Drama to be eradicated from Radio 3

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  • french frank
    replied
    Originally posted by Pulcinella View Post

    This might help!

    Vox is a general interest news site for the 21st century. Its mission: to help everyone understand our complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. In text, video and audio, our reporters explain politics, policy, world affairs, technology, culture, science, the climate crisis, money, health and everything else that matters. Our goal is to ensure that everyone, regardless of income or status, can access accurate information that empowers them.
    Yes, I knew the origin But it only "literally" [sic] means Christ when several of the letters have been removed for a 'popularized shorthand'. I don't feel as strongly about it as other people apparently do or how they feel about people not observing the ritual of watching the sovereign's Christmas day speech on their television sets or listening on their wirelesses.

    That aside, I'm now engaged in drawing up the key bullet points for a letter to go to Messrs Jackson and Davie re the ending of regular full-length drama broadcasts which can no longer be afforded out of BBC's miserly £4bn budget.

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  • kernelbogey
    replied
    An interesting take on the funding of the BBC from the ever-trenchant Simon Jenkins in the Guardian - here proposing a subscription model for funding. (Not directly about Drama on 3 obviously, but we are hearing that it's all down to money.)

    Leave a comment:


  • Pulcinella
    replied
    Originally posted by french frank View Post

    I'm always rather shocked when Christmas is abbreviated to Xmas ...
    This might help!

    Vox is a general interest news site for the 21st century. Its mission: to help everyone understand our complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. In text, video and audio, our reporters explain politics, policy, world affairs, technology, culture, science, the climate crisis, money, health and everything else that matters. Our goal is to ensure that everyone, regardless of income or status, can access accurate information that empowers them.

    Leave a comment:


  • french frank
    replied
    Originally posted by smittims View Post
    Yes, one of my sons spent Xmas dinner with his future in-laws and was shocked. 'What! You don't have the (then) Queen ? ' he berated them. They do it now.
    I'm always rather shocked when Christmas is abbreviated to Xmas ...

    Leave a comment:


  • LMcD
    replied
    Originally posted by vinteuil View Post

    ... why? (genuine question)

    .
    Possibly in the hope that any fierce anti-Royalists on the premises might storm out in disgust into the kitchen and start the washing-up?

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  • french frank
    replied
    Originally posted by smittims View Post
    I gave Xmas a miss this year, no tree, no turkey etc. but I always find five minutes for my King. I like to hear what he has to say.
    I was commenting on the idea that BBC broadcasts can "Unite the Nation", and I would accept the view that there are certain one-off occasions which interest enough of the nation to qualify, given that I would challenge anyone to come up with an occasion which could 100% unite the nation (other than the Last Night of the Proms, Glastonbury or a Cup Final ). Royal occasions might come close given that the minority, whatever percentage, is free to sigh and ignore it completely. My point was not that royal occasions really do unite the nation but that a BBC self-congratulatory notion of uniting the nation is pure fantasy.

    Leave a comment:


  • Andrew Slater
    replied
    Originally posted by smittims View Post
    I'm glad Radio 4 is still broadcast on Long Wave,as I have a good LW radio use for Woman's Hour and The King on Xmas Day!
    But don't hold your breath: it's likely to disappear later this year. I can't find the announcement at the moment, but I think the Droitwich transmitter and its counterparts are due to be taken out of service on 30th June 2025.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sir Velo
    replied
    Originally posted by smittims View Post
    Yes, one of my sons spent Xmas dinner with his future in-laws and was shocked. 'What! You don't have the (then) Queen ? ' he berated them.
    I trust they replied that they saw it for what it was: an establishment trick to keep us in all our place by engendering a fake sense of mutual identification?

    Leave a comment:


  • vinteuil
    replied
    Originally posted by smittims View Post
    I always find five minutes for my King. I like to hear what he has to say.
    ... why? (genuine question)

    .

    Leave a comment:


  • Serial_Apologist
    replied
    Originally posted by smittims View Post
    Yes, one of my sons spent Xmas dinner with his future in-laws and was shocked. 'What! You don't have the (then) Queen ? ' he berated them. They do it now.

    I've found the King's messages less predictable and more moving than the Queen's. I know he's speaking to everyone but I do feel he's speaking to me. I gave Xmas a miss this year, no tree, no turkey etc. but I always find five minutes for my King. I like to hear what he has to say.

    He's supposed to be everyone's king!

    Leave a comment:


  • smittims
    replied
    Yes, one of my sons spent Xmas dinner with his future in-laws and was shocked. 'What! You don't have the (then) Queen ? ' he berated them. They do it now.

    I've found the King's messages less predictable and more moving than the Queen's. I know he's speaking to everyone but I do feel he's speaking to me. I gave Xmas a miss this year, no tree, no turkey etc. but I always find five minutes for my King. I like to hear what he has to say.


    Leave a comment:


  • LMcD
    replied
    Originally posted by vinteuil View Post

    ... I suspect the world is divided into those for whom listening to HMQ or HMK on christmas day is 'a thing', and those for whom it is not.

    In seventy two years I have never knowingly listened to the monarch on 25 December....

    .
    They're both much more enjoyable than PMQs.

    Leave a comment:


  • vinteuil
    replied
    Originally posted by smittims View Post
    The King on Xmas Day!
    ... I suspect the world is divided into those for whom listening to HMQ or HMK on christmas day is 'a thing', and those for whom it is not.

    In seventy two years I have never knowingly listened to the monarch on 25 December....

    .

    Leave a comment:


  • smittims
    replied
    Really, something should have been done about the licence fee in 1956 when ITV started and people began to say 'I don't need the BBC to watch TV'. But it's been allowed to go on becoming more and more of an anchronism.

    I'm glad Radio 4 is still broadcast on Long Wave,as I have a good LW radio use for Woman's Hour and The King on Xmas Day!

    Leave a comment:


  • vinteuil
    replied
    Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post

    Trouble is every one wants every thing but there’s not enough money to pay for it and not enough people are willing to …
    ... not sure that this is cheering news (pretty sure it isn't, for those of us in the niche audience that is Radio Three... )

    The culture secretary calls the TV licence "regressive" and is thinking "radically" about alternatives.


    ,

    Leave a comment:

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