Martin Bashir

British news reporter
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://mainten.top/biography/Martin-Bashir
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Quick Facts
Born:
January 19, 1963, London, England (age 61)

Martin Bashir (born January 19, 1963, London, England) is a British journalist who worked for various networks in both the United Kingdom and the United States but was best known for his BBC interview with Princess Diana in 1995. However, it was later revealed that Bashir had used deceptive measures to secure her cooperation.

Bashir was born in London to Pakistani immigrants. After graduating from King Alfred’s College (later University of Winchester), where he studied English, Bashir enrolled at King’s College London. There he earned a master’s degree in religious history in 1985. The following year he joined the BBC.

To the surprise of many, the little-known journalist landed an interview with Princess Diana for the BBC’s Panorama program in 1995. Described as “the scoop of the century,” the episode made headlines as Diana gave an intimate view of her faltering marriage—she revealed that both she and her husband, Prince Charles, had been unfaithful—and discussed her struggles with bulimia. Allegations subsequently arose that Bashir had used forged documents to land the interview. However, a BBC internal investigation found no wrongdoing in 1996.

The interview made Bashir internationally known, and other exclusives followed. Notably, in 1998 he interviewed Louise Woodward, a British nanny who had been convicted of involuntary manslaughter while working in the United States. That year Bashir left BBC for Granada Television (later ITV Granada). There he made headlines in 2003 with a controversial documentary about Michael Jackson. For the program, he followed the pop singer for some eight months and conducted lengthy interviews. The result was a candid look at Jackson’s life, and it raised questions about his relationships with young children and his abilities as a father. Jackson’s camp criticized the documentary, claiming that it was “tawdry” and a “gross distortion of the truth.”

The Jackson documentary, which first aired on British TV in 2003, later appeared on ABC in the United States, and in 2004 that channel hired Bashir. The following year he began cohosting the news program Nightline, covering topics that ranged from the Iraq War to the use of anabolic steroids in baseball. In 2008 he was briefly suspended from ABC after making crude remarks during a speech at a dinner for Asian American journalists. Two years later he moved to NBC News, where he became a contributor to Dateline. In addition, in 2011 he began hosting his own eponymous afternoon show on MSNBC. However, in 2013 he abruptly left NBC News after making derogatory comments about American politician Sarah Palin; he notably called her a “world-class idiot.”

In 2016 Bashir returned to the BBC, working as its religion editor. However, he resigned in 2021, citing health issues. Shortly thereafter an independent inquiry into his interview with Princess Diana found that the journalist had been “deceitful.” Although he apologized, Bashir claimed that the forged documents did not play a role in Diana’s decision to grant the interview.

Amy Tikkanen