Originally posted by Oddball
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The Future of the BBC
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Russ
Originally posted by aeolium View PostThe terms of reference are set by the Secretary of State for DCMS, who has also as it were picked the jury, and presumably will ultimately act as the judge at the end of the process.
Russ
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Originally posted by Russ View PostI think Whittingdale's central problem, and he is acutely aware of it, is that the majority of supporters of the BBC and of the current licence fee system are Conservative voters.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post.... I imagine myself on a televised CMS select committee meeting and telling them what I think of them
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Originally posted by Gordon View Postyou now have the next best thing, respond to this consultation [I have feeling you will anyway!!]
It's tricky: personally, I wouldn't want to hammer the BBC at the moment. Last time, under Labour, it was safer to be critical.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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Russ
(beginning to marshall some thoughts on BBC governance), I am opposed to giving the task of BBC governance to OFCOM, because:
- OFCOM, whilst an excellent regulator, is simply not geared up to take on the task of BBC governance (and I strongly doubt OFCOM would want the job);
- in the same way that the relationship between BBC Executive and Trust has been criticised as being 'too cosy', an equivalent charge could be made against OFCOM were it to hold both the regulatory and governance functions of the BBC;
- if OFCOM were to take on BBC governance, an inevitable question would arise as to why OFCOM is not taking on governance roles in the other bodies and industries it regulates.
Having said that, there is one area I would be in favour of OFCOM taking a greater role, and that is over the initiation and processing of BBC PVTs.
Russ
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Originally posted by Russ View PostHaving said that, there is one area I would be in favour of OFCOM taking a greater role, and that is over the initiation and processing of BBC PVTs.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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Russ
Originally posted by french frank View PostAnd possibly aspects of the regular service reviews now carried out by the Trust?
I think I might be warming to the notion of an 'ofBeeb'.
(The idea of a new quango appealing to the ideological wing of the Minister's jury is probably somewhat remote, albeit ironic and a bit hilarious should the Government go for that option!)
Russ
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wenotsoira
I think that sadly the BBc has no future. The governments of whatever colour all want rid of it.
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Originally posted by Russ View Postmy inclination is to keep them under the responsibility of the Governance body (whoever or whatever that may be in the future)
On funding, I can't see the difficulty with having a commission with the teeth of IPSA: if IPSA says MPs must have a pay rise, the government 'regretfully' has to accept the verdict of the independent body, with no mechanism for MPs to refuse the increase.
If the BBC had to deal with a body with that kind of independence it would be up to them to argue their case for the funding they needed, and no matter how 'regretful' the government was, it would have to fork out. No possibility of having Foreign & Commonwealth or Works & Pensions expenditure lumped on to the BBC either.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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As a continuation of the R1/R2 future above in this thread this from Helen Boaden might add to that discussion. Note the comments from readers below the article.
The key argument seems to be that it these stations lack 'distinctiveness'. The shorthand we often hear - Radios 3 and 4 embody public service broadcasting whilst Radios 1 and 2 are easily replaced by commercial counterparts - is wrong. Take Radio 1. It informs, educates and entertains 10million young listeners a week. It offers daily news (up to six times more news per week than its commercial competitors), regular documentaries (rarely heard on commercial networks) and social action campaigns, highlighting issues like online bullying and teenage suicide. In fact, we estimate around 40% of Radio 1's daytime output is speech - twice as much as comparable commercial outlets.
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Originally posted by Gordon View PostNote the comments from readers below the article.
"It's simple. Let those who want BBC Radio pay for it. I don't and won't."
Sadly, many many people (including several in the government) really do believe that the licence fee should be replaced
in which case
bye bye R3 et al
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Originally posted by Gordon View PostAs a continuation of the R1/R2 future above in this thread this from Helen Boaden might add to that discussion. Note the comments from readers below the article.
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/hele...b_7817036.html
The 40% of R1 daytime that is speech must surely be comprised ( from the little I occasionally hear) principally of presenter banter.
the comments at the bottom must be made up by a particularly nasty machiavellian government advisor.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSadly, many many people (including several in the government) really do believe that the licence fee should be replaced
2010: BBC must take over funding for World Service from F&CO, but breathe a sigh of relief: they win the battle over taking on over-75s licence funding after all.
2015: BBC must take over funding of over-75s licences from DW&P, but breathe a sigh of relief: no legislation to decriminalise non payment of licence fee after all.
2019: Non payment of licence fee decriminalised, but breathe a sigh of relief ………………?????
And so on, until the licence fee payer is footing the bill for more and more and the BBC is getting less and less for making programmes.
The licence fee is a government's great weapon for attacking the BBC.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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