I heard an interesting comment from Gillian Reynolds, that doyenne of radio critics, on Radio 4 this morning about the danger of Podcasts.
Whether we like it or not, BBC is pushing the Podcast idea onto all of us, not least listeners to Radio 3. Reynolds's comment was that the lethal thing about Podcasting is, that it leads us to select whatever is already congenial, familiar and "liked" to the exclusion of those random encounters with the unexpected, spiky - or plain rebarbative - which are often the most valuable experiences we can have.
Listening to Radio 3's atrociously bland bill of fare this Sunday morning ("curated" by the smiling Sarah Walker) made me wonder if this Podcasting ethos is killing the Channel. There was nothing to challenge or wake up adventurous listeners. We were fed a constant stream of soothing, anodyne Granny's Favourites by Brahms, Mendelssohn, Satie and Mahler (guess which movement of the 5th Symphony?), "balanced" - of course - by some "lively" American jazz or Gershwin (I didn't hang around long enough to find out which).
In other words, perfect Podcastery for those wishing for a quiet Sunday-morning snooze in their bath chairs, but irritating for those of us taking the rare Sunday morning opportunity to listen to Radio 3 in hope of being surprised and/or stimulated.
It looks as if Podcast Programming is here to stay. But can Radio 3 justify 24/7 the insult to public funding, when it is pushing slush like this every morning?
Whether we like it or not, BBC is pushing the Podcast idea onto all of us, not least listeners to Radio 3. Reynolds's comment was that the lethal thing about Podcasting is, that it leads us to select whatever is already congenial, familiar and "liked" to the exclusion of those random encounters with the unexpected, spiky - or plain rebarbative - which are often the most valuable experiences we can have.
Listening to Radio 3's atrociously bland bill of fare this Sunday morning ("curated" by the smiling Sarah Walker) made me wonder if this Podcasting ethos is killing the Channel. There was nothing to challenge or wake up adventurous listeners. We were fed a constant stream of soothing, anodyne Granny's Favourites by Brahms, Mendelssohn, Satie and Mahler (guess which movement of the 5th Symphony?), "balanced" - of course - by some "lively" American jazz or Gershwin (I didn't hang around long enough to find out which).
In other words, perfect Podcastery for those wishing for a quiet Sunday-morning snooze in their bath chairs, but irritating for those of us taking the rare Sunday morning opportunity to listen to Radio 3 in hope of being surprised and/or stimulated.
It looks as if Podcast Programming is here to stay. But can Radio 3 justify 24/7 the insult to public funding, when it is pushing slush like this every morning?
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