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.