BBC Radio is
older than I am, but TV is younger. Consequently the BBC one way or another has
always been there. It has not been just
the sound and vision on the various boxes owned or used. There have been many live performances or
recordings dating from the 1950's when I was there, sometimes alongside the
mikes, the cameras and the control decks and in a handful of programmes.
There has been
much to be grateful for and many programmes that have been enjoyed or
appreciated, although rather fewer these
days. But like many other organisations
the BBC now is what is was then and we are in a different digital and visual
world.
One reason why
the change has seemed to be a rapid one is that for TV it has only been two
to three decades since we had only a handful of channels and news sources. Had we been permitted to have a much greater
choice in the past there might now be two or three generations used to far more
choice and differences as opposed to one.
For all that
the actual organisation itself has grown and grown and has come to epitomise
all the wilder theories of managing that can be found in the textbooks on
organisation and management. At the same
time rather than be many voices, politically it is becoming one. Despite all the effort and activity it seems
to be more limited in the nature and type of output and far less original.
The news
programmes in between the endless noisy self promoting clatter are more
predictable, selective and not in the best ways and tending towards the
sensational. The discussion or
interviews have become tiresome, aggressive and headline seeking rather than
being informative or balanced. There are
a lot of other qualities that have gone missing in action.
In an
increasing number of cases the actual research and analysis that goes into key
material is becoming poorer and more sketchy.
Whether that is the result of using low paid short term interns to get
out stuff for the celebrity presenters or just being in too much of a hurry and
having a contempt for the audience is a question.
As a state
broadcaster it is only the government that can decide what is to be and who
shall do it. But the government is made
up of politicians who do not want bad news or to upset the BBC too much because
their running dog can bite and inflict nasty public relations injuries before
it is put down.
Also, the leading
politicians and the top people at the BBC have similar backgrounds and
overlapping personal and financial interests.
They are creatures from the same lagoon.
The only other
real contender or competitor is Sky and the Murdoch's. We have a duopoly that may be more interested
in keeping the status quo and the public quiet than any real reform or in
having any relatively open media.
So what have
we got online, or among the CD's or the DVD's?
"They are creatures from the same lagoon."
ReplyDeleteIndeed they are - a good way of putting it. The BBC does not attract interesting people and wouldn't want them anyway.