I was once involved in a piece aired on local TV. During a shift with the service the producer wanted to report on, my colleague and I were accompanied by a film crew. I was driving. At one stage we were diverted to a more urgent call and I told my colleague we were going the wrong way and would have to turn around. After dealing with the call, the crew asked to film us doing a U-turn. And you'll never guess what happened, will you? For several years afterwards I had people coming up to me and laughing at the 'fact' that I didn't know my way around my own home town, because the clip was edited to exclude the urgent call, thus making me look like a twonk.
This is the price I paid for entering into an unspoken agreement that enabled me to publicise myself and my writing (nearly every time I spoke, I managed to introduce my ambitions into the recording that they couldn't edit out). I knew exactly what I was getting myself into and weighed up the pros and cons - one plus is that I now feel extremely comfortable giving interviews, for example. If you are not savvy with how the media works, remember this: Like every other media provider that I know of,
@ITVCaughtOnCamera's bosses are never going to allow editorial control over any submission. And don't forget that TV shows are just that: shows. They are meant as entertainment and, as such, will begin with an agenda to garner ratings (so much more important than facts). So, unless you have an acute awareness that your footage will most certainly be used in ways you may not like and have a thick enough skin to take the crap you'll get from others who forget the 'show' has been edited for ratings, avoid getting involved.
Get out on your bike, instead.