get married, I really
wanted to have a child, and now I want to give my son a sibling.
Farah with her son and husband
Is he
excited about the baby?
Farah: Oh my God,
he’s so excited about his baby sister. Though he also thinks there’s a baby in
his tummy, so that’s funny. He puts his little doll in front of his tummy
sometimes, and asks my husband if he’s having a baby too, and he says ‘No, I just
had a big lunch!’ He’s really excited. I don’t think he fully gets it yet.
I read that
back in your 20s you were diagnosed with an autoimmune disease. How are things
with that now?
Farah: Things are good. I had a flare-up before I got
pregnant but generally things are good. I’ve been pretty much in remission. But
that was tough, I had to take about six months off work in the prime of my
career, the beginning of my career, but so far so good.
Have either
of you had to deal with social media negativity, Twitter trolls, that sort of
thing?
Alan: We’re
both pretty active on social media. I’ve long been active in my other role as
Queen’s Park Bureau Chief, so much of my content is very political which raises
the ire of many people, as objective as I am, and I try to be very objective on
Twitter. The Twitter trolls, I find, tend not to be personal. It’s more political.
I engage to a point until you realize there’s no sense. I might respond to the
first message, but when they just come back with more hysteria, that’s it.
Farah: There
are going to be some people who don’t like your work, that’s just how it is,
not everyone is going to be able to connect, and that’s fine. When I get it, I
just leave it alone. You take the compliments, you take the constructive
criticism. I love feedback when it’s relevant, because that’s how you get
better. I got a recent Facebook comment about being pregnant on air, ‘You just
started this job and now you’re pregnant! Jeez!’, but you just have to say
people are going to have their opinion, they don’t know the backstory.
And you don’t
let it bother you?
Farah: No, you can’t.
If you do, for me anyway, it could really affect my work. I have to put up a
thick skin and say ‘This is just somebody’s opinion, what one person thinks’,
and that’s it.
Literally rubbing shoulders with the new anchors
I think the
message out there in the public is that women on television are judged more
harshly on their appearance than men, and perhaps are told how to look while the men
have it easier. I’m curious to know if either of you has ever been told by higher-ups to change your appearance in any way, or been given negative feedback?
Farah: No, I
don’t think that’s happened to me. Oh, I had one boss, and I kept my hair curly
once and he told me not to do that again, but that was somewhere else years
ago.
Alan: I
think at the beginning of my career I got a lot of that but probably deservedly
so, because I was in my early 20s at the time and didn’t know how to dress, but I haven't had any for a long time. I think you’re absolutely right though, because for
me, how tough is it to pick out a jacket, a shirt and a tie? You’ve got to work
to screw that up. Every once in a while someone will tweet at me, ‘Seriously
dude, you wore a checked shirt, striped tie and polka dot square!’
Farah: Yes, it’s
more the public telling us!
Alan: Or my
dad. He’ll say ‘What is with your hair?’ He’s my greatest fan and my harshest
critic.
Farah: It’s
so true! It’s family members! My aunts will write in, or my mom, and tell me
something about my lipstick, or that a color washes me out.
*****
They both look great to me (in person, as well as on-screen) and more importantly, they are doing a fantastic job as the new anchors of Global News Hour Toronto (weekdays from 5:50-6:30).
Thanks again to Alan, Farah and the Global team for inviting me behind-the-scenes, and I wish Farah good health and all the best with her baby-to-be now that she is on leave.
Here's a parting shot of the reporters-in-training at my house - they love when I bring home swag!