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Striking the Wrong Note Nazih El Ahdab | Senior Presenter, Al Jazeera News Channel

The team behind the book you are reading now requested that I write about one of my most memorable experiences with Al Jazeera. I am not as good at talking about myself as I am about politics, but I will do my best. I have been with Al Jazeera for just five of its 25-year journey. When I first pitched my weekly satire show to the editorial management, I knew it was going to be a herculean task for many reasons. One of those was that Al Jazeera is known for its professionalism built on facts and figures. It would take a magic formula to devise a humorous satire show that adhered to Al Jazeera’s code of ethics – that presented those facts and figures in a burlesque fashion, that was professionally purposeful yet humorous in tone. I never lost sight of the key concept: to be critical without malice or excessiveness and to expose the hypocrisy and contradiction that is rife in political and media narratives. My proposal was ultimately approved, although some of the decision-makers within the Network felt I was ‘hitting the wrong note’. The show pitch had first carried the name ‘The Fifth Estate’ as it was supposed to be a critic of the three ‘estates of the realm’ – namely, the legislative, executive and judicial powers – as well as the ‘fourth

estate,’ the media. I later found out that the German TV channel Deutsche Welle (DW) had a show with the same name; a kind of telepathy I suppose. So, we dropped the title and came up with the current one: ‘Above the Estate.’ From day one, I meant to be a critic of all that comes my way, without exception, including Qatar and its close ally Turkey. Otherwise, the show would be yet another form of the same hypocrisy we criticise. We, at Al Jazeera, truly practice what we preach. An example of this was one of the early episodes slamming the excessive display of the Emir of Qatar’s portrait across Doha during the blockade arbitrarily imposed against the country by three GCC states. I waited for a response from the Qatari government, at least a ‘gentle reproof’ phone call. There was none. The show also criticised Qatar’s minimal ‘working relationship’ with Israel and the coordination of its relations with the Gaza Strip through the Israelis. And it did not stop there. It criticised Qatar’s refusal to restore relations with Damascus while maintaining good relations with Assad’s staunch ally, Iran. The show also dissected all the claims raised by the blockading states against Qatar, to find out if any were

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