The Record Review podcasts have been heavily pruned - they now only go back to 2017 and those from 2012 onwards have disappeared .
Podcasts BAL disappear from BBC Sounds
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThe Record Review podcasts have been heavily pruned - they now only go back to 2017 and those from 2012 onwards have disappeared .
Clips & Podcasts! This link seems to go back a little further, to 2015; and I think this CD Review link goes back to 2012 (Haydn's "The Creation" is 2012, just).
-
-
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostThe Record Review podcasts have been heavily pruned - they now only go back to 2017 and those from 2012 onwards have disappeared .
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by LMcD View Post
I'm wondering how many BBC cutbacks are due to the need to fund the fees paid to the consultants brought in to advise the BBC on how to save money.
But it is a serious point. So many organisations seem to focus so much on saving money, that it eventually costs them more.
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.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by teamsaint View Post
But it is a serious point. So many organisations seem to focus so much on saving money, that it eventually costs them more.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Darloboy View PostThis is infuriating. Especially given that anyone who posts historic recordings of the programme to Youtube seems to be forced to take them down. Does anyone know the reason for this?
As for the pruning of pre 2012 podcasts (#1) that’s more of a mystery. The standard licence for these sorts of things is 5 years or 5 year blocks . But that doesn’t tally with 2024.
I wonder whether there is some wider sensitivity over podcasts? I know there’s a lot of “anti” BBC lobbying been done by the (vast) podcast industry. In some ways I don’t blame them - as soon as any new media market opens up the Beeb tends to go in with both boots and studs up.
Comment
-
-
As I understand it, for those of us listening from outside the UK, we won't be able to listen to 'live' BBC radio, as it is by way of BBC sounds, or be able to access 'listen again' So "Record Review" will be no more than memories from the past. Does anyone know if I'm right, or indeed, have more knowledge about this impending end?
Comment
-
Comment