'scuse me while I bash the sky.........
BBC Young Musician on Four
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VodkaDilc
Originally posted by Panjandrum View PostAh, you hyphenate it Vods? I suppose standardisation has yet to be achieved.
Another interesting one for Panjandrum: looking at the title of this thread, Young Musician on Four. What is "Four" most likely to imply these days: R4, Ch4 or BBC4? For me, I think it would be Ch4!
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Lateralthinking1
A list of ten others who have been in Sky Arts (Murdoch) productions:
Ken Livingstone
Ken Loach
Stephen Fry
Steve Coogan
Thom Yorke
Jeremy Hardy
Jo Brand
Mark Steel
Benjamin Zephaniah
Billy Bragg
Most people who say that they are left-handed naturally grab with the right.Last edited by Guest; 15-04-12, 23:10.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostA list of ten others who have been in Sky Arts (Murdoch) productions:
Ken Livingstone
Ken Loach
Stephen Fry
Steve Coogan
Thom Yorke
Jeremy Hardy
Jo Brand
Mark Steel
Benjamin Zephaniah
Billy Bragg
Most people who say that they are left-handed naturally grab with the right.
Still, not a bad list, is it?
Although I usually change channels if there's any sign of the hypocritical tax avoider Ken Livingstone.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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VodkaDilc
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostA list of ten others who have been in Sky Arts (Murdoch) productions:
Ken Livingstone
Ken Loach
Stephen Fry
Steve Coogan
Thom Yorke
Jeremy Hardy
Jo Brand
Mark Steel
Benjamin Zephaniah
Billy Bragg
Most people who say that they are left-handed naturally grab with the right.
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Richard Tarleton
Today, Lat, you would be able to see Barenboim, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Howard Goodall with Evelyn Glennie, a programme about the National Trust, Joan Bakewell, the Sixteen, lots more on Shakespeare, a new production of Henry lV part 1....
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Panjandrum
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostToday, Lat, you would be able to see Barenboim, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Howard Goodall with Evelyn Glennie, a programme about the National Trust, Joan Bakewell, the Sixteen, lots more on Shakespeare, a new production of Henry lV part 1....
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StopPatriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostToday, Lat, you would be able to see Barenboim, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Howard Goodall with Evelyn Glennie, a programme about the National Trust, Joan Bakewell, the Sixteen, lots more on Shakespeare, a new production of Henry lV part 1....
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You mention Joan Bakewell, another lefty, who would know that many of her favourite constituency, the elderly, would also have difficulties in paying for it. She and the others I have mentioned - is it 14 or 15 of them so far? - should be looking at their own contradictions. Their selfishness really takes the mick.
I stick to what I said about the majority of Sky output being, in my view, without merit. But in the case of what many would call quality broadcasting the situation now looks even worse. This tiny corner of Sky is the private medical company or the private school of television. This means that it is arguably bleeding the BBC dry while providing for the wealthy. Furthermore, whatever its artistic achievements, its standards will not be as high as the BBC standards were in the absence of Sky in several key respects.
First, not being open to everyone, it plays to all the buttons pressed by arts viewers in its marketing surveys. While this might seem preferable to dumbing down to cater for a wider public, it is inferior to a system which holds to a standard and persuades others through content to take an interest. In other words, it is safe, just as dumbing down is safe. ITV wasn't safe in the 1960s, nor the BBC. There was no call for a "Cathy Come Home" but it was done anyway. Ditto the Radio Ballads that were on BBC radio. That is what I mean by innovation. It is fearless. I humbly suggest that fearless - even with disasters - is precisely what we need.
You won't get an Alice Nutter play on Sky Arts. Not only does it need to please its audience but it needs to please the advertisers. Those have far more importance than they should do and was ever the case in the early days of commercial television. Plus there is the issue of the political involvement of those who run it whereas the BBC is neutral; the problem of a lack of any accountability to all; and the fact that it might not stick around. In short, I would suggest that it is too easy to be taken in by it.
I am now seeing this clearly. It is another area where the wealthy left are selling out and potentially leaving other people with nothing. They are every bit as big a menace as rabid right-wing conservative types and have shown that vividly ever since 1997.Last edited by Guest; 16-04-12, 08:25.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostThanks. I admit that the list is impressive. Perhaps I shouldn't ask whether that National Trust programme and the Howard Goodall one were bought from the BBC. The fact is that I wouldn't be able to see it because I am unwaged and not on any benefits.
You mention Joan Bakewell, another lefty, who would know that many of her favourite constituency, the elderly, would also have difficulties in paying for it. She and the others I have mentioned - is it 14 or 15 of them so far? - should be looking at their own contradictions. Their selfishness really takes the mick.
I stick to what I said about the majority of Sky output being, in my view, without merit. But in the case of what many would call quality broadcasting the situation now looks even worse. This tiny corner of Sky is the private medical company or the private school of television. This means that it is arguably bleeding the BBC dry while providing for the wealthy. Furthermore, whatever its artistic achievements, its standards will not be as high as the BBC standards were in the absence of Sky in several key respects.
First, not being open to everyone, it plays to all the buttons pressed by arts viewers in its marketing surveys. While this might seem preferable to dumbing down to cater for a wider public, it is inferior to a system which holds to a standard and persuades others through content to take an interest. In other words, it is safe, just as dumbing down is safe. ITV wasn't safe in the 1960s, nor the BBC. There was no call for a "Cathy Come Home" but it was done anyway. Ditto the Radio Ballads that were on BBC radio. That is what I mean by innovation. It is fearless. I humbly suggest that fearless - even with disasters - is precisely what we need.
You won't get an Alice Nutter play on Sky Arts. Not only does it need to please its audience but it needs to please the advertisers. Those have far more importance than they should do and was ever the case in the early days of commercial television. Plus there is the issue of the political involvement of those who run it whereas the BBC is neutral; the problem of a lack of any accountability to all; and the fact that it might not stick around. In short, I would suggest that it is too easy to be taken in by it.
I am now seeing this clearly. It is another area where the wealthy left are selling out and potentially leaving other people with nothing. They are every bit as big a menace as rabid right-wing conservative types and have shown that vividly ever since 1997.
By the way, the Howard Goodall series is entirely produced by Sky. It represents precisely the kind of serious approach to classical music broadcasting that is but a distant memory at the BBC. And as for your commentholds to a standard and persuades others through content to take an interest
I repeat, it really is quite hard to be lectured about the quality of Sky programming by somebody who never watches it.
Originally posted by Panjandrum View PostDoes being a lateral thinker mean you are more or less likely to come out with complete crap?
Question answered.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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And when did BBC TV have complete and "un-presented" concerts by Abbado, Haitink, Rattle, Gatti, plus regular and complete Puccini / Wagner operas, and recently some astonishing dance material, plus the haunting Playhouse Presents + Tennant? And HBO material as said.
Frankly, for a publicly owned global brand conglomerate, the BBC's record in high-end Arts TV broadcasting in the last four or so years has been pathetic. Proms? Just read what this Forum's members think of the BBC's presentation of many of those concerts. It took The Guardian to start streaming major operas from Glyndebourne eg Turn of the Screw. And other posters will have lists of their own favourite TV Arts progs form round the networks, and my guess is that not many will have been on BBC TV.
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Lateralthinking1
Originally posted by Mr Pee View Postfar too much sex, strong language and violence for poor old Auntie
No, I mean fearless as in imaginative. God forbid, things that haven't been thought of yet except by a wide range of individuals dotted around whose ideas would never be accepted under current regimes.
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostNo, I mean fearless as in imaginative. God forbid, things that haven't been thought of yet except by a wide range of individuals dotted around whose ideas would never be accepted under current regimes.
And feel free to respond to some of my other points.Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.
Mark Twain.
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