This looks like a promising next step on the road towards opening up the BBC archive. I am much more interested in the radio archive than in anything on TV, and the article seems mainly to be referring to TV programmes, but at least it establishes the principle of enabling archive downloads which would be far easier to manage with audio files than video ones (at least for the majority with slow broadband). Presumably the difficult copyright issues have been resolved for this project to be considered.
BBC Archive Download project
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Yes, I saw this but lost interest when it appeared only to be covering television programmes. As you say, though, radio may be following and Radio 3 will surely have some treasures.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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Perhaps one should wait and see what happens, but the wording "proposals allowing viewers to permanently download copies of their favourite shows from the archives' strikes me as rather ominous. I for one don't really want things like 'Dad's Army' and 'Fawlty Towers' which are anyway repeated ad nauseam and available on DVD, but programmes such as Alec Clifton-Taylor's three series on English Towns in the 70s and 80s, which seem to have disappeared from the face of the earth and have never been transferred to DVD. The trouble with Clifton-Taylor, in the minds of the populists, is that he 'talked posh', (so 'stuffy', 'inaccessible' ..... fill in your own adjective), and they're unlikely to be repeated even on BBC4. I doubt. too. whether the programmes would come into the category of 'favourite shows'.
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Russ
I understand the scheme will encompass radio. A few weeks ago, Tim Davie hinted that some of it might be free, but he thought it likely the BBC "would want to monetise archive radio drama".
Russ
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Originally posted by mercia View Postthey were marvellous weren't they
and in turn that's reminded me of W G Hoskins's series The Landscape of England
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Russ
Good 'ol Youtube (or the hinterlands of file-sharing 'thusiastas for radio), is probably the best you're going to get for a lot of the decent archive stuff. The BBC is planning to sell only its recent (post-digitalisation) programmes wholesale to a commercial 'YouPay' outfit that will be handling it for resale to the general public. YouPay will be as about as opposite to a public service broadcasting ethic as you could imagine, and won't be interested in anything remotely ancient because it won't be commercially attractive to buy it from the BBC. YouPay will want to deal only with 'popular' stuff - fine if you want the 2009 final of Strictly Come Dancing, but if you're in the mood for an obscure b&w arts documentary from 1968, forget it.
In a way, I'm grateful for Tim Davie for having mentioned radio drama, because radio is way way down the agenda for YouPay, and they probably won't know what radio drama is.
Russ
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Whilst looking for something else I came across this site and this link, very relevant to this discussion...and not really just to those of us interested in World Music.
Can you supply a list of all 7-inch vinyl records manufactured in Kenya and Tanzania that are currently held by the BBC Archive? Such a list should include details of label, catalogue number, artist, A-side, B-side and date of manufacture where known. Yours faithfully, Tim Clifford
I like the idea of the site which enables info sharing on FoI requests. We can be sure that most of the organisations who receive the requests aren't quite so enamoured...
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Globaltruth View PostWhilst looking for something else I came across this site and this link, very relevant to this discussion...and not really just to those of us interested in World Music.
Can you supply a list of all 7-inch vinyl records manufactured in Kenya and Tanzania that are currently held by the BBC Archive? Such a list should include details of label, catalogue number, artist, A-side, B-side and date of manufacture where known. Yours faithfully, Tim Clifford
I like the idea of the site which enables info sharing on FoI requests. We can be sure that most of the organisations who receive the requests aren't quite so enamoured...
As for the BBC, I had it in my mind wrongly that they weren't subject to FOI. But, in a sense, they still aren't judging by that reply. I have some doubts about how organised their record library is. Do they actually know what they have got and what they haven't?
Mixed feelings on the television archive. If the commercial sector is only interested in the recent, that's fine with me. I'm more concerned about safeguarding quality output. Whether we should have to pay for accessing programmes we have paid for to be made is a moot point. I could only see it as justified, and then only slightly, if that is what it takes to maintain the current service.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View Post
As for the BBC, I had it in my mind wrongly that they weren't subject to FOI. But, in a sense, they still aren't judging by that reply. I have some doubts about how organised their record library is. Do they actually know what they have got and what they haven't?
So you can ask about how much it spends on taxis for its senior staff, but apparently not about its record library (which is I presume held for the purpose of art or literature)."I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostAs for the BBC, I had it in my mind wrongly that they weren't subject to FOI. But, in a sense, they still aren't judging by that reply. I have some doubts about how organised their record library is. Do they actually know what they have got and what they haven't?
On the record labels question, they may get out of it because they aren't required to generate information that they don't already 'hold', e.g. which needs special research to put together.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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Lateralthinking1
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I found this programme "In Town Tonight" from 1955 by flook. Astonishingly I remembered bits of it from the age of about eight, especially being impressed by Tito Gobbi and Alistair Sim.
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