Originally posted by french frank
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Controller, BBC Radio 3
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostNot sure whether you are being ironic
Some of the arguments have definitely been put forward by the BBC - such as the need to pay R2 presenters (and sports presenters?) top salaries to attract the best: the best being the ones who have the greatest public appeal and therefore bring in audiences because people 'like the presenter'; and news gathering being inherently more expensive. I used to study the annual figures - and service licences under the BBC Trust were particularly useful - to see how as far as network radio was concerned Radio 3 dropped down the pecking order to become the network with the smallest budget (it had been Radio 1), and Radio 2, comparatively, was getting more and more. It's particularly valued by the BBC because it's "the nation's favourite radio station" with the biggest audience.
The use of the metric 'cost per listener' or 'cost per listener hour' (rather than how many millions does it get) seems to me to reek of knowing the cost of everything and the value of nothing. There seemed to be no idea of evaluating what Radio 3's remit entailed. Going back to my minidisc collection I have 50+ recordings of Drama on 3, including 10 Shakespeare plays. Such drama is hugely expensive to produce and I doubt Radio 3 has the budget to replicate that programme now. One-off documentaries, live outside broadcasts, rights payments, as you say, don't come cheap. By comparison, staff salaries play a smaller part in R3's budget than in R2's. It seems to me an inescapable conclusion that Radio 3 is less valued because it has a small - by comparison - audience. It's that, rather than the cost of the content, which sets the budget allowance vis-à-vis the other stations competing for diminishing funds.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 JasonPalmer View PostI am pretty happy with the radio 3 offering except I would like all the singing in English, even like the adverts promoting different programs.
It is a pity that R3 doesn't make better use of its online facilities to make translations available, for instance for the lunchtime recital that you were enjoying. As gurnemanz mentioned on another thread there was a live feed from Wigmore Hall with translations but it doesn't happen often that the stars align like that.
However I'm not an opera lover, where I can appreciate the arguments might be somewhat different.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI was being ironic
Some of the arguments have definitely been put forward by the BBC - such as the need to pay R2 presenters (and sports presenters?) top salaries to attract the best: the best being the ones who have the greatest public appeal and therefore bring in audiences because people 'like the presenter'; and news gathering being inherently more expensive. I used to study the annual figures - and service licences under the BBC Trust were particularly useful - to see how as far as network radio was concerned Radio 3 dropped down the pecking order to become the network with the smallest budget (it had been Radio 1), and Radio 2, comparatively, was getting more and more. It's particularly valued by the BBC because it's "the nation's favourite radio station" with the biggest audience.
The use of the metric 'cost per listener' or 'cost per listener hour' (rather than how many millions does it get) seems to me to reek of knowing the cost of everything and the value of nothing. There seemed to be no idea of evaluating what Radio 3's remit entailed. Going back to my minidisc collection I have 50+ recordings of Drama on 3, including 10 Shakespeare plays. Such drama is hugely expensive to produce and I doubt Radio 3 has the budget to replicate that programme now. One-off documentaries, live outside broadcasts, rights payments, as you say, don't come cheap. By comparison, staff salaries play a smaller part in R3's budget than in R2's. It seems to me an inescapable conclusion that Radio 3 is less valued because it has a small - by comparison - audience. It's that, rather than the cost of the content, which sets the budget allowance vis-à-vis the other stations competing for diminishing funds.
On the plus side Radio 3 is very very popular with a small number of people. Another bizarre factoid from the bran tub of memory - Classical music TV programmes used to get very high AI’s (audience appreciation) with the Vienna New Years Day concert getting onto the 90’s ( out of 100) : a stratospheric figure.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostOn the plus side Radio 3 is very very popular with a small number of people. Another bizarre factoid from the bran tub of memory - Classical music TV programmes used to get very high AI’s (audience appreciation) with the Vienna New Years Day concert getting onto the 90’s ( out of 100) : a stratospheric figure.
I think that high AI scores give reassurance to the BBC and programme producers that they are delivering what listeners/viewers want; it doesn't address whether e.g. Piano Flow, Happy Harmonies, Tearjerker et al should be on Radio 3 in the first place. All that matters is whether they're attracting an appreciative audience.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 when radio 3 spend a lot on a drama tv and radio promotional adverts would drive people to listen ?
I remember once seeing an advert for radio 3 evening concerts before the 6pm BBC one news, as I don't get to see that news a lot these days I don't know if they still happen.
Frank has a valid point, things like the royal opera house get a big budget, I don't see why radio 3 and for that matter BBC four could not broadcast all their productions.Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI have dipped in that same bran tub! I remember - I think it was the first time that the BBC had released AI scores for individual programmes - The New Year's Day concert topping the list. Where specialist material and a smaller number of listeners are involved the scores tend to be higher. AI is I think now a sort of BBC gold standard but there is still one factor missing: the index measures how individuals appreciated what they saw or heard, and ignores the size of the audience. So if this is, say, a regular radio programme the views of people who don't listen (because they think it's awful) are discounted because they aren't listeners. Almost by definition those who listen do so because they enjoy it.
I think that high AI scores give reassurance to the BBC and programme producers that they are delivering what listeners/viewers want; it doesn't address whether e.g. Piano Flow, Happy Harmonies, Tearjerker et al should be on Radio 3 in the first place. All that matters is whether they're attracting an appreciative audience.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostCertainly when I was there AI’s were taken very seriously.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 PostIf I remember, high AI scores were taken as a measurement of 'quality'.
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I found an article about the new controller via twitter from classical music website but can't seem to find a link to share but did some googling and found this spectator article about dumbing down on three so that the writer is listening to a french station instead.
In March, Alan Davey will step down as the controller of BBC Radio 3. His role over the past eight years has been huge. Not only has he overseen programming and strategy for Radio 3 and BBC orchestras, but he has also championed access to contemporary music and focused on forgotten past composers, many of
Edit .. found it..
The Long View | Pity the boss of Radio 3
Annoyingly listening to and commenting on radio 3...
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostThey can be but they are more an indication of audience engagement which is important to programme makers. Most tv and radio is of a bland everyday nature . It is the programmes that stay with people that create loyalty to a channel.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 PostIn other words, their AI metric of what constitutes 'quality' is what is of value to the BBC and programme makers for their own purposes. As an indication of 'quality', others might have alternative views. This is rather like R3 deciding that the 'value' of the original R3 messageboards was that content could be 'fed into' programmes, and live programmes were selected to comment on if the said content could be fed into them - as for Breakfast, Iain Burnside, In Tune. But not Choral Evensong, so that board was eventually dropped completely. All of which provoked the Peasants' Revolt.
And Thirdly because Facebook and other social media made them a bit of irrelevance. Twitter now provides an instant minute by minute gauge of audience opinion if you have the nerve to read it and if the programme is popular enough to get a tweet.
The specifics behind the R3 boards I know nothing about. They do have a value though in providing audience feedback which is actually fairly scant. It’s very difficult to find out what people think about programmes as very few people write in with praise or , as a proportion of the total audience , with complaint . There is a TV audience log which always used to make for interesting reading . I don’t know whether there’s a radio log. In general I found radio much more secretive about that sort of thing,
As I’ve said a high AI is not always an indicator of programme quality - it just an indicator of how much people enjoyed it. That’s not the same thing.
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Originally posted by JasonPalmer View PostOooo what revolt was that then ?
Ein Heldenleben's points partially answered (and partially rebutted re Facebook and Twitter)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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