Brian Sewell joins the throng!
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Carmen
Good old rumpus-causing Mr Sewell can always be depended on, though it's a shame the article's in that particular paper. I'm surprised, however, that he's raised no objections to Petroc's style. With his abrasive drawl, PT was the first of R3's 'upbeat', DJ-style presenters to hurt my early morning ears, followed a couple of years later by the even worse Sarah Mohr-Pietsch.
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Originally posted by doversoul View PostMickyD
1. Well spotted.
2. I wonder if BS has been following the forum. His vocabulary is rather familiar (not a bad thing at all)
3. I didn’t know you were a Mail reader
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Originally posted by Carmen View PostI'm surprised, however, that he's raised no objections to Petroc's style. With his abrasive drawl, PT was the first of R3's 'upbeat', DJ-style presenters to hurt my early morning ears, followed a couple of years later by the even worse Sarah Mohr-Pietsch.
I suspect there are better ways of getting the FoR3's point across than relying on fickle Daily Mail columnists.
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Originally posted by MickyD View Postit would have been far more effective in a non-tabloid.
The Indie managed a review of which the writer was someone who listened to Radio 3 for a week but otherwise never listened to it and was quite approving; the Guardian's radio critic wrote a piece in which she quoted - so she said - this website (with a tinge a distaste), when in fact the quotes were taken from one of the Telegraph articles. And another Guardian journalist made himself 'unavailable' when I asked for a meeting (he gave the impression it was necessary to check with Roger Wright first). So, yes, it's a pity that the Indie and Guardian (in which Tom Service is the equivalent of the Telegraph's Michael White) show no interest, as yet.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 Carmen
though it's a shame the article's in that particular paper
I suspect there are better ways of getting the FoR3's point across than relying on fickle Daily Mail columnists
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amateur51
I'm afraid that I read 'thong' for 'throng' and now have to sponge down my screen which is pebble-dashed with AllBran
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Well, actually, given the paranoid way politicians etc now quote the Mail at almost every turn, it is not bad thing that this 'blue-top' is carrying something like this, The Mail is a populist paper, exactly where the BBC want to take R3 and to have ti blasted by a heavyweight IN the Mail is salutary and one hopes likely to cause a fluttering in the dovecotes. Would that Rob Cowan had similar misgivings about the bilge he has to conduct.
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Don Petter
A goodly blast, which might bring such complaints to a wider audience, which can only be a good thing.
(Amused, though, to see that BS thinks that Pacific 231 must imply an American loco.)
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Originally posted by Word View PostI suspect there are better ways of getting the FoR3's point across than relying on fickle Daily Mail columnists.
Most of the BBC's arguments ignore the fundamental questions.
'Should the BBC offer a service which is devoted to the 'highbrow' arts (first major difficulty - how do you define the highbrow arts? - Corneille's The Comic Illusion, on Do3 last night?), with expert specialist presentation?' [Drama on 3 is a useful benchmark: it epitomises what we think Radio 3 should be (not least in being content which only a minority listens to!).]
But high, demanding standards = elitist, exclusive and claims that a small group of people wants to tailor the station to their own preferences or 'keep everyone else out'.
The BBC generally avoids the insults but says things like: 'Radio 3 offers superb, high quality content and we feel it would be a shame [sic] for it not to be shared more widely.'
The symptoms - phone-ins, twitterings, inanities, repetitious, undemanding music 'braying' or uninformed presenters - can all be superficially 'put right', but unless the arguments are won they will all creep back again in their new 'moving with the times' forms.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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BetweenTheStaves
No-one mentioned that Brian Sewell has picked up on the phrase Radio 2.5.
Also in the same issue, Janet Street-Porter has also come out against Radio 2.5 and as she's been invited to take part at the Free Thinking Festival in November, she will be an advocate. (Note to readers. It was a toss-up in cafe nero this morning whether I read the DM or the Grauniad). Link to her piece here http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/ar...time-home.html down to the bottomLast edited by Guest; 26-09-11, 10:32.
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