Daily Mail editor accuses BBC of indulging in cultural Marxism

, reports Owen Gibson in today’s Media Guardian:

Paul Dacre, editor of the Daily Mail, used a rare public speech last night to accuse the BBC of “a kind of cultural Marxism” that is harming political debate and failing to represent the views of millions of licence fee payers. He said the BBC’s tendency towards institutionally biased left-leaning views, part of what he dubbed “the subsidariat” of newspapers and broadcasters that do not turn in a profit, was a factor in feeding political apathy.

Delivering the Hugh Cudlipp lecture, Dacre said the BBC was not only expansionist, but guilty of subscribing to a singular world view. “BBC journalism is reflected through a left-wing prism that affects everything – the choice of stories, the way they are angled, the choice of the interviews, the interviewees and, most pertinently, the way those interviewees are treated,” he said.

Dacre said while he approved of some of what the BBC did, he believed it was out of step with large swaths of public opinion.

Couldn’t agree more with that. Do read the rest.

Courtesy of Rottypup and the Grauniad, here’s the full speech. You can also listen to Dacre on Radio 4’s Toady programme this morning.

Hat tip to commenter SiN.

According to Saturday’s edition of The Sun,
And here’s one I slayed earlier

, the BBC’s long-running children’s programme Blue Peter showed graphic footage last Thursday of the Halal slaughter of a goat in Oman, to “show the celebrations that mark the Muslim festival of Eid-ul-Adha”.

Biased BBC commenter Chuffer writes:

Astonishing bit on Blue Peter this evening, about 17:05, 18JAN07 – a long feature on the joys and general loveliness of the Religion of Plumbers in Oman, especially for the youngsters. Bless. At the end of Ramadan, a goat is killed. And as two men hold it down, and one slashes its throat, the Blue Peter muppet turns to camera and says “At least it’s done humanely….”

It would have been bad enough to show the humane stunning and killing of animals in a UK abbatoir, let alone the Halal slaughter of an animal having its carotid arteries cut and then being hung up to slowly bleed to death.


Fun for children on today’s multi-culti Blue Peter

Whatever happened to the Blue Peter that we knew and loved when we were children? The worst I remember was the sensitive coverage of those being helped by each year’s Blue Peter Annual Appeal and the occasional vandalism of the blessed Blue Peter Garden – which presumably nowadays wouldn’t be greeted with shock, but rather as an opportunity to explore the needs of frustrated inner-city yobs.

According to The Sun:

BBC bosses were forced to apologise last night after Blue Peter screened footage of a goat being slaughtered for a Muslim sacrifice.

Young viewers of the kids’ favourite — famed for its pet cats and dogs — watched in horror as the animal was held down and its throat slit. The bloody footage then showed the goat hanging dead from a tree.

About 140 shocked viewers phoned the Beeb to complain about the programme, shown on Thursday afternoon. Furious parents accused the BBC of damaging the family-friendly reputation of Blue Peter, whose catchphrase “And Here’s One I Made Earlier” is known to generations.

Michael Alligham, 50, of Herts, who watched with his four-year-old daughter, said: “She sat there goggle-eyed. I tried to make light of it, but she knew. “One man was kneeling on the goat’s head, one holding its leg down, then they slit its throat.”

Blue Peter screened the footage, filmed in the Middle Eastern country of Oman, to show the celebrations that mark the Muslim festival of Eid-ul-Adha. Last night editor Richard Marson apologised to viewers.

But he insisted: “We felt it was important to show the link between the food people eat and where it actually comes from.”

Strangely though, having searched through BBC Views Online’s search engine, the Blue Peter Homepage and the BBC’s Press Office, I can find no references to this apology from the editor of Blue Peter – has it passed you by Beeboids? There’s still time to get an article up on BBC Views Online’s Entertainment page, the place where you normally need no excuse to toot the BBC’s horn!

Hat tip to commenters Chuffer and will.

While we’re on the subject of Newsnight

, today’s Daily Mail reports
Minister’s fling with BBC girl who booked him for Newsnight, by Paul Revoir and Gordon Rayner. Some excerpts:

It has emerged tha the BBC has held an inquiry into the role of Newsnight producer Thea Rogers, who booked Mr Purnell to appear on the show – and who just happened to be in the middle of a fling with him at the time.

Mr Purnell, 36, also faces questions over whether he broke ministerial rules by using his chauffeur-driven government car to whisk his glamorous 25-year-old girlfriend off for a romantic meal immediately after the programme…

The ambitious Miss Rogers, who worked for Labour during the 2005 election campaign and is said to be on first name terms with Gordon Brown and Tony Blair, did not tell her Newsnight bosses that she was dating Mr Purnell at the time she was asked to book him as a guest on the show last October.

It is also understood that she may have helped brief Paxman on the line of questioning he should take in the interview. As a result, the BBC has held an internal inquiry into her role – which has cleared her of any wrongdoing.

Sources at Newsnight insisted last night that it was “absurd” to suggest that Miss Rogers’s relationship with the minister had any bearing on his treatment on the show…

“Because he’s worked in the BBC, where he was head of corporate planning before he became an MP, and because she has worked for the Labour Party, they have a lot in common”…

Then Miss Rogers, known during her Oxford days as “trout lips” because of her pronounced pout, was told by her bosses to book Mr Purnell for an interview on the show.

After Mr Purnell’s appearance – which, unusually, was pre-recorded – viewers immediately complained he had not been grilled hard enough.

Sue Bebbington complained to the programme’s website: “I was disappointed that the pensions minister got off so lightly in this evening’s programme”.

“It was a great pity that Mr Paxman did not use his skills to question this further, not just to make the minister’s appearance rather less of an easy ride, but also to highlight the insecurity of occupational pensions schemes”.

A BBC spokesman told the Daily Mail that:

The BBC is satisfied that our employee has done absolutely nothing untoward and that Newsnight’s journalism has not been compromised in any way.

Well that’s alright then. I’m tempted to paraphrase Lord Hewart’s famous quotation, “that justice should not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done”, but I’m sure you get the idea.

Do read the whole thing. See also Talk about Newsnight, 25OCT2006 for other viewer complaints about Newsnight’s pensions coverage that day.

Hat tip to commenter SiN.

The editor of Newsnight, Peter Barron

, has replied to Guido’s email (see post below):

On Newsnight we don’t necessarily stick to linear running orders which reflect the relative significance of stories in the same way that news bulletins tend to. The loans for peerages story was of course more significant, but there were other factors at play. We had committed Michael Crick to following David Cameron’s efforts to relaunch his campaign in the North. While covering that he came across the “cripple” email story, which was an exclusive and highly pertinent to the Conservatives’ attempts to portray themselves as a compassionate party of government. It followed and mirrored the biggest controversy and talking point of the week which concerned the use of un-PC language in Big Brother. The loans story had been reported in some detail on the 10 O’clock News and on Newsnight we considered that our version could not be substantially different given the information we had at that point. We therefore decided to lead off on our own original story and to run the loans story prominently in second place. You could actually argue that in terms of global significance it was our third story – about China and star wars – which was the most important of the three.

What a load of blather, especially this bit:

While covering that [Michael Crick] came across the “cripple” email story, which was an exclusive and highly pertinent to the Conservatives’ attempts to portray themselves as a compassionate party of government

Came across? He means he was given a ready spun a line by the Labour Party – and not even a good line – the whole ‘cripple’ email story was a crock of the proverbial and should never have got anywhere near being on any part of the BBC, let alone the lead item on Newsnight, even if there was no other news whatsoever to report.

As for being “an exclusive” Peter, did you ever stop to ask yourself just why it was ‘an exclusive’? If not, I’ve got a few exclusive stories that you can cover too!

Crick and the rest of the Newsnight team should have seen the ‘cripple’ story for what it was and omitted it from their piece altogether – it wasn’t news, and it would strain to be even half-way credible in even the most self-righteous and indignant of Labour Party propaganda leaflets!

Update:

Peter Barron, the editor of Newsnight, has subsequently blogged about the running order of Newsnight on Friday, saying “I don’t rule out the possibility that it was simply a misjudgement”. This rather implies that it wasn’t him personally that was running the show on Friday evening. I wonder who it was. Moreover, if we accept that the running order was ‘simply a misjudgement’, it still doesn’t explain why Michael Crick et al made so much out of the ‘cripple’ email non-story (a non-story even on the quietest of news days), or indeed how this email, between just two people, came to be ‘leaked’ in the first place – which is a story in its own right. Would you care to address these points please Peter?

While we’re at it, would the editors of the Six and the Ten care to comment please on their respective running orders on Friday, either on the BBC editors blog or on the comment thread here or by email to biasedbbc@gmail.com. Thank you.

Update 2:

I’ve posted the following comment on Peter Barron’s blog:

Hello Peter. You say: “I don’t rule out the possibility that it was simply a misjudgement”, which rather implies that it wasn’t you who made that judgement. Was someone else editing Newsnight on Friday? If we accept that the running order was ‘simply a misjudgement’, it still doesn’t explain why Michael Crick et al made so much out of the ‘cripple’ email non-story (a story based on a private email sent four months ago from a private individual (not even a councillor) referring to someone else as a cripple – a non-story even without the Ruth Turner headlines). Also, can you explain how this email came to be leaked? It was a private email between two people, so unless either of them leaked it themselves (unlikely), how did it come to be leaked to the BBC? Left-wing council employees perhaps? If it was leaked in this way, do you really think that ‘public interest’ would justify such criminality? Looking forward to hearing from you further, Andrew (Biased BBC).

Will let you know if and when he replies.

Following on from Ed’s post yesterday and mine on Saturday

, I hadn’t realised, until reading the comments, that Newsnight had run the ‘cripple’ email non-story on Friday night, and worse, as their lead item, over and above the Ruth Turner Cash for Peerages arrest story.

I honestly expected that BBC Views Online’s placement of the ‘cripple’ email non-story as the fourth most important story in the world was the action of some leftie cub-journo left to their own devices on the night-shift in Shepherd’s Bush.

But Newsnight? Leading with it? A supposedly serious flagship BBC programme with its own editor, what on earth were they thinking?

Let’s get this straight, Ruth Turner, Tony Blair’s ‘gatekeeper’, is arrested, arrested, in connection with alleged breaches of the 1925 Honours Act and on suspicion of perverting the course of justice (a crime that carries a possible life sentence), so Newsnight spends eight full minutes leading with a different non-story about a private citizen (not even a mere councillor) who sent a private email to a councillor four months ago in which he insulted a leftie activist with a limp by referring to him as, shock, a cripple. Big deal – what an exclusive!


Newsnight pt. 1: eight minutes of NuLab spin eked out of a non-story

The real question about the ‘cripple’ email, completely ignored by the BBC of course, is just how the hell did a private email between just two people get leaked? My bet would be on leftie employees within the local authority illegally reading (and leaking) councillors email – now that would be a story worth investigating.

After covering this non-story, Newsnight then spent a mere three minutes, mostly on a pretty lame two-way between Emily Maitlis and Michael Crick, on this huge development in the Cash for Peerages story, before moving on to a story about the Chinese shooting down a satellite.


Newsnight pt. 2: three minutes of lame two-way on a huge story

Newsnight were spun, and spun quite willingly it seems, by Tony’s NuLab spinners. Pathetic.

Even when the BBC have deigned to cover this story, much has been made of the police being heavy-handed and dramatic in arresting this ‘poor 36 year old woman, who lives alone, don’t you know, at her home at 6.30am’. Another big deal. I doubt the police kicked her door in, slapped on the cuffs and threw her in the back of a Black Maria, or does the BBC know different?

Even our own much-valued pet BBC defender, ‘John Reith’, writing from inside the Corporation, comments:

I think it’s wrong to publish private e-mails in the absence of any compelling public interest requirement. In this case the writer of the e-mail was simply a private citizen. It might be different if he were the shadow spokesman on disability. But he isn’t.

Frankly, I thought the addressee’s reaction was a bit PC-priggish too – but media-savvy as it turned out.

As for the complainant – the so-called ‘cripple’. I’d be more sympathetic if there was anything seriously wrong with him – e.g. if he were a wheelchair user or equivalent. It seems he just walks with a bit of a limp. As we all do from time to time.

I notice he doesn’t mind being called a reptile. Safest to stick to that then.

As you say – a non-story. And one stored up since last September by NuLab spinmeisters for a Cameron visit.

Journalists should be careful not to be so easily manipulated. A number seem to be off their guard since the era of spin was declared over. Time to wise up again – ‘cos it’s back.

Thank you for your honesty John (oh, and now that you’re back, would you mind giving us your views on my posts about Molly/Misbah and the stealth-editing of the manufactured golly row story please? Thank you).

Writing from the cellars beneath the Palace of Westminster, Guido Fawkes Esq. graces us with his presence to say:

Peter Barron – Newsnight editor – has yet to respond to my query re. the Newsnight story order and emphasis on Friday. I know the Beebie babies read this blog, just like Downing Street reads my blog, so I reproduce it below.

Peter,

Could you give me an on the record quote concerning the relative priority given to these stories on Friday.

The lead story focused on an embarrassing email sent between two non-entity local Tory councillors. In other news, after nine minutes on this story, the next story was that PM’s aide was arrested on suspicion of perverting the course of justice in the loans for lordships investigation. This story was given three minutes.

Why were the stories prioritised in that order?

Do you think the un-pc email story was more important?

Guido Fawkes Esq.

Well Peter, you can reply to Guido at guido.fawkes@order-order.com, and if you don’t mind cc’ing it to me at biasedbbc@gmail.com I’ll be happy to share your explanation about why the ‘cripple’ non-story was so important with our readers (both inside and outside the BBC) too! Thanks.

P.S. It’s not just Newsnight – apparently the BBC’s Ten O’Clock news led (again) on the story of the weather from the day before. Perhaps the editor of the Ten would care to get in touch with a comment too.

‘Age discrimination is rife within the BBC, but they get away with it’

, according to today’s Daily Telegraph:

The BBC faced accusations of “ageism” from its own employees yesterday as a Daily Telegraph inquiry revealed mounting anger from local radio staff who claim they have been told to keep old people off the air.

At the heart of their resentment is an imaginary couple created by Corporation bosses called Dave and Sue, to whom all presenters are told to aim programming…

They emerged from a BBC study called Operation Bullseye, which concluded that older people are getting younger in their attitudes and interests. Literature distributed to local radio stations said: “Dave and Sue live in a multi-ethnic, multi-cultural England”. Dave is a self-employed plumber, Sue a school secretary, and both have children from previous marriages. They shop at Asda, wear T-shirts and fleeces, and grew up in the Beatles generation. They have lived through a period of change. One of their children has entered a mixed-race marriage, although the BBC calls this “mixed heritage”.

The article, by Stewart Payne, follows up on his article from November, also highlighted by Biased BBC, BBC radio phone-in silences the elderly.

So much for public-service broadcasting when the BBC spends its time competing with commercial stations for already well-served audiences and with commercial stations for staff. The BBC, it’s what we do.

Hat tip to commenter SiN.

Journalist and author Dave Hill

, writing about the Molly/Misbah case on the Grauniad’s commentisfree, links to my piece below about the BBC’s blinkered coverage of this story, saying:

For some, the whole affair has been just the latest excuse to damn Islam wholesale and with it all Pakistanis and even to vilify the child. (Whatever you think of the point made by the original post here, the lowlife on the comment thread will sicken you. And I thought Big Brother contestants weren’t allowed internet access).

Whilst it is our clear policy to permit freedom of speech as far as reasonably possible, this does serve as a reminder to some of our more wayward commenters that what you say here is on public view over the long term and could be used to discredit the work of the Biased BBC team and of other more considered commenters.

Meanwhile, having read through the comments responding to Mr. Hill’s article, it seems to me that we’re not the only ones with the thorny issue of free speech to contend with.

BBC Views Online are currently reporting Tory rebuked for ‘cripple’ email

. The story is that last September a Conservative activist sent an email to the Conservative leader of Bradford City Council referring to the leader of Bradford Labour Party as a ‘cripple’ and a ‘reptile’. A mischief-maker then posted a copy of the email to the leader of Bradford Labour Party who is, needless to say, less than pleased with it.

So, Person A sends an email to person B insulting person C who gets to hear about it and isn’t very pleased. Wow. Happens all the time, even at the BBC I’m sure.

But here’s the thing, this relative non-story is currently, according to BBC Views Online, the fourth most important story in the whole world on the UK version of BBC Views Online’s top page!

 


Is this really the fourth most important story in the world?

Who the hell are they kidding? It’s a pretty ridiculous story, and if the political parties were reversed, it probably wouldn’t even make it on to BBC Views Online, let alone be a top story on the front page.

Open thread – for comments of general Biased BBC interest:


Please use this thread for off-topic, but preferably BBC related, comments. Please keep comments on other threads to the topic at hand. N.B. this is not an invitation for general off-topic comments – our aim is to maintain order and clarity on the topic-specific threads. This post will remain at or near the top of the blog. Please scroll down to find new topic-specific posts.

Last Friday, BBC Views Online published an article beginning:

Call for faith-based NHS services

The NHS should provide more faith-based care for Muslims, an expert says.

Muslims are about twice as likely to report poor health and disability than the general population, says Edinburgh University’s Professor Aziz Sheikh.

Ostensibly based on an article in the British Medical Journal, Should Muslims have faith based health services?, BBC Views Online quote Professor Aziz Sheikh at length. Near the end of BBC Views Online’s report they throw in a few quotes to the contrary from Professor Aneez Esmail.

What the Beeboids don’t make clear is that the BMJ article is actually a two part head-to-head article, with Professor Aziz Sheikh in the first part arguing for the proposition and Professor Aneez Esmail in the second part arguing against, both at some length.

Worse than that, what BBC Views Online fail to point out is that Professor Aziz Sheikh is a former chair of the Muslim Council of Britain’s Research & Documentation Committee and led the launch of the MCBDirect project – so is clearly interested in the promulgation and promotion of political Islam.

Not surprisingly, the BMJ, a professional publication, quite properly notes:

Competing interests: Aziz Sheikh chaired the research and documentation committee of the Muslim Council of Britain from 2002-6. He is currently principal investigator on a Scottish Executive supported grant investigating the end-of-life care needs of South Asian Sikhs and Muslims in Scotland.

Funny that the BBC should omit that.

Hat tip to commenters Chuffer & Pounce