Signed
Drama to be eradicated from Radio 3
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Andrew Slater View PostThey'll have to be quick about it - the contracts with the chosen producers of the 10 brass band programmesIt 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.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Andrew Slater View Post
They'll have to be quick about it - the contracts with the chosen producers of the 10 brass band programmes and 40 20th century modernist programmes (see P.11 of each document) which will fill the slot are probably about to be signed, if they haven't already been.
The barbarians aren't at the door, they're inside.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by french frank View Post
Note that brass bands are another import from Radio 2 joining Jools Holland and Friday Night is Music Night. Only 10 episodes of brass bands so to be followed, no doubt, by The Organist Entertains.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by french frank View Post
Note that brass bands are another import from Radio 2 joining Jools Holland and Friday Night is Music Night. Only 10 episodes of brass bands so to be followed, no doubt, by The Organist Entertains.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by french frank View PostSigned. This is a determined effort to destroy Radio3 as a cultural network.
£1375 per episode, excluding presenter fees
Thats a fraction of what a drama costs . I doubt if £1375 would even cover a Radio Drama writers fee.
The reality is that Radio drama is expensive and gets a small audience . I suspect it’s a tiny one. I don’t know why as audiobooks are doing well and so are podcasts. Possibly the fare is too recondite - the Brooklyn Gatsby on this week is unlikely to be an audience puller. Stars are too expensive and getting newer talent to adapt classics is a lot cheaper than commissioning an established playwright and casting it with star names. It’s also difficult to get foreign investment as the plays can’t be dubbed obviously, Something like 2/3 rds of funding for TV drama comes from outside funders and that’s changing the nature of what gets green lighted and how it’s cast - probably for the worse.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Andrew Slater View PostThey'll have to be quick about it - the contracts with the chosen producers of the 10 brass band programmes and 40 20th century modernist programmes (see P.11 of each document) which will fill the slot are probably about to be signed, if they haven't already been.
The barbarians aren't at the door, they're inside.
Page 4 also claimed:
About Radio 3
BBC Radio 3 is the BBC’s classical music station, also offering a range of broader cultural programming to entertain and absorb audiences. Classical music leads its daytime schedule, complemented by a host of live concerts and live performance every day. Alongside this are distinctive programmes on jazz, world music, and drama, as well as documentaries and speech programmes.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View Post...
The reality is that Radio drama is expensive and gets a small audience . I suspect it’s a tiny one. I don’t know why as audiobooks are doing well and so are podcasts. Possibly the fare is too recondite - the Brooklyn Gatsby on this week is unlikely to be an audience puller. Stars are too expensive and getting newer talent to adapt classics is a lot cheaper than commissioning an established playwright and casting it with star names. ...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by AuntDaisy View PostThanks Andrew.
Page 4 also claimed:
But drama has disappeared from page 4 of the Documentary commissioning brief.a host of live concerts and live performance every day.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThats a fraction of what a drama costs . I doubt if £1375 would even cover a Radio Drama writers fee. The reality is that Radio drama is expensive and gets a small audience . I suspect it’s a tiny one.
Your argument is based on cost rather than value, except that 'value' for the BBC is now measured in terms of cost v reach. The higher ambitions of the early BBC which resulted in the launch of the Third Programme have been abandoned. But there's more money to be made from junk food to the masses ... quantity rather than quality.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.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by AuntDaisy View PostThanks Andrew.
Page 4 also claimed:
But drama has disappeared from page 4 of the Documentary commissioning brief.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by french frank View Post
That's BBC-think certainly, but it's not comparing like with like, is it? Let's do away with the NHS and fund a new wellness channel on BBC TV. Even a 50,000 audience for a play by Lope de Vega would pack 25 provincial theatres around the country, and offer to everyone with a radio something not available anywhere else. Classic plays on television have also largely been consignd to history to be replaced by written-for-television here-today-gone-tomorrow new plays. This has impoverished the country's cultural life.
Your argument is based on cost rather than value, except that 'value' for the BBC is now measured in terms of cost v reach. The higher ambitions of the early BBC which resulted in the launch of the Third Programme have been abandoned. But there's more money to be made from junk food to the masses ... quantity rather than quality.
Having worked on a series that got 2-3 million viewers and was absolutely classic public service broadcasting that was axed putting about 120 out of work I have every sympathy with Drama On 3 but with a 30 per cent cut in funding in real terms the family silver was sold off long ago. Very few have written to the Times about local radio cuts but those services have been very severely cut - much more so than Radio 3 and 4 which because of their powerful middle class educated lobby have been relatively protected.
Comment
-
Comment