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Ted Talk! F1 cult hero Kravitz on pit lane secrets and… cheese

Ted is talking about cheese. For a Formula 1 pit lane reporter functioning in a world of tyre compounds and floor specifications, Ted often finds himself talking about cheese. Usually at pre-season testing. A bizarre synonymity, some might say, and readers not drooling in the daily churn of digital F1 content may be a little lost already. Don’t worry, you’re forgiven.

Sky Sports’ ever-present pit lane reporter Ted Kravitz – of BBC and ITV before that – has a style of presenting so inimitable that the man himself has formed a devoted following of his own, hate it as he might. Ahead of his 22nd year of pit lane reporting and 27th working in the sport he loves, Ted’s methodology of fan interaction is constantly evolving. This year, forget TikTok: it’s all about TedTok. So, back to the cheese.

“TedTok was just too good for somebody to steal,” the 48-year-old tells The Independent, in the unusually formal setting for him of an office at Sky Studios. “So I’m just going to put nonsense about doing stuff with cheese on there.

“I put up a video of me and Anthony [Davidson] choosing the perfect cheese in Bahrain to carve away the venturi tunnels of the car to the floor edge… it’s harder than you think.

“You could have got a block of cheddar, but then it would’ve just crumbled away and the whole shoot would’ve been a disaster. This was 20 minutes and Anthony was quite right in choosing the right type of cheese… gouda!”

And there you have it. The end result, Kravitz detailing the changes in the underside of this year’s car with a slightly bemused technical director of AlphaTauri Jody Egginton, is viewable to all on YouTube.

Kravitz’s unique use of cheese in broadcasting started two years ago in an interview with Sebastian Vettel but is one example of how, sometimes unbeknownst to the man himself, he makes the intricacies of physics and mechanical design a viewable commodity to the regular sports fan. No mean feat, it must be said, in a world where F1 is ever-growing and attracting new audiences.

What has also taken on a life of its own in recent years is his Notebook feature on Sky. It started out as a written column for the old ITV Sport website in the noughties, developed into a short video segment for BBC Sport and now has its own 30-minute timeslot on Sky after qualifying on Saturday and the race on Sunday.

Recorded in the most unique of improvised fashions, all in one take, it is a lesson in filling air time with unearthed detail on every driver and every team.

“Only if there’s something really un-broadcastable do we edit it,” Kravitz reveals. “There was a kid in the paddock who flicked the V signs in front of the camera one race, so we had to redo that. But usually it is the livest of live. And there is a thrill about that.

“Last year I apparently caught the moment that Williams was signing the deal with James Vowles to be their team principal! Not the best scoop in the world, it happened without me even noticing, but that’s what people at home like – you get a real behind-the-scenes view of the paddock.

“Once it’s live we never stop, even if I fluff the opening link. It’s unpredictable and whatever happens, happens.”

Like when Ted and his cameraman walk down an upwards moving escalator in Miami. Or when he drinks from his shoe amid a rapturous group of fans in Melbourne. Moments that have become iconic, almost as much as the man himself in F1sphere. A fan banner emblazoned with ‘Hi Ted’ at Silverstone symbolises that. Not that he likes it.

Asked what he makes of a popularity now undeniable, he replies: “I’m just a schlub in shorts, as my grandmother might call me! It makes my toes curl hearing you say that.

“I don’t want to think about it. I appreciate it if people like what I do. I just tell the stories like it is and how I see it – and if that gets me into a scrape here or there, that’s part of the game too.”

Kravitz worked for ITV and BBC before moving to Sky in 2012

Indeed. Last year, for example, Christian Horner and his Red Bull team boycotted Sky as a result of what Kravitz implied in his Notebook feature, speaking about Lewis Hamilton being “robbed” of an eighth World Championship after the controversy in Abu Dhabi in 2021, which saw Max Verstappen win his inaugural crown.

Nowadays, for all the adulation, usually comes criticism too.

“People can misinterpret or not like what I say, but I’ll always say things the way I see them and how a reasonable F1 fan might see things,” he says.

“They might not like that. But if you’re true to yourself and accurate – I will always correct myself if not. But I think people mostly like it and that’s fine. I get embarrassed by it all to be honest.”

Ted’s Notebook feature is a lesson in live broadcasting – but comes with risk

Xural.com

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