I know, I know - I shouldn't. But I can't be bothered to comment on Damian Thompson's blog in the Telegraph because there are too many comments there already. But, 'I love the Proms – but why subsidise them?' is the headline. What a mutton-headed question!
"Anyway, back to my original question: why do the (wonderful) Proms need nearly £6 million of your money, out of a budget of around £9 million?
The main factor is that ticket prices are too low. The Beeb may get a philanthropic buzz from charging only £5 for Prommers’ tickets in the arena, but it’s at our expense..."
Um, have you not noticed, Mr Thompson, that the whole of Radio 3 is 'at our expense'? What would it cost Radio 3 to fill all the Proms hours over two months, with the afternoon repeats and other repeats later in the year? What would alternative programming cost anyway? That £6m is just part of Radio 3's programming costs.
Aother frequently heard suggestion is that the Proms 'lose' £6m [sic]. Many people may have begrudged the £6m annual payments that went to Jonathan Ross, but it wasn't presented as 'loss-making' or 'subsidy' - it was just spending (foolishly, outrageously, in my view) on programme content.
In 2009, the BBC spent £1.7m on coverage of Glastonbury - and how much programme time did that fill? (in fact, according to the official figure, the Proms that year 'cost' £3.7m). Radio 1 got little change from a million for The Big Weekend. One weekend! And the Beijing Olympics 'lost' £15.6m of 'our money'.
The licence fee provides two months of live music-making for the entire country. So why, if it comes to that, should the Prommers 'subsidise' the nation's entertainment by paying more? - or should the Proms be henceforth considered no more than a great opportunity to turn in a bit of a profit?
"Anyway, back to my original question: why do the (wonderful) Proms need nearly £6 million of your money, out of a budget of around £9 million?
The main factor is that ticket prices are too low. The Beeb may get a philanthropic buzz from charging only £5 for Prommers’ tickets in the arena, but it’s at our expense..."
Um, have you not noticed, Mr Thompson, that the whole of Radio 3 is 'at our expense'? What would it cost Radio 3 to fill all the Proms hours over two months, with the afternoon repeats and other repeats later in the year? What would alternative programming cost anyway? That £6m is just part of Radio 3's programming costs.
Aother frequently heard suggestion is that the Proms 'lose' £6m [sic]. Many people may have begrudged the £6m annual payments that went to Jonathan Ross, but it wasn't presented as 'loss-making' or 'subsidy' - it was just spending (foolishly, outrageously, in my view) on programme content.
In 2009, the BBC spent £1.7m on coverage of Glastonbury - and how much programme time did that fill? (in fact, according to the official figure, the Proms that year 'cost' £3.7m). Radio 1 got little change from a million for The Big Weekend. One weekend! And the Beijing Olympics 'lost' £15.6m of 'our money'.
The licence fee provides two months of live music-making for the entire country. So why, if it comes to that, should the Prommers 'subsidise' the nation's entertainment by paying more? - or should the Proms be henceforth considered no more than a great opportunity to turn in a bit of a profit?
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