Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 15
Roger Cook Dies at 83, Leaving 25 Years of Award-Winning Investigative Reporting
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 15

Roger Cook Dies at 83, Leaving 25 Years of Award-Winning Investigative Reporting

3 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jun 15

Summary

  • Roger Cook, the investigative journalist credited with pioneering the doorstep interview, has died peacefully at 83 after a short illness, his family said.
  • ITV led tributes to Cook's "groundbreaking" reporting, saying his work exposed criminal wrongdoing and injustice and helped drive lasting legal change.
  • The Cook Report ran for 16 series from 1987 to 1999 and earned Cook a Bafta special award for 25 years of outstanding investigative journalism.
  • More than 12 million viewers watched his investigations at their peak, even as the New Zealand-born, Australia-raised reporter endured beatings, three broken ribs in one 1981 attack and at one point a police warning of a murder plot.

Insights

Which UK laws were directly changed because of Roger Cook's investigative reporting?
Has social media made confrontational journalism obsolete or more necessary than ever?