Definitely Not A Good Week For The Beeb

Definitely not a good week for the Beeb…

Thanks to George R in the comments for pointing out that criticism of the Beeb’s bloggers – particularly Webb – is finding a wider audience.

[S]urely it’s time the organisation tried to control its bloggers who are becoming more and more outspoken. As a publicly-funded broadcaster, the BBC is supposed to maintain an attitude of political impartiality, but no longer, when it comes to the blogs available on the corporation’s website, reads the Standard’s Diary column.

It goes on to reference a couple of the recent blog entries that have been highlighted here. And it’s none too flattering about Peston, either.

Ross And Brand To Be Investigated

Ross and Brand to be investigated by Ofcom

Sky has the full story. The BBC also has it, but again in its coverage of this forgets to mention that it received over 1,500 complaints – interesting context, I thought.

UPDATE: Definitely not a good day for the Beeb, with both Melanie Phillips and the Guardian’s John Harris having a go at it.

LEAVING ON A JET PLANE

LEAVING ON A JET PLANE

And so, as the sleet falls outside, I pack my sun tan lotion and head off for a short break to warmer climes. I’ll be back in a week’s time but hope that my fellow B-BBC writers will continue to provide you with plenty of meaty material to chew over between now and then. What with the final countdown to the US election and the hysterical Justin Webb now indistinguishable from the Obama-crew, and Gordon Brown being held up as the only man who can save our economic necks, and Wossy and Brand indulging in pranks that distress 78 year olds, has the BBC’s stock ever been higher? I have been enjoying the posts here and hope you have also. Trust this finds you all well and I will speak to you again next week.

And Another Thing…


And another thing…

Anyone know why the Beeb’s website has outsourced part of its US election coverage to Newsweek? The latest piece (following others such as these) is – well, just what you’d expect from a left-leaning news weekly – a predictable pre-emptive strike on any floating voters who dare choose McCain. Here’s the writer’s conclusion, imagining the horror of a McCain victory:

Democrats are despairing over the results, fearing they might never view their country in the same light again. Even many Republicans are subdued at the news of McCain’s victory.

Having expected him to lose, they know the GOP has now completed a sorry transition from the party of Lincoln to the party of cynicism. McCain, they’re reasoning, might prove a fine president, but it shouldn’t have happened like this…

… It probably won’t. Millions of people in the rest of the world assume that Barack Obama cannot be elected because he is black. They assume that the original sin of American history – enshrined in our Constitution – cannot be transcended.

I go into next week’s election with a different assumption – that the common sense and decency of the American people will prove the sceptics wrong.

If You’re Wondering Why It Doesn’t Work


If you’re wondering why it doesn’t work

Steve Hewlett’s piece in The Guardian offers an interesting insight into accountability at the BBC. The discussion is about the proposals for top-slicing the license fee, but the point is more widely applicable:

Senior Ofcom executives have privately expressed surprise at the lack of obvious separation between the BBC Trust and the BBC management on these questions… The Trust, meanwhile, continues to maintain that it represents licence fee payers.

Hewlett’s conclusion (and he has worked for the Beeb) is interesting: Yes, the Trust is required to demonstrate independence, and to represent the interests of licence fee payers by holding BBC management to account. But the Trust is, constitutionally, the BBC – so once you engage in bigger questions about the role, funding or even the very existence of the corporation, the Trust, quite properly, speaks as the BBC and not as a separate or independent regulator of it.

If you’re wondering who actually represents your interests regarding the BBC, then, the answer would seem to be, no one.

In Case You Missed It

In case you missed them…

Guido has an amusing piece up on a surprising episode of Spooks. Shockingly, it goes some way towards reflecting reality – not a fundamentalist Christian terrorist or Mossad conspiracy in sight. As he says, it’s all a terrible disappointment: This is the BBC, we expect to be force fed left-wing platitudes and propaganda, not given a patriotic tear jerker.

Don’t get too excited, though. At the Three Line Whip, Iain Martin points us to this piece by Michael Gove, chastising the Beeb for sucking up to the Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm.

JOHN PRESCOTT – CLASS WARRIOR

JOHN PRESCOTT – CLASS WARRIOR.

Don’t know if any of you managed to endure the first of the BBC’s farcical series examining “class” fronted by tub of lard John Prescott? I caught the last ten minutes – frankly it was just a freak show with Prescott coming across as the bearded lady. In a way it is good to see it since it shows just how hate-driven those like Prescott really are but on the other hand I object to our money being handed over to this delusional class warrior so he can sneer at those who come from different social backgrounds to him.

Open Thread

General BBC-related comment thread! Please use this thread for comments about the BBC’s current programming and activities. This post will remain at or near the top of the blog – scroll down for new topic-specific posts. N.B. This is not an invitation for general off-topic comments, rants or chit-chat. Thoughtful comments are encouraged. Comments may also be moderated. Any suggestions for stories that you might like covered would be appreciated! It’s your space, use it wisely

DOG BITES MAN

DOG BITES MAN.

Did you see that the BBC is leading it’s US election coverage with the shock horror news that “Alaska newspaper endorses Obama“? Alaska’s largest-circulation paper, the Anchorage Daily News, said state governor Mrs Palin was “too risky” to be one step away from the presidency. Mmm. Funny how the BBC didn’t tell us that this same newspaper endorsed Kerry in 2004 and Gore in 2000. The BBC – half the picture, all the time.

Setting The Record Straight


Setting the record straight

The BBC Editor’s blog is flagging up a Radio 4 Feedback piece on its blogs that helps clarify their status. It’s only five minutes long, but the key segment has this from presenter Louise Adamson:

Some would say the whole point of a blog is that it should be controversial, outspoken, off the cuff and frequently partisan. So how does that fit with the principles of BBC journalism?

“Badly” is the correct answer, as is daily apparent, but she has the features editor of the BBC’s news website Giles Wilson on instead:

It is quite a challenge so the thing we explain to our bloggers, and thankfully they’ve all got it, is that they shouldn’t misunderstand the apparent informal atmosphere of a blog to let their commitment to impartiality drop. They’ve got to be conversational but they’ve still got to speak in a BBC voice and follow the BBC guidelines on impartiality. Later on he remarks: We don’t think of blog content as being any different to any other news content.

I hope that clears things up.