I know many here aren't natural Telegraph readers but-
Interesting comment on BBC from Steven Berkoff.
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"Last year, I was trying to watch the BBC on Saturday night," he said. "They had Strictly Come Dancing and Bruce Forsyth. And I watched almost with tears because I remembered when I was 17, 18 I used to see Hamlet and Death Of A Salesman on a Saturday night. That educated me."
Kevin Spacey said something similar a few years back (in rather more refined language ).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 french frank View Post"Last year, I was trying to watch the BBC on Saturday night," he said. "They had Strictly Come Dancing and Bruce Forsyth. And I watched almost with tears because I remembered when I was 17, 18 I used to see Hamlet and Death Of A Salesman on a Saturday night. That educated me."
Kevin Spacey said something similar a few years back (in rather more refined language ).
The comments attached are (at time of writing) 100% in agreement.
I know I've banged on about this now but MY introduction to classical music was blundering across 'Andre Previn's Music Night' as a 13 year old. (Martha Argerich playing Prokofiev's third piano concerto - what young adolescent male could resist!?)
Don't think it could happen now.
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The puzzling thing is that as the BBC expands - television and radio - it finds less and less airtime for anything that can't come under the heading of 'popular culture' - meaning anything which can command a significant audience. As 'popular culture' expands and fragments, so airtime is found for it.
BBC Arts and Entertainment news doesn't seem to have picked up the story yet - so well-spotted, James!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 pastoralguy View PostThe comments attached are (at time of writing) 100% in agreement...
Just ask yourself:
Who is controlling Hollywood, who is controlling the Media Corporations, pouring that intellectual rubbish into people's brains?
Only 6 Media Corporations control all the TV channels.
Churning out nonsense after nonsense.
It tell you who:
The Vatican and the Freemasons.
They are responsible for this.
It's part of their Illuminati "Grand Plan".
(When the article has Berkoff rallying against the BBC, do you think they really meant railing?
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View Post
I know I've banged on about this now but MY introduction to classical music was blundering across 'Andre Previn's Music Night' as a 13 year old. (Martha Argerich playing Prokofiev's third piano concerto - what young adolescent male could resist!?)
Don't think it could happen now.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostThe comments attached are (at time of writing) 100% in agreement.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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I'm surprised that an actor would think television is a better place to see Hamlet and Death of a Salesman than the theatre
the BBC has always done 'light entertainment' (particularly at primetime Saturday evening I would have thought)
he switches on BBC1 on a Saturday evening and is surprised not to get high culture - quite honestly where has he been for the past fifty years ?Last edited by mercia; 06-08-13, 09:15.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe puzzling thing is that as the BBC expands - television and radio - it finds less and less airtime for anything that can't come under the heading of 'popular culture' - meaning anything which can command a significant audience. As 'popular culture' expands and fragments, so airtime is found for it...
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe puzzling thing is that as the BBC expands - television and radio - it finds less and less airtime for anything that can't come under the heading of 'popular culture' - meaning anything which can command a significant audience. As 'popular culture' expands and fragments, so airtime is found for it.
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Originally posted by salymap View PostIt's not my imagination - when BBC4 started I video[e]d some wonderful opera, concerts and plays.
Where are they now in the same quantity, or is [this] just the 'things were better then' syndrome ?
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Originally posted by mercia View Postthe BBC has always done 'light entertainment' (particularly at primetime Saturday evening I would have thought)
he switches on BBC1 on a Saturday evening and is surprised not to get high culture - quite honestly where has he been for the past fifty years ?
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Originally posted by salymap View PostIt's not my imagination - when BBC4 started I videod some wonderful opera, concerts and plays.
Where are they now in the same quantity, or is just the 'things were better then' syndrome ?
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Originally posted by salymap View PostIt's not my imagination - when BBC4 started I videod some wonderful opera, concerts and plays.
Where are they now in the same quantity, or is just the 'things were better then' syndrome ?
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