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BBC cuts: Times item today
On Thu, 24 Mar 2011 07:25:47 -0000, "Brian Gaff"
wrote: Cut what, hint, jpgs are not textual. Here are the headline and the first two patagraphs: BBC could close TV channel at night in effort to make 20% licence-freeze cuts. The BBC is considering swingeing cuts to late-night programming on BBC One or BBC Two, which could lead to one of the channels going off air overnight, the corporation’s Director-General warned yesterday. Mark Thompson said that television programmes shown between 10.35pm and 6am, when many potential viewers are asleep, cost the broadcaster more than £150 million a year to produce. Endquote. The Daily Mail had a similar article about it at: http://tinyurl.com/6bnvz5u -- Peter Duncanson (in uk.tech.digital-tv) |
BBC cuts: Times item today
On Thu, 24 Mar 2011 07:15:28 +0000, Mark Carver wrote:
and Mark Thomson appears to be constructing a coffin for BBC LR. Do you think "there is something of the night about him"? |
BBC cuts: Times item today
On Thu, 24 Mar 2011 09:16:04 +0000, Mark wrote:
The BBC local radio station near here broadcasts exactly the same kind of crap as the commercial stations and you can hardly tell them apart - crap pop music and stupid DJs talking drivel. This latter point "talking drivel" is particularly noticeable during the breakfast time shows. At one time, BBC local radio produced informative, interesting, and relevant breakfast news programs. Now these shows consist almost entirely of a man and a woman making silly jokes about the fluff that was on TV the night before with no direct relevance to local current affairs. There was a time for example when BBC Radio Sheffield broadcast the proceedings of Sheffield City Council on a regular basis. Now local politics is almost completely ignored on BBC local radio stations. |
BBC cuts: Times item today
On Wed, 23 Mar 2011 20:34:32 +0000 (UTC), J G Miller
wrote: On Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011 at 20:13:45h +0000, Peter Duncanson wrote: The BBC has a duty to provide output that entertains all licence payers, both high-brow and low-brow. Which it does most effectively for the latter in the form of Eastenders, Casualty, The One Show, Homes Under the Hammer, Britain's Empty Homes, Cash in the Attic, Bargain Hunt, Escape to the Country, and "Would I Lie To You?" to name just a few examples. In fact, most of the schedule of BBC-1 network. Not to mention BBC3 programming for post-operative brain donors |
BBC cuts: Times item today
On Thursday, March 24th, 2011 at 14:58:29h +0000, Albert Ross wrote:
Not to mention BBC3 The digital TV station which is not afraid to try something new, and offers helpful and practical advice to those with social problems. Mondays at 21:00h, a show designed for those considering polygamy -- http://www.bbc.co.UK/programmes/b00z86ym Why polygamy -- the answer is in the title -- "women" plural not "a women" singular. Seems like Islamization by the back door, ne c'est pas? Who can possibly claim that the BBC does not actively engage in social engineering? |
BBC cuts: Times item today
J G Miller wrote:
On Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011 at 21:10:15h +0000, Charles explained: The BBC started local radio before the commercial stations appeared Long before in fact: 2LO in the City of Westminster, 5IT in Birmingham, 2ZY in Manchester, 5WA in Caerdydd, and 5SC in Glasgow. But did these stations every carry commercials? Did they have local programming or were they simply line fed from London? |
BBC cuts: Times item today
Brian Gaff wrote:
Cut what, hint, jpgs are not textual. Brian Sorry Brian. Tried to OCR it but for some reason it came out garbled. I think the scan was too poor, and of course I've lost the original now. Bill |
BBC cuts: Times item today
Mark wrote:
On Thu, 24 Mar 2011 00:43:06 +0000, Bill Wright wrote: charles wrote: who is doing the competing? The BBC started local radio before the commercial stations appeared And anyway BBC local radio doesn't compete in an real sense with local commercial stations. The audiences are very different and there isn't much overlap. The BBC local radio station near here broadcasts exactly the same kind of crap as the commercial stations and you can hardly tell them apart - crap pop music and stupid DJs talking drivel. The only difference is the adverts. I would say they are in direct competition. That's interesting. BBC Sheffield broadcasts a lot of speech programmes which are spoilt by the fact they play pop music every now and then. Bill |
BBC cuts: Times item today
Brian Gaff wrote:
Cut what, hint, jpgs are not textual. http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011...ng?INTCMP=SRCH BugBear |
BBC cuts: Times item today
On Thursday, March 24th, 2011 at 17:05:55h +0000, Bill Wright wrote:
Did they have local programming They must have, because the BBC National Programme did not come into service until August 21st 1927, when 5GB Daventry came on the air. Admittedly these stations did become more regional in their outlook as their content was rebroadcast by daughter stations when these came on air eg 2FL Sheffield, 2LS Kingston-Upon-Hull, 2LV Liverpool carrying 2MT Manchester and ??? Edinburgh carrying 5SC Glasgow. Listeners in Aberdeen however were privileged to have their own locally produced material throughout the period from 2BD until the inception of the Scottish National Service inaugurated soon after the BBC National Programme came on the air. or were they simply line fed from London? From what I understand [corrections requested] "line feeding" did not happen until a long time afterwards, as the daughter stations rebroadcast their programs from their off air received signal. |
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