From Feedback……
Who decides the news agenda?
Richard Clarke, the Editor of the BBC Radio newsroom, on the stories that make the news.
Deciding the agenda…’We have our own ideas…but also use the Today programme, World at One, and PM, all of which influence us.‘
‘We test each other’s judgement….I make a much better decision when editing if I test my judgement against the rest of my team.’
So they test whether a story is suitable for the news by bouncing ideas off each other….who all think alike.
It was suggested that the BBC is becoming more ‘Tabloid’, covering too many sex and crime stories and that listeners are off to Al Jazeera for real world news……but also there was too much bad news…could there be time set aside for ‘good news’?
The reply…‘No….that would be manipulating the news.’
From that are we to believe they think they don’t manipulate the news?
Clarke says…‘When stories happen we HAVE to report them’.
Of course they do…..except when they choose not to…such as on Israel/immigration/Europe/inconvenient climate change bad news/good news on the economy.
The final question was ‘Are you interested in what listeners think?’
Answer….hmmm…not really…but he does read the duty log [of comments] every morning…probably for a good laugh.
Another Feedback programme covered similar ground……
How Broadcasting House interacts with its listeners
This programme looked especially at ‘Broadcasting House’ on Sunday mornings.
It asks….‘Do listeners have any real input….has there been anything in today’s broadcast suggested by listeners?’
Answer….‘No….but we read their comments with great interest.’
Yes…of course.
The answer continued….‘It’s quite trivial and silly things that get people going….such as whether English is being spoken on a train as raised by Nigel Farage.’
Yes…quite trivial and silly to worry about being a stranger in your own land.
Roger Bolton says ‘Listeners just want to be heard.’
Answer….’Yes….They want to know they are being listened to….that it’s not just a bunch of old suits paying themselves too much money at the BBC when the country wants to talk about these issues….they are battering the door down to tell us what the country is like.’
But is the BBC listening..to all the different voices…or just those of a similar persuasion? In my experience any ‘listening’ and response is purely on the basis that the listener is ignorant or prejudiced and it is the BBC’s job to re-educate them on the benefits of immigration or the peaceful and tolerant nature of Islam and the apparent Nasty Fascist side to UKIP.
The final point was interesting as it feeds into, and is the antithesis of, the comment made by Clarke in the first programme when he said he bounced his ideas off his own team…..in this programme it is suggested by Bolton that programmes and news broadcasts that feed off each other lead to the same agenda doing the same stories in the same way…they need to connect with the audience…and to respond to it.
Just don’t raise the subject of BBC bias.