I'm a great fan of Simon Reeve's bitter sweet travel programmes - they are a real exploration of the highs and lows that different countries and places have to offer....and although still quite young, he has carved impressive paths round our globe***. I think he researches and writes all of these documentaries himself too. He is far from being just a pretty-faced front man. He also has a natural warmth and interest in people , which brings out the best in those he talks to. I find his programmes alternately inspiring and distressing - but always gripping. Each one is a roller coaster, and I inevitably feel afterwards that I have learnt something new.
I have always presumed that people who work successfully in serious television have been sprinkled with fairy dust - most of it gleaned from public schools, and then while working for first class degrees at Oxford or Cambridge. It was a shock therefore to read Reeve's autobiography, and learn how very different his life has been.
Reeves was brought up in quite a poor part of London, and he and his schoolmates were real delinquents. They would shoplift, or fill car locks with glue. At one time they broke into a stage school near where they lived which had suffered a fire, and they "quite literally smashed it to pieces" . Then they did the same thing again to the same school. "Within a few weeks we were told the damage was so bad the school could no longer be repaired and they had to move to another building." He'd take rides in stolen cars and set fire to rubbish bins. They would steal petrol from pumps and cars and start fires. At thirteen he started carrying a knife.... "You could buy ludicrous weapons by mail order, just by ticking a box to say you were over sixteen." He ended up with a knife the size of a machete. "I revelled in the secret feeling of power and respect carrying a knife gave me. Nobody looks up to a thirteen-year-old....I thought carrying a knife would give me authority. In the years since I've been held up at chaotic guerrilla checkpoints abroad by kids the age I was back then, carrying Kalashnikovs rather than knives. I've seen the look in their eyes, and sensed how they gloried in a feeling of power."
He argues however that he was never nasty. "I often felt at risk of a random act of violence. Over a few years I was mugged for pocket money, was punched hard in the face by a youth wearing a knuckleduster medallion ring, and was chased by a gang of older boys who threatened to kill me....I was also threatened by another boy with a knife..... I was never a gang member, or a really bad lad, I don't think. I was never a brutal, hard kid. I was never deliberately violent and nobody feared me..." Given my marshmallow ideas of what constitutes anti-social behaviour however, I found these descriptions pretty chilling....
At fourteen he was referred by his school for counselling for three years, and he acknowledges that this helped keep him stable. For me it also indicates that the school felt he had serious problems. It seems to me to be quite a giant step for a school to recommend counselling.
His home life was dysfunctional. His father taught maths at one of the toughest in London, "a place that was traumatising for the staff as well as the pupils". His father was a competitive man, quick to anger, who often didn't think twice before ranting and shouting. Confrontation was often his parenting style. Although he could be softer, the relationship was hugely destructive. He and Reeve fought, verbally and sometimes physically. Reeve also had a fiery temper, and put his foot through a door and his fist into a wall. He bashed his brother who then threw knives at him. There was endless shouting, and sometimes things got so violent that the neighbours called the police to come and break it up. Reeves found the rows incredibly upsetting - they "dominated my feelings and emotions. Over the years of my middle teens the arguments and upheaval at home fed a sense of despair and depression that slowly grew within me....."
Leaving school was a very difficult time for Reeves, and he felt suicidal . He was so pessimistic about his future. He still suffers with depression now, although feels that he has learnt to cope with it better. He sees life in "shades of grey".
Then two things happened that had a massive effect on his life - to the extent his life was completely turned around.
On a whim he caught a train up to Scotland, and while there he climbed a mountain. The weather was bad and he was inadequately dressed for the climb. It was very challenging. He passed climbers who suggested that he turn back, but he continued to climb...and eventually he reached the summit. It was a pivotal moment. This gave him a sense of achievement that had hitherto been missing from his life.
Then his father spotted an advertisement in the back of The Sunday Times. The newspaper wanted a small team of boys and girls for their post department, and was holding out the possibility of some journalism training for anyone who worked hard. There were thousands of over-qualified graduates jostling for any job in the media, but this ad was aimed exclusively at non-graduates.
Reeves filled in the form, and sent an accompanying piece of writing - an essay he had written on Schindler's Ark. There were five positions available on the paper. Over 5,000 people applied. Reeves was one of the five who were taken on.
From a life where work was bottom of his list of priorities, it became the most important thing in his life. He worked massively hard, doing even the most menial of chores with enthusiasm, and always walking the extra mile to get everything done as perfectly as possible. Slowly he moved from being a post boy to being someone who helped the journalists with doing the initial research based on newspaper cuttings. He then started occasionally going out on jobs, providing backing for investigative journalists. Then he started writing. He was obviously very good on all these fronts. Eventually he became the youngest staff writer in the history of Times Newspapers.
After a successful career he left the paper to write a book called The New Jackals. It was published in 1998. He was inspired to do this by a bomb exploding beneath the World Trade Centre in New York in 1993. The book explored the person behind the bombing - Ramzi Yousef, a colleague of his called Osama bin Laden, and and gave an overview of terrorism. The book was largely ignored. That is until the September 11 attacks in 2001 on The World Trade Centre, when suddenly everyone wanted to read his book, interview him, and get his views on terrorist activity. The book became a bestseller - one of the biggest-selling non-fiction books in America.
He was working as a freelance writer and author when an acquaintance who worked for the BBC suggested that Reeve audition for a role of documentary presenter,. He went to their head office for an interview....and thus began his television career.....which has been such a success. The book ends with marvellous descriptions of some of his early documentaries. Not only are the countries he visits fascinating, but he also has so much respect for the people he encounters - and I find that most inspiring.
To those who are familiar with his work - this book is every bit as good as his documentaries. I highly recommend it.
***So far he has covered the Mediterranean, Russia, Turkey, Burma, the Caribbean, the Tropic of Cancer, the sacred rivers in India, Greece, Australia, Ireland, the equator, ports round the Indian Ocean and the arctic. Currently we are watching his travels through the Americas.