Originally posted by scottycelt
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Patten v. Thompson
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amateur51
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostYour antipathy to Margaret Hodge has been aired often scotty. She's a powerful woman (as presumably was Miss Dow), could that be it?
Like a lot of politicians, H can be frustrating. It's got nothing to do with her being a woman, powerful or otherwise.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostLike a lot of politicians, H can be frustrating. It's got nothing to do with her being a woman, powerful or otherwise.
It was often said that part of Margaret Thatcher's hold over her party lay in the fact that she reminded all those old Tory men of Nanny.
Scotty's post did make me think of that:
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostIn fact she reminds me very much of the long-deceased Miss Dow who kept shouting at me in Primary Four ...
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amateur51
Originally posted by eighthobstruction View PostNaaa Never....Wind Up Scotty, you might as well try to wind up a 747....I have carried Miss Lewis 1L through my life too....but Hodge certainly does grandstand, a little inaccurately, but against people who need to be shook up....
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostUnusually for a senior politician, I feel that Margaret Hodge speaks for me in the way she shakes these people up.
I think a Sargeant at Arms (Chief Knocker Up) should be provided to the PAC to leap on the table and slap these people around the face as you would trying to revive an unconscious patient.....Oi Krol....bong ching
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We could, of course, agree to agee that a (strong-willed) woman stands a better chance of getting at the truth than a middle-class, middle-aged-to-elderly man, who, but for the grace of God could be one of the BBC grandees himself. There has never been a woman appointed as BBC chairman, never a woman director-general, never a woman director of the BBC Trust. The lead non-executive director on the BBC Executive Board, a man, was [!!!] a Barclays banker. And the one woman didn't get an easy ride either ("You seem to keep changing your evidence.")
All those men could eat a more timid woman for breakfast and would sit down to eat breakfast with any men of their own kind.
It needed someone not in their mould, and that, on the day, was Hodge.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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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by french frank View PostThompson told them it was going well and they believed him.
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Scene One: BBC Trust boardroom
Patten: "So, Mark, how's that IT project going?"
Thompson: "Very well, Chris"
Patten: "Jolly good. Shall we go and have lunch? Your club or mine?"
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amateur51
Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostI agree with you although she does remind me, at times, of Anne Robinson.
I have attended a funeral with Ms Hodge and can report that, off-duty, she's a much nicer person than when she has her foot on Mr Thompson's throat.
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostPrecisely my point about the experience/skillset (lack of?) of the BBC Trust members.
Scene One: BBC Trust boardroom
Patten: "So, Mark, how's that IT project going?"
Thompson: "Very well, Chris"
Patten: "Jolly good. Shall we go and have lunch? Your club or mine?"
One of our complaints, which we made to the Trust, was that the Charter and Agreement stresses that Trust and Executive should be independent of each other, and we thought the Trust had just rubber-stamped management's plans for Radio 3 without understanding the implications (or answering any of the questions we posed). The only reply we got back from a member of Mr Kroll's staff was, 'The Trust is independent of the Executive'. Oh, good. So that's all right, then. Sorry we troubled you.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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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostAnd see my previous one. I was appalled to see them 'Mark-ing' and 'Chris-ing' as they sat side by side when being questioned over the previous BBC Annual Report.
One of our complaints, which we made to the Trust, was that the Charter and Agreement stresses that Trust and Executive should be independent of each other, and we thought the Trust had just rubber-stamped management's plans for Radio 3 without understanding the implications (or answering any of the questions we posed). The only reply we got back from a member of Mr Kroll's staff was, 'The Trust is independent of the Executive'. Oh, good. So that all right, then. Sorry we troubled you.
No answer required, just a suggestion.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostAnd see my previous one. I was appalled to see them 'Mark-ing' and 'Chris-ing' as they sat side by side when being questioned over the previous BBC Annual Report.
One of our complaints, which we made to the Trust, was that the Charter and Agreement stresses that Trust and Executive should be independent of each other, and we thought the Trust had just rubber-stamped management's plans for Radio 3 without understanding the implications (or answering any of the questions we posed). The only reply we got back from a member of Mr Kroll's staff was, 'The Trust is independent of the Executive'. Oh, good. So that's all right, then. Sorry we troubled you.
The Trust is an irreparably broken institution imo and should be replaced by one that is wholly independent of the BBC and of government.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI have personal experience of Ms Robinson which prevents me from agreeing with you (he adds, mysteriously).
I have attended a funeral with Ms Hodge and can report that, off-duty, she's a much nicer person than when she has her foot on Mr Thompson's throat.
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Originally posted by jean View PostWell I'm not so sure.
It was often said that part of Margaret Thatcher's hold over her party lay in the fact that she reminded all those old Tory men of Nanny.
Scotty's post did make me think of that:
He may have been equally terrorised by some male teachers, but he hasn't told us about those.
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