Carol Thatcher, daughter of Margaret,

has written an article, How the BBC disgraced my mother, published in the Daily Mail, beginning:

When it comes to separating fact from fiction, the dear old Beeb seems to have been making a bit of a hash of things recently.

There have been a whole string of exposures about faked competition winners, dubious reporting and manipulatively edited documentaries.

Before moving on to her main point:

So serious is the issue that BBC bosses are now sending their staff on training courses to teach them how to be more honest. That’s a sorry sign of the times. I hope members of the BBC drama department and some of its large army of commissioning editors will also be receiving this kind of instruction.

For here, too, the Corporation has been twisting the truth to suit an agenda. A new film about my mother’s early life has just been commissioned by the BBC. Produced by a company called Great Meadow, this drama – entitled The Long Walk To Finchley – has one crucial passage.

Set in the early 1950s, when she was looking for a Conservative seat in Parliament, my mother is shown in a foul-mouthed tirade against the party’s top brass.

“F**king Establishment!” she rails, after being turned down as a candidate in one constituency.

This fictionalised incident would be laughable were it not so offensive. I have never been against satire directed at my mother. I enjoyed, for instance, the musical Billy Elliot, which contained a diatribe against her.

But this BBC screenplay shows a warped view of history. Neither the writer nor the production company seems to have the slightest understanding of my mother’s character and of the moral climate of the early Fifties.

Carol concludes with this, which applies in so many ways to so many of the attitudes and priorities on display in the BBC’s news and current affairs output:

This world has always dripped with unthinking snobbery and scorn towards her because she dared to challenge their knee-jerk ideology and their addiction to taxpayers’ subsidies. Their endless mocking was their attempt at revenge. And this snide film is just the latest example.

Do read the rest.

Update: According to Andrew Pierce in the Telegraph: BBC orders F-word cut from Thatcher drama. Jane Tranter, the controller of fiction at the BBC, told The Daily Telegraph:

The film is a positive portrait, not negative. It makes clear right from the start that Margaret Thatcher, a trained barrister, chemist and mother of twins, is a phenomenon.

Believe it when you see it!

Thank you to Biased BBC reader Sara for the Daily Mail link.

Open thread – for comments of general Biased BBC interest:

Please use this thread for BBC-related comments and analysis. Please keep comments on other threads to the topic at hand. N.B. this is not (and never has been) an invitation for general off-topic comments, rants or use as a chat forum. This post will remain at or near the top of the blog. Please scroll down to find new topic-specific posts.

The BBC shoots at the CIA goalie! The BBC scores! Whoops! It’s an own goal! They think it’s all over… it is now!

* (well, one can dream!). As Ed blogged below, Biased BBC’s story about the BBC’s utter hypocrisy in its desire to embarrass the CIA has gone big, being picked up, among many others, by Daily Telegraph journalist Damian Thompson, Helen at the usually excellent EU Referendum blog (which covers far more than the EU) and the BBC itself, where Pete Clifton has written on the BBC Editors blog:

Words like glass, house and stones spring to mind, because we weren’t exactly sharp about the other obvious question that springs to mind… What about people inside the BBC?

This was an irritating oversight. Some of you have written to complain, others have given the issue a significant airing online (see here, here and here) and beyond.

Pete Clifton goes on to defend the BBC’s participation in Wikipedia – which is fair enough, up to a point. It’s a pity though, and perhaps indicative of the leftist public-sector mentality of the BBC, that the same benevolent attitude wasn’t on show when the BBC leapt gleefully into action to report, with much fanfare (third most important story in the world, remember!), on the CIA’s supposed Wikipedia edits, which are in the main as benign as the bulk of the BBC’s own ‘anonymous’ edits.

Although the BBC has now updated Jonathan Fildes original BBC Views Online Wikipedia ‘shows CIA page edits’ article with a belated mention of the BBC’s own edits, there’s still room, Pete, to improve the honesty of the article much further – after all, what’s good for the CIA goose is just as good for the BBC gander! You’re too coy about the BBC’s own edits of George W. Bush’s Wikipedia entry and Tony Blair’s Wikipedia entry.

Come to think of it though Pete, the headline and tenor of the article is so badly skewed that the whole article ought to be re-written with a focus on the global embarrassment of large organisations, including the BBC, at the stupidity of (some of) their Wikipedia editing employees, rather than maintaining the pretence that the article is about that great BBC bete-noir, the CIA. Don’t worry though, John Leach’s excellent News Sniffer service will make sure the full history of the BBC’s shabby handling of these revelations is clear for all to see (though as I have said for many years, there is no reason, apart from BBC corporate secrecy and defensiveness for the BBC not to provide News Sniffer’s level of transparency and honesty itself, if, that is, the BBC is interested in being transparent and honest).

The point where the BBC’s participation in Wikipedia ceases to be fair enough though is where BBC employees ‘revise’ Wikipedia articles about the BBC (except for the most minor of typographical errors). It is utterly wrong that even the mildest, most reasonable and honest criticism of the BBC on Wikipedia is dishonestly removed, edited or spun away, and ever so rapidly, by the Corporation’s own employees – especially on the telly-taxpayers time (heaven knows what they get up to on their home IP addresses in their own time).

BBC employees need to recognise that the BBC, in common with all large organisations, can and does do wrong – which is especially dangerous with an organisation with the size, reach and global influence of the BBC. The notion of a faultless, well-meaning, benevolent BBC that can do no wrong, a notion that BBC staff are thoroughly imbued with, is a large part of the ‘BBC culture’ that needs to be thrown out if the BBC is to even hope of regaining the respect that it once, deservedly, had.

P.S.: A special welcome to our visitors from elsewhere on the web. I hope you will take a few minutes to browse our other recent coverage of the BBC, and that you will come back in the next few days to help us keep an eye on the BBC.

* See Wikipedia, where else, for an explanation of this popular British expression.

With breathtaking hypocrisy, BBC Views Online’s third top story

this evening is: Wikipedia ‘shows CIA page edits’!

 


Hypocrisy writ large: the BBC pot calls the CIA kettle black

Biased BBC’s story about the BBC’s own editing of Wikipedia has been online for 18 hours – and has been blogged on the BBC’s internal blog system by Nick Reynolds, a senior advisor on editorial policy, and yet this article, by Jonathan Fildes (is that a typo for Fidler?), a BBC science and technology reporter no less, allegedly (maybe he’s the same work experience kid that happened to edit George Bush’s Wikipedia entry!), the third most important story the BBC can find, apparently, makes absolutely no mention of the BBC’s own Wikipedia edits. Unbelievable.

The BBC’s Mr. Fidler writes:

An online tool that claims to reveal the identity of organisations that edit Wikipedia pages has revealed that the CIA was involved in editing entries.

Wikipedia Scanner allegedly shows that workers on the agency’s computers made edits to the page of Iran’s president.

It also purportedly shows that the Vatican has edited entries about Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams.

Now for some BBC-style Wikipedia ‘revising’ for the BBC’s Mr. Fidler:

An online tool that claims to reveal the identity of organisations that edit Wikipedia pages has revealed that the BBC was involved in editing entries.

Wikipedia Scanner allegedly shows that workers on the corporation‘s computers made edits to the page of America‘s president.

It also purportedly shows that the BBC has edited entries about Britain’s former leader Tony Blair.

Now, if one of you Beeboids that hangs around here could just commit my minor edits (in bold above) to Mr. Fidler’s BBC Views Online version of the article (the third most important story in the world!) that would be grand. Thanks very much. (See here for the BBC’s edit of George W. Bush’s Wikipedia entry and here for the BBC’s puerile edits of Tony Blair’s Wikipedia entry).

P.S. If that’s too much to ask, just do the decent thing and update Mr. Fidler’s article to extend the same level of scrutiny the BBC subjects the CIA to to the BBC itself.

Thank you to the many spotters of this development and to Sam Duncan for the Tony Blair Wikipedia link.

Update: You can see the rest of Biased BBC by going to our top page. While you’re here, make sure you see and hear our story from Tuesday about the BBC’s decade long cover up of Neil Kinnock exploding in anger at James Naughtie on Radio 4.

Following up on our post from Sunday about what Iain Dale

reported and also about the BBC’s (ab)use of that Redwood footage again, Helen Boaden, the BBC’s Director of Views, sorry, News, has written about the BBC’s Red Tape Reporting on the BBC Editors Blog, saying:

In retrospect we weren’t right to use that footage again, which came from a long time ago.

In retrospect Helen? Wasn’t it obvious that it was wrong beforehand? It was obviously wrong to everyone outside the White City Viewsroom, but it’s like a knee-jerk reaction at the BBC: mention Redwood, show that footage, as sure as night follows day.

Some Beeboid posteriors really ought to be getting a boot imprint on them for such stupidity – and Helen Boaden really ought to be apologising for it – not just coming out with a bland, passive acknowledgement of their bias, sorry, Helen, their ‘mistake’. It’s not as if it was an accident – someone purposely dug out that footage and used it to embarrass Mr. Redwood, quite out of context from the news story. Someone wasn’t doing their job properly or professionally. Surely someone in the Viewsroom at the weekend had the power and the nous to stop such stupidity before it got on air? But no, it seems not.

Boaden goes on to list a selection of news headlines in a bid to defend the BBC from Iain Dale’s comments about the BBC’s approach to this news story, but it’s all in vain – anyone can pick a small selection of headlines that don’t happen to say the words Iain Dale quoted, but the tenor of the BBC’s approach was plain – Helen Boaden would do well to admit it, to apologise and to kick some backsides.

It looks like it’s Bloggers (and The Sun): 1, BBC: 0, again.

P.S.: If you haven’t heard it already, see the post below to listen to the BBC interview with Neil Kinnock that was covered up and hidden for more than a decade after Kinnock, Leader of the Opposition and would-be Prime Minister at the time, exploded in rage during an interview. By the same BBC standards this should be (but of course never is) played whenever Lord Kinnock pops up on the box to give us the benefit of his wisdom.

An anonymous Biased BBC reader notes that people at the BBC

have made somewhere in the region of 7,000 anonymous Wikipedia edits (i.e. not including those Beeboids who have their own Wikipedia accounts), including this BBC edit of George W. Bush’s entry, changing his middle name from Walker to the Beeboid’s own name. How amusing.

Of course the real joke is that we telly-taxpayers are paying these morons to sit on their backsides and indulge in their petty personal political prejudices whenever they think they can get away with it.

Update: Lots more BBC Wikipedia edits have been uncovered by Biased BBC readers, (see the comments), including this one, where a BBC Wikipedia editor has changed ‘terrorists’ to ‘freedom fighters’. What a surprise. Lots more Wikipedia edit-o-rama drama to come I’m sure!

Meanwhile, The Grauniad has picked up on this story too (from where they don’t say – unlike Biased BBC they don’t credit their sources) – but of course, they don’t make any mention of their BBC bedfellows penchant for er, ‘revising’, Wikipedia!

Thank you to Anonymous for this excellent detective work, and to (another) Anonymous for The Grauniad link.

From Michael Gove’s Times column on Tuesday:

This August I’m sorry not to be in Edinburgh. Not because I’ll miss the Fringe. If I want left-wing propaganda masquerading as comedy I can always tune into Radio 4…

Sadly there’s much more than a grain of truth in Michael’s dig – far too often Radio 4 seems to be filled with the idiotic whining of unfunny class warriors like Mark Steel, Jeremy Hardie and so on – all spreading their prejudice while sucking on the telly-taxpayer teat. It almost makes Jonathan Woss’s £18 million for three years look like good value for our money…

Thank you to Biased BBC reader Arthur Dent for the tip.

The message of Biased BBC reaches farther and wider than ever:

see this editorial from today’s Sun:

Anti Auntie

THE BBC’s coverage of Tory plans for £14bn cuts in red tape and bureaucracy was a mockery of impartial journalism.

Instead of examining John Redwood’s arguments, it made a joke of them by unearthing his garbled version of the Welsh anthem from a decade ago.

The caustic bulletins could have been scripted by Labour ministers.

Mr Redwood may be a colourful character. But few can match his understanding of the way Labour and the EU have tied our economy in knots with pointless regulation.

Certainly not the BBC — a bastion of smug, self-satisfied bureaucracy which rightly stands accused by its own watchdogs of being “institutionally biased”.

Following on from Sunday’s post about the BBC using that Redwood singing footage, again, since what’s good for the goose is sauce for the gander, have a listen to this – James Naughtie interviewing Neil (now Lord) Kinnock, Leader of the Opposition, would-be (and almost was) Prime Minister, back in 1989:

Click the play button to listen online:

codebase=”http://fpdownload.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=7,0,0,0″
width=”400″ height=”18″ > quality=”high” bgcolor=”#E6E6E6″ name=”xspf_player” allowscriptaccess=”allow”
type=”application/x-shockwave-flash”
data=”http://www.hotlinkfiles.com/files/228675_6sdax/xspf_player_slim.swf?playlist_url=http://www.hotlinkfiles.com/files/228676_daqpm/Biased_BBC_Kinnock_Kebabbed.xspf”
pluginspage=”http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer”
align=”center” height=”18″ width=”400″>

N.B. You might need to click play twice the first time.

To save yourself a copy:

Right-click on this link, Kinnock Kebabbed MP3, and select ‘Save As…‘, save it to your computer, and then play it using your own choice of media player.

This incident was covered up by the BBC for more than a decade until it was finally admitted to in 2000 in a Radio 4 series called, appropriately, Kebabbed:

But James Naughtie pressed Kinnock on the likely effectiveness of Labour’s alternatives.

What listeners heard was an abrupt pause in the conversation, followed by an explanation from Naughtie that the interview had been suspended when Kinnock objected to the line of questioning, before being resumed.

The tape recorders, however, whirred on to capture the unexpurgated exchange, never previously broadcast.

In it, Kinnock raged at Naughtie, telling him that he would not take part in “a WEA lecture” on Labour’s economic strategy any more than he was inclined to be “bloody kebabbed” by Naughtie.

We are grateful to Mr Kinnock for giving us the title for our series, along with permission to transmit the untransmitted material. Even across the passage of more than a decade, it makes your ears go pink.

Note the sickening thanks to Kinnock for permission to broadcast the full interview – as if the BBC would have waited a decade and asked for permission if a Conservative had given them such an explosive interview – it would have been on air the same day, leading every news bulletin!

Thank you to Biased BBC reader Dave T for link to The Sun. Thank you also to Hotlink Files for their excellent online file storage service.

Open thread – for comments of general Biased BBC interest:

Please use this thread for BBC-related comments and analysis. Please keep comments on other threads to the topic at hand. N.B. this is not (and never has been) an invitation for general off-topic comments, rants or use as a chat forum. This post will remain at or near the top of the blog. Please scroll down to find new topic-specific posts.

Former BBC producer Antony Jay

, co-author of the wonderful Yes Minister series, has been spilling the beans recently on the bias and attitudes inherent in the culture of the BBC. His latest article was in yesterday’s Sunday Times. Here are some excerpts – the first sets the scene and lists the things that the BBC was, and still is, largely anti- to:

The growing general agreement that the culture of the BBC (and not just the BBC) is the culture of the chattering classes provokes a question that has puzzled me for 40 years. The question itself is simple – much simpler than the answer: what is behind the opinions and attitudes of this social group?

They are that minority often characterised (or caricatured) by sandals and macrobiotic diets, but in a less extreme form are found in The Guardian, Channel 4, the Church of England, academia, showbusiness and BBC news and current affairs. They constitute our metropolitan liberal media consensus, although the word “liberal” would have Adam Smith rotating in his grave. Let’s call it “media liberalism”.

It is of particular interest to me because for nine years, between 1955 and 1964, I was part of this media liberal consensus. For six of those nine years I was working on Tonight, a nightly BBC current affairs television programme. My stint coincided almost exactly with Harold Macmillan’s premiership and I do not think that my former colleagues would quibble if I said we were not exactly diehard supporters.

But we were not just anti-Macmillan; we were anti-industry, anti-capitalism, anti-advertising, anti-selling, anti-profit, anti-patriotism, anti-monarchy, anti-empire, anti-police, anti-armed forces, anti-[British nuclear] bomb, anti-authority. Almost anything that made the world a freer, safer and more prosperous place – you name it, we were anti it.

The second excerpt explains the mindset that makes it ‘okay’ for self-regarding Beeboids to shape the news agenda and massage their news stories in the way that they do:

We saw ourselves as part of the intellectual elite, full of ideas about how the country should be run. Being naive in the way institutions actually work, we were convinced that Britain’s problems were the result of the stupidity of the people in charge of the country.

This ignorance of the realities of government and management enabled us to occupy the moral high ground. We saw ourselves as clever people in a stupid world, upright people in a corrupt world, compassionate people in a brutal world, libertarian people in an authoritarian world.

And lastly, a truism of media in general, but of telly-tax-funded media in particular:

The Tonight programme had a nightly audience of about 8m. It was much easier to keep their attention by telling them they were being deceived or exploited by big institutions than by saying what a good job the government and the banks and the oil companies were doing.

Do read the rest (see link above) – there’s lots more good stuff.

Make sure too that you get and read Antony Jay’s significant treatise Confessions of a Reformed BBC Producer (PDF), published by the Centre for Policy Studies.

Thank you to Biased BBC reader Dave T for the link.