Emily Maitlis and Jon Sopel – two first-class presenters – leaving BBC to join Global Group. I'm increasingly listening to LBC these days, namely to James O’Brien, Shelagh Fogarty, Matt Frei, Eddie Mair, include Natasha Devon, equally good presenters. If Newsnight reduce first comment call-up to IDS, Peter Bone, Peter Lilley, may return to watching the programme.
Emily Maitlis & Jon Sopel To Leave BBC
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I've been wondering why Emily Maitlis has been absent from Newsnight. Haven't there been a couple of "issues" about her making comments /questions that contravene the recently re-inforced BBC's neutrality in news presenters expressing an opinion (any opinion). Perhaps she is attracted by the opportunity to leave that straight jacket behind....
Originally posted by groovydavidii View Post.......If Newsnight reduce first comment call-up to IDS, Peter Bone, Peter Lilley, may return to watching the programme.
However, none of the developments on presenter departures to date is likely to drive me into being an LBC (or Times Radio) listener....Last edited by Cockney Sparrow; 22-02-22, 20:32.
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Originally posted by cat View PostThe much-vaunted BBC "impartiality" is become so hard to sustain with everyone from Jonathan Humphries to Nana Akua jumping at the chance to go full Daily Mail the moment they quit, that I wonder whether we'll soon see AI presenters being rolled out across their news programmes.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe most urgent matter is a complete redefinition of what 'impartiality' means as far as the BBC is concerned. It can no longer mean allowing both sides of a disagreement equal time/opportunity/treatment to state their case.
The problem comes on all the other issues from Brexit , the economy, culture wars , the housing problem , the funding of the health service where there is a big range of views some very nuanced. It’s almost impossible to reflect the entire range of views or even a selection of them in anything less than an hour long programme and very few people these days are prepared to devote that amount of time to viewing a film or reading a 10,000 word article.
The complexities of the NHS - how it’s structured how it’s funded , how “successful “ it is for example. In the past when working Ive spent weeks researching pieces on it - it’s like trying to wrestle with a whale greased in oil. Just with academia there are a range of opinions - spend more on primary care - no spend less spend more on hospitals - no spend more on health education . The real problem is private practice - no it’s not it’s underfunding etc etc. The irony is that as far as the NHS is concerned there’s more consensus amongst politicians and the public ( to just keep shelling out) than those that work in it and study it . The only thing that the latter two groups have some consensus on is the need for some sort of continental style hybrid insurance system - but try selling that to the public. And try making a film about it and getting it shown…
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostIt’s never really meant that . There is no equivalence given in matters of fact or where the balance of science is based fairly on one side . E.g. The greenhouse effect (fact ) , global warming (strong balance of evidence), man made global warning (ditto maybe slightly less ) .
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThe problem comes on all the other issues from Brexit , the economy, culture wars , the housing problem , the funding of the health service where there is a big range of views some very nuanced.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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I like Emily M but won't be following her to LBC. I don't buy a daily paper any more, just Observer on Sunday and now get my news from various sources, but a rolling news channel is not what I want as my radio listening. I regular check out Sky News and BBC News on the TV to keep in the picture and nearly always watch Newsnight, whoever is presenting, as a good way to round off the day. I mainly obtain latest news on my phone or tablet. The apps, Fast News and NewsNow, are very useful for tracking latest news from various sources, also HuffPost. I also like to use German news sources for a different line on things.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostExcept there was the case of Nigel Lawson being rolled on to represent the climate deniers.
I truncated my last reply to ignore this as possibly leading to controversy . But, yes, and not just nuanced. Completely polarised. Where on earth do you draw the line between reasoned doubts and copper-bottomed certainties on both extremes of the argument?
The position now is there is no need to “balance” where the balance of scientific opinion is strongly on one side. The problem now is addressing the mind boggling complexity of climate change and energy issues. Are people in the West really going to reduce their consumption of hi energy products and almost certainly a lower standard of living (though possibly higher quality) ? Are electric cars really “ greener” than internal combustion? Why are we subsiding the burning of wood chip and aerobic digestion of maize ? Just how green is that? Why have so many nations ruled out nuclear ? On the other hand are the billions being spent on Hinkley money well spent ? Trying to convey even a part of the complexities of those debates in the short amount of time given to them on the contemporary media is very hard which is one reason why the public debate is so thin.
Thanks for taking the time to read this…
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI could write a thesis on media coverage of climate change . The Lawson interview on the Today programme was many many years ago .
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThe position now is there is no need to “balance” where the balance of scientific opinion is strongly on one side.
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThanks for taking the time to read this…It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostNot exactly Back to Methuselah - it was 5 years ago, but point taken that it's now 'ancient history' as far as the BBC's practice is concerned.
And it may be just human nature that gets enraged when some 'obviously' wrong/morally wrong opinion is being spouted by some (evil) idiot … So much is in the eye and ear of the beholder. Yes, sometimes unfortunately the 'balance' IS wrong, but only because some other individual approaches the issue from a different place. Not only allowed but inevitable. I'm not so sure of always being right on anything to want to have to make these decisions.
A pleasure
It’s not all bad - if there’s a strong narrative people will follow a complex eight episode podcast but these are people and emotion -led they are not going to change government thinking much. Another positive sign the return of the long essay in The Guardian and Times - these are nearly always worth reading . A particularly good one from a retiring GP this week…
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5 years seems like a long time. Lawson also sallied forth to lecture us how Brexit would make life better for us. When I say "us" I mean those of us living in the UK. Lawson himself, like a number of other Brexit enthusiasts, has presumably returned to live in pleasant surroundings in France where being ruled by an over bureaucratic and EU dominated government is preferable to the "freedoms" the rest of us are now saddled with.
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