Originally posted by amateur51
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RAJAR - Radio 3 in Decline?
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I just don't know what is being measured now. Does the R3 figure include people listening via iPlayer or Internet means?
In the article it mentioned something like 45 million people listen to radio - but does that mean they turn the radio on once a week, or month, or they listen for hours each day, or what? I'm sure they have some sort of methodology for estimating the figures, but I really wonder if the figures are themselves not totally meaningful.
It does make sense to have some sort of handle on what people are "consuming" though, as if very few people are listening, either live or in on demand mode, there would be little point in providing the service.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostIt does make sense to have some sort of handle on what people are "consuming" though, as if very few people are listening, either live or in on demand mode, there would be little point in providing the service.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI just don't know what is being measured now. Does the R3 figure include people listening via iPlayer or Internet means?
In the article it mentioned something like 45 million people listen to radio - but does that mean they turn the radio on once a week, or month, or they listen for hours each day, or what?
Each week there is a different panel of, I think, about 2,500 people (a total sample this last quarter of 26,023 - much bigger than the average opinion poll sample), and the quarter (12-13 weeks) averages out the figures collected each week. So it's unlikely that they're going to find, every week, 2,500 people who only listen to radio for 5 minutes.
If, week after week, and then quarter after quarter, you're getting results which are roughly similar for each station, the probability is that you are getting a fairly accurate picture. But the larger the audience (for any given station) the less likelihood there is of inaccuracy. I.e. it's 100-1 (not to scale!) that Radio 2 has between 13m-15m listeners each week. With a station like Radio 3, 'fairly accurate' has the emphasis on the 'fairly. And when you get down to a single programme, like Breakfast, it's more 'fairly fairly' accurate. But being a daily programme it will be more accurate than for a programme which is on for an hour once a week. Theoretically, it could have no measurable audience at all some weeks. BUT, that doesn't mean that in reality it had no listeners - just that the methodology can't cope very well with measuring it.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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Here is the Grauniad's take on the figures:
Matt Deegan: Digital upstart’s move past predominantly analogue big beast highlights steady growth of platform and new-found confidence
"Cultist"? "Public service broadcasting stodge"? Journalists
Ed: Do these figures mean that rather than trying to close down 6 Music a while back the BBC should have been trying to close R3?
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostHere is the Grauniad's take on the figures:
Matt Deegan: Digital upstart’s move past predominantly analogue big beast highlights steady growth of platform and new-found confidence
"Cultist"? "Public service broadcasting stodge"? Journalists
Ed: Do these figures mean that rather than trying to close down 6 Music a while back the BBC should have been trying to close R3?
But, oh - those pop-oriented journalists' opinions. 'Cultist'? A writer and he can't even spell 'elitist'! But he's surely depressingly representative of an equally growing section of the public which thinks that popular ciulture is, not the equal, but miles better than yer 'high culture'.
As for the 'PR coup': one of the major reasons given for closing 6 Music was its low reach/low public awareness. The amount of publicity that the 'pop-oriented' press then gave it solved both problems overnight. Who would fight for Radio 3? Only some obscure 'cultist' cranks, evidently.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 PostBut he's surely depressingly representative of an equally growing section of the public which thinks that popular culture is, not the equal, but miles better than yer 'high culture'.
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Originally posted by Hitch View PostThe Friends of Radio Three must be a cult because I didn't realise it was one. Classic brainwashing!
Cultist as an adjective seems to be a modern usage: I can't find it.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 Serial_Apologist View PostInverted snobbery has long been around; it's only since consumerism got a grip that it has become culturally respectable.
Inverted snobbery, as a respectable pastime, has been completely ruined by middle class journalists getting hold of it, and selling it to the upper middle classes.
They just have to have it ALL, those people.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.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Post
Inverted snobbery, as a respectable pastime, has been completely ruined by middle class journalists getting hold of it, and selling it to the upper middle classes.
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Originally posted by Angle View PostPerhaps what is needed is some downright, plain speaking. Jonathan Miller managed it in The Times today. Here, however, is a report from the DT:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/t...ller-says.html
'Earlier this year, comedy producer John Lloyd also complained about problems with current executives, claiming those in charge are now drawn from "scheduling, marketing and car parking". '
'John Cleese, speaking as Monty Python reunited for a final series of live shows this summer, said the corporation was made up of a "new echelon of BBC executives who can’t write, who can’t direct, who are not really associated with shows" who were nevertheless "supposed to know what they’re doing.” '
"A spokesman for the BBC said: "This is not a description of the BBC we recognise. We're focused on making great TV and radio which audiences tell us they love."
There seems to be a valid point that 'BBC commissioning editors' aren't experts in what they have responsibility for commissioning. From experience , I'd say that with the BBC you are seldom talking to anyone who really has their finger on the pulse of what's happening. The higher you go, the less they know (obvious but unsatisfactory). On the rare occasions that you are, that person is the one who is ultimately responsible for what you're complaining aboutIt 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
There seems to be a valid point that 'BBC commissioning editors' aren't experts in what they have responsibility for commissioning. From experience , I'd say that with the BBC you are seldom talking to anyone who really has their finger on the pulse of what's happening. The higher you go, the less they know (obvious but unsatisfactory).
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