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DG's Mac Taggart Lecture (Read 23150 times)
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Reaction to DG's Mac Taggart Lecture
Reply #15 - Aug 29th, 2010, 9:22am
 
Culture Secretary says BBC 'has to live on the same planet as everyone else' over 25% cuts


Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt piled on the pressure on BBC bosses to slash costs yesterday with a fresh warning that he may cut the licence fee.

With Government departments facing budget cutbacks of 25 per cent, Mr Hunt said: ‘The BBC has to live on the same planet as everyone else.’

His broadside at the Edinburgh International Television Festival came as BBC boss Mark Thompson admitted that some of the Corporation’s stars faced being axed or having their huge salaries slashed.

Mr Thompson used a lecture to the festival to warn that the days of vast pay packets for top stars were over.

But Mr Hunt, who last month attacked the BBC’s ‘outrageous waste’, turned up the heat. Asked if he thought the BBC had mishandled the issue of executive pay, he said ‘I do’, but added that it was not his job to set BBC salaries.

The Culture Secretary said he had not yet opened negotiations with the BBC about the £145.50-a-year licence fee, but said the broadcaster would have to prove it was putting measures in place to ensure much better value for money.

Mr Hunt also referred to the scandal over MPs’ expenses as he pressed the case for more transparency on BBC spending.

He said: ‘Why do I know that in ten years, 20 years, 30 years’ time, no MP will ever try to claim for a duck house?

‘I know that because all expenses claims are going to be made public. That will be the discipline in the process.’

He added that the BBC also needed to ensure it was not threatening other broadcasters by ‘moving into areas where it wasn’t needed’.

Mr Hunt raised fresh speculation that the system of funding the BBC could be radically altered to reflect new ways of watching television.

He said Ministers accepted the principle of a household tax but the mode of collection may change.

‘We may have to think of a new way of doing it,’ he added.

There was also a suggestion that the BBC Trust could be replaced with a new system of regulation.

Mr Hunt said: ‘I don’t think the current governing structure of the BBC works. ‘If you look at one of the biggest issues of public concern recently, which was the Jonathan Ross-Russell Brand affair, people want to be able to complain to a body which they feel is independent of the BBC.

‘The BBC Trust can’t fulfil that role because it wants to be both the BBC’s regulator and cheerleader.’

BBC1 controller Jay Hunt spoke of her battle to stop a ‘hurt’ Adrian Chiles leaving. She said she did everything to persuade him to stay.

‘We offered him chat shows and factual programmes.’

But Ms Hunt said he was too upset by the decision to remove him from the Friday night spot on the One Show.

By Christopher Hastings (Mail On Sunday).

Source:-
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1307138/Culture-Secretary-says-BBC-live-...
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Reaction to DG's Mac Taggart Lecture
Reply #16 - Aug 30th, 2010, 7:01pm
 
Thompson's attack is more than it seems

By Stephen Glover

In his MacTaggart Lecture a year ago, James Murdoch, son of Rupert and head of the Murdoch empire in Britain, accused the BBC of mounting a "land grab", and described its ambitions as "chilling". Last Friday, Mark Thompson, director-general of the BBC, warned in his own MacTaggart Lecture that BSkyB (which is controlled by the Murdoch empire) is too powerful, and threatens to "dwarf" the Corporation and its competitors.

Yours is far bigger than mine. No it's not. Yours is much bigger. That about sums up this slightly childish exchange between the two men.

It was, of course, pretty absurd for the son of the biggest media mogul in history to complain about the increasing power of the BBC. Apart from controlling BSkyB, which they would like to own outright, the Murdochs have four national newspapers accounting for approximately 35 per cent of all sales.

The savagery of James Murdoch's attack on the BBC stirred old animosities against Rupert Murdoch on the centre-left which had been largely quiescent during the long years of his support for New Labour. Mr Thompson's aggressive counter-attack on the Murdoch empire should be interpreted in this light.

It was partly a diversionary tactic. The BBC has come in for a lot of criticism for paying many of its executives hefty salaries which they would be fortunate to receive in the private sector, and for showering licence payers' money on stars such as Jonathan Ross. Mr Thompson was trying to take the heat off his own lax management by attacking BSkyB. More important, he intended to inflame anti-Murdoch prejudices, which used to run very deep.

Whatever we may think of Rupert Murdoch – and I have my reservations – we should take what Mr Thompson said with a pinch of salt. His assertion that the BBC is in danger of being "dwarfed" by BSkyB is extremely melodramatic. This claim would seem to rest on the fact that BSkyB's revenues are £5.9bn a year while the Corporation has an annual income of about £4.5bn including £3.5bn from the licence fee. The comparison doesn't make much sense. By any yardstick the BBC is a much bigger organisation, employing 20,000 people in comparison to BskyB's 11,000, and with a far wider reach.

Whereas Sky's programmes are watched in nearly 10 million households, the "penetration" of BBC television is at least two-and-a-half times as great. The BBC dominates national radio, where Sky has no presence at all. BSkyB does not have a website to compare with the BBC's. Nor does it have a World Service broadcasting to tens of millions of people in dozens of languages. Or anything resembling BBC Worldwide. Or a network of local radio stations throughout Britain.

As a political and cultural influence the BBC dwarfs (to coin a word) BSkyB, both in this country and abroad. Whereas the Corporation is a national institution enjoying monopolies that seem well-nigh impregnable, BSkyB is simply an extremely successful and dynamic commercial broadcaster, very likely to get bigger but also certain to lag a long way behind as far as the eye can see.

The director-general of the BBC is not a stupid man. Beneath his wildly exaggerated fear-mongering about the Murdochs there lay a deeper though unspoken purpose – to divide the Coalition. Rupert Murdoch is, after all, the new best friend of David Cameron, who enjoys the unqualified support of the Murdoch-owned Sun. In demonising the Murdoch empire, Mr Thompson was calling into question the company the Tory leader keeps. And he was also trying to rally the Lib Dems, whose atavistic anti-Murdoch hatreds do not lie far below the surface.

His strategy may seem a dangerous one. The Tories, after all, are the senior partners. But they can hardly ignore Lib Dems' dislike of the Murdochs as well as their feelings of approval for the BBC, which are reflected not just in bien pensant circles but in the country at large. Mr Thompson's suggestion that the Corporation is threatened by the wicked Murdochs is obviously preposterous in view of the enormous power it wields and the privileges it enjoys. But it is a compelling myth, designed to make it more difficult for David Cameron to indulge Rupert Murdoch while starving the BBC.

Scoops galore at the Screws


It is fashionable to decry the Murdoch-owned News of the World for being vulgar and hypocritical. The paper undoubtedly took a knock when Mr Justice Eady ruled that it had infringed the privacy of Formula One boss Max Mosley as he indulged in an outlandish orgy. But the red-top has carried on with a succession of impressive "stings".

Yesterday's story that members of the Pakistan cricket team have allegedly delivered "no-balls" in return for cash payments is its most influential for a long time, and led BBC news bulletins for many hours. It was even sorrowfully mentioned by the vicar at a church service I attended. If true, the story is profoundly depressing to all cricket-lovers, but most will be grateful that the News of the World had the courage and ingenuity to publish it. Is there another newspaper in this country that would have done so?

Private misgivings


On reflection, the headline on my item last week about press freedom may have overstated the case. I'm not sure I have changed my mind about the desirability of a privacy law. It would be fraught with dangers, the chief one being that politicians might attempt to safeguard themselves from media investigation. But shouldn't the matter at least be discussed? At the moment we have judges gradually introducing a new privacy law without politicians or anyone else having a say. If nothing is done, the process may be complete in a few years. I may not trust politicians to frame a privacy law, but I trust judges even less.



Source:-
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/opinion/stephen-glover-thompsons-attack-...
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Reaction to DG's Mac Taggart Lecture
Reply #17 - Sep 2nd, 2010, 7:51am
 
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