A posse of
film stars are said to be riding to the rescue of the BBC which is said be at
risk of being on the wrong end of a "massacree" being planned by the
backwoods tribes of the Tory Party led by Chief Getridofem.
Because of
what the BBC is, what it has been and what people of wildly differing views say
it ought to be there is no shortage of opinions as to the future, if any. From my own view what it is now is not what
it was intended to be and cannot be sustained for the future in its present form.
In effect it
is a state sponsored body that has shape shifted in the near century since its
origins, see Wikipedia for a brief outline.
It is now a Statutory Corporation under a Royal Charter. The charter is now up for grabs raising the question
of what corporate status might be coming next.
There is also
the said to be the four billion pound budget and how it is paid for, the
licence fee, in effect a state media tax, is a major part but it earns money in
other ways. Inevitably, being a state
body it attracts close attention to the salaries etc. it pays and how it
decides on this or that and what it seems to be saying. This is not always clear.
Personally, my
first hearing of the radio was in the late 1930's and from the 1950's onwards I
have been at umpteen live and recorded events and performances in a number of
venues including ones at Broadcasting House and Maida Vale. Doing screen tests for a couple of stints on TV
was an intriguing caper.
In its work in
the past there is a good deal to thank the BBC for and to recognise as both
valuable and necessary in broadcasting.
But just as they cannot be 100% wrong they cannot be 100% right. My view is that in the last decade or two it
has been slipping slowly but surely from more right to more wrong and it is
getting worse.
Bluntly, the
structure of services does not meet needs.
What it is doing within those services often is out of key with the
present day. It has an overblown
management and administration which has now become an obstacle to progressive
change. It is too often using hundreds
for work that could be done by tens.
Also, because
it at times has had to be in some respects a propaganda element in the media,
it is becoming clear that this is not so much something in the system, it has
now become one of the major management objectives. It is trying to force the making of opinion
as opposed to recording and discussing it.
In the 1920's
it might have been entering a Brave New World but in the 2020's it will be a
terrified and chaotic new world in which if anything it could be adding to the
disruption and problems on its present form.
Just what it might become and in what form we cannot know.
Some say it
should be left to the market, but it is not a free and open market, it could
fall into the hands of one group of oligarchs or another. Some say it might be a scaled down basic
state service picking up the disregarded bits and pieces, like the Arts and
local services.
Some say get
rid of it altogether, but there is a lot to lose. What is ironic is that the BBC has been so
cavalier and thoughtless of its archive what might have been its greatest
treasure is to all intents and purposes lost.
What is most
likely is major cuts leaving a lopsided leaderless quango cum cut down
collection of services that will gradually fade away into history.
I agree. Poor management, bloated bureaucracy, obsession with celebrity culture and an inability to make the best use of its archive have ruined the BBC.
ReplyDeleteIt is too late to fix it, the damage is done.