Friday 26 June 2020

Winning Hearts and Minds

My flirtation with Good Morning Britain and especially Piers Morgan continues and was fascinated the other day to watch him arguing with co-presenter Susanna Reid who insisted on reading-out a government statement in lieu of a minister's appearance. 

Piers forcefully took the view that if the government were intent on continuing its boycott of the programme, why should they read out any prepared statement? I agree totally, but of course that option isn't available to the poor-old BBC with its cast iron commitment to 'balance'. Piers is refusing to play this game and just 'calls-out' bullshit, incompetence and lies when he sees it and it's why he and GMB continue to fascinate me. Most interestingly, it's something that appears to be resonating with the public too as viewing figures are climbing apparently, with a 25% share overall, rising to 35% at certain times. 

On Wednesday, former long-term BBC staffer John Pienaar took the opportunity of joining-in with a bit of banter mocking the beeb with it always having to 'on the one hand this; on the other hand that and another hand this' all the time and how much he was looking forward to Monday's launch of Times Radio. This digital-only station is Rupert Murdoch's contribution to the right-wing agenda of neutering the poor-old BBC, despite continuing allegations of right-wing bias and commitment to 'effing 'balance'! What is going on here? 

This from the New Statesman in February and pre-Covid-19 taking hold:-  

The arrival of Times Radio is as much about politics as media competition

As Rupert Murdoch’s new venture poaches BBC presenters, what does the future of British broadcasting look like?


And so the bleeding begins. The first big name has been lured from the BBC to Rupert Murdoch’s new venture, Times Radio, with John Pienaar, the corporation’s deputy politics editor, jumping ship. It is, for now, just one high-profile presenter. But it marks the opening of a new front against the BBC that has as much to do with politics as it does commercial competition.

As the Guardian has reported, Times Radio is targeting the BBC’s top names, including Chris Mason, recently anointed host of Radio 4’s Any Questions, and Today presenter Nick Robinson. 
The project is being run as a joint venture between Murdoch’s two high-end newspapers, the Times and the Sunday Times, and his radio operation Wireless, which already runs talkRADIO, talkSPORT and Virgin Radio. Both are owned, along with the Sun, by News UK, the company helmed by Rebekah Brooks, who returned to the role in 2015 after resigning amid the phone-hacking scandal at the News of the World.

Times Radio will eschew ads, meaning it can match one of the BBC’s main selling points, in favour of sponsorship and marketing opportunities to sell subscriptions to the Times online and in print. Its launch will be overseen by Stig Abell, the former Sun managing editor who currently edits the Times Literary Supplement.


The seeming viability of the whole project reflects the way the internet has broken down the barriers between different mediums. Just as broadcasters like the BBC long ago broke into the written word with hugely popular websites, technological advances have lowered the barriers to entry for newspapers and magazines to compete for our ears.

Video remains difficult – production costs are high and the skills required both in front of and behind the camera are very different. But audio offers much less of a challenging leap. The success of podcasts from print organisations has provided proof of concept – add to that the expertise and infrastructure from News UK’s radio stations, and the Times is in a strong position.

In this particular tussle, however, the backdrop of technological change is in many ways less important than our new political landscape. Years of Conservative rule have already taken their toll, and the BBC has been cutting costs, most recently announcing that 450 jobs are to go across its news division. Now Boris Johnson’s comfortable majority has given the Conservative Party a platform to revisit its old obsessions with more verve, and put people such as the virulently anti-BBC Dominic Cummings into positions of power.

The briefings coming from the government this weekend suggest a major ramping up of attempts to “whack” the BBC, proposing that the licence fee will be scrapped and a mass cull of TV channels and radio stations. Some Conservative MPs are already pushing back. They will argue, rightly, that there will be political repercussions to extinguishing well-used and much-loved stations and channels. There are many who would miss Radio 2, which is popular among middle-aged, middle-class voters, or CBeebies, pretty much the only major provider of high-quality educational programmes that parents feel comfortable dumping their children in front of.

While the more brutal proposals for the BBC are likely hot air, the return of former culture secretary John Whittingdale to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport as a minister offers a more concrete indication of where the government will go. Whittingdale oversaw the most recent negotiations for the renewal of the BBC’s charter in 2016. Then, apocalyptic briefings about the government’s plans for the BBC laid the groundwork for what could later be presented as a compromise – a compromise that included making half of the posts on the BBC’s ruling board government appointees.

A larger majority offers Whittingdale, long a critic of the licence fee model and the BBC’s overall size, another shot at pushing through further changes, but expect them to fall short of the more spittle-flecked anonymous pronouncements from No 10.


Whatever members of the government really want to do about the BBC, the biggest problem for anyone trying to curb its impact or output is the support it retains across pretty much every section of the public. As a brand, it has unparalleled recognition and trust. Its critics compellingly argue that this support is the result of its privileged position on the airwaves and funding tied to the licence fee. But that doesn’t change the fact that the BBC is still one of the UK’s most-loved institutions.

The strength of the BBC’s brand is the core challenge for its commercial rivals, its political enemies and, indeed, those who straddle both camps, such as Murdoch and the Barclay Brothers, owners of the Telegraph (the Telegraph, we should not tire of pointing out, until recently employed Prime Minister Boris Johnson on £250,000 a year).


Its broad base of public support means those who wish to diminish the BBC have only one option: to chip away slowly. Each familiar name that leaves, each show that has to rely on fewer reporters on pared-back production budgets, is one step towards convincing the public that the BBC “isn’t what it used to be”.

Every time a listener follows their favourite presenter’s voice over to a programme delivered by a competitor adds to the feeling that they “don’t listen to the BBC as much as I used to”. Add into that the impact of services such as Netflix and YouTube capturing younger audiences and chipping away at its broadcast foundations, and the cracks will inevitably begin to show.

To succeed, Times Radio will have to take a chunk out of the BBC, but many of those rooting for it see it as just one part of a bigger battle to cut back the national broadcaster.

14 comments:

  1. Which gives context to the government's ongoing boycotts of media outlets it doesn't agree with/approve of, viz-post from yesterday:

    "The Conservatives have banned the BBC from publishing pictures of Robert Jenrick and Richard Desmond at a party fundraising dinner.

    It comes amid the row over property developer Desmond's £1bn, 1,500-home scheme on the Isle of Dogs in east London, which communities secretary Jenrick signed off in January after contact with Desmond."

    ReplyDelete
  2. During the lockdown, my neighbours left books on their wall for passers by to take and I picked up ‘Death on the rock, and other stories,’ by Roger Bolton who at the time was editor of Panorama and Newsnight.
    In the book he describes the politics at play in Northern Ireland at the time and the disputes with the government who wanted to broadcast propaganda, not balanced news.
    ‘The troubles,’ give a stark insight into the workings of the government, how they manipulate, bully and murder to maintain their positions. It was said at the time, and remains a truism, That what they did in Ireland then, was the practice for how they would retain control on the mainland whenever they were seriously challenged.
    These were dark days and there has been no accountability. These are themes which are currently emerging from the current gang at number 10.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Similarly with Print Newspapers.

    Multiple Government adverts in evert edition of Argent's, East Anglian Daily Times, Gannet's Newsquest publcations in Essex, and Reach's (Daily Express Group) local papers in Essex and I presume elsewhere BUT zero government advertising in The Morning Star, or the new but brilliant monthly Byline Times.

    I take all those papers - we still need local papers of all sorts - if only for the statutary Public Notices and letters, I find the Morning Star much less irritating than in previous times, when it was simply too predictable - now it is a daily source of news that the main stream media barely mention, especially trade union and poverty related issues as well as foreign reporting.

    Byline Times is simply excellent, which is unsurprising as at the heart is Hardeep Mathura who I have followed as a reporter since the Napo protests in Epsom - when she worked for a local paper there and as well as somehow getting into her copy actual reports about probation, also was the first to cover in any detail (as far as I am aware) that prison riot that ended up in Blackfrirairs Crown Court - cannot remember the actual prison, one of those on the Downview site in Sutton, I think that bought us an apt turn of phrase about the riot in evidence from someone - which I also cannot remember.

    There you have it - a dyspraxic ramble - easier to delete than leave for anything of relevance in it!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "11 men are standing trial for an alleged prison mutiny and criminal damage at High Down in Banstead

      The Government admitted that it “got it wrong” after introducing reforms to the prison system which sparked a rebellion among inmates at High Down last year, the prison's governor has said.

      High Down was only the second jail in the country to make cuts mandated by Justice Secretary Chris Grayling, a criminal trial into 11 men accused of a prison mutiny and criminal damage heard yesterday."

      " Andrew Jefferies QC, defending, told the court that the prisoners made a number of demands during the barricade including: “If we get mackerel and dumplings we will come out.” "

      https://www.yourlocalguardian.co.uk/news/11593663.government-got-it-wrong-over-cuts-which-led-to-mackerel-and-dumplings-prison-rebellion/

      Delete
  4. MoJ/HMPPS quick out of the blocks...

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/895699/HMPPS_COVID19_Statistics_Publication_19_June.pdf

    Published 26 June 2020

    Introduction
    This new official statistics release will provide weekly data on the spread of COVID-19 in the prison and probation service in England and Wales and mitigating actions being taken to limit the spread of the virus and save lives. This release covers the period from Monday 16 March 2020 at start of the COVID-19 outbreak to Friday 19 June 2020.

    In the period to 19 June, there had been a total of 44 deaths among HMPPS service users suspected to be due to COVID-19. This includes 23 prisoner deaths, with no deaths of children in custody. Amongst the probation caseload, there were 21 deaths suspected to be due to COVID-19. Of these, 14 were in the National Probation Service, 7 in Community Rehabilitation Companies

    In the period to 19 June, there have been a total of 510 symptomatic prisoners or children that tested positive for COVID-19, of which 500 were prisoners and 10 were children

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    Replies
    1. The data in the excel spreadsheet here...

      https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/hm-prison-and-probation-service-covid-19-statistics

      ... shows there was the grand total of 175 early releases comprising 132 covid-19 early custody releases & 43 compassionate releases.

      Interesting to see how they spin those figures in their publication: "As of 19 June, the number of early releases under the end of custody temporary release scheme to date is 175 and there have been 43 compassionate releases of vulnerable prisoners, pregnant women and mothers with babies." THE TOTAL RELEASED EARLY REMAINS 175.

      They also claim: "As at 19 June, the useable operational capacity of the prison system had been reduced by around 3,850 places"

      The claim is preceded by this:

      "As of 19 June 2020, the prison population is 79,600, showing a reduction of over 4,300 since 13 March 2020. This has primarily been driven by a reduction in inflows from the courts due to COVID-19 disruption, whilst outflows have continued as usual as prisoners reach their release dates."

      4,300 less 3,850 = 450 missing prisoners?

      Delete
  5. While we're in the mood for persuasion & transparency, here's the last govt report on their special advisers. MoJ have two listed - Peter Cardwell & Rajiv Shah each on salaries between £57k and £78k:

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/special-adviser-data-releases-numbers-and-costs-december-2019

    And this is the last version of their code of conduct:

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/special-advisers-code-of-conduct

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Looks like Peter Cardwell has left:

      "Peter Cardwell - Former Special Adviser to four UK Cabinet Ministers now working as an independent consultant"

      According to Guido's "SpAd Tracker" it seems MoJ currently have Rajiv Shah, Ben Jafari & Alex Wild in post.

      Rajiv Shah is also linked to the No.10 Policy Unit

      Ben Jafari is declared by Buckland in June 2020 as one of his research assistants. Is this a SpAd role?

      Alex Wild? "The Justice Secretary’s new special adviser is Alex Wild, formerly at the Home Office and a veteran of the 2012 campaign to re-elect Boris Johnson as Mayor of London." (Swindon Advertiser)

      Delete
  6. Whatever your political persuasion or whatever media outlet you choose to get your news from, there really is no escaping from spin and political bias.
    I like old wood, and decided to make my own beeswax polish during lockdown, and turned to Google to find the wax blocks, oils, stains and scents I would need.
    The next few days saw my news feed showing articles on how to make beeswax polish. A few days later that had moved on to the plight of bees themselves. They are suffering their very own pandemic at the moment, are it's entirely possible it will mean extinction for the species. It's cause is explained as a result of bringing bees together that would never meet if left in their own environment.
    Then my news feed changed again with articles about how capitalist exploitation of the environment and the third world is not just risking the extinction of bees, but the whole of mankink. Those articles are tempered with others explaining how our own societies could learn a great deal politically from the social structures of bees.
    The point I'm making is that by simply trying to source widely available products to make beeswax from the Internet, I'm now being presented with arguments extolling the virtues of Capitalism or Marxism, Frederick Engels and Adam Smith.
    I haven't chosen or elected to receive such articles, but somewhere out in the ether it's been decided that those articles should be destined for my news feed.
    I think it's very dystopian when the news we read, when and where we read it is being determined by algorithms in total control of the media moguls.

    'Getafix

    ReplyDelete
  7. " ‘Nightingale’ courts will tackle backlog of half a million cases "

    Presumably they have not considered probation - as Probation is not mentioned!

    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/nightingale-courts-will-tackle-backlog-of-half-a-million-cases-tbv5zwhk0

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    Replies
    1. didn't know she was a district judge as well

      Delete
  8. It's all very well singing the praises of Piers Morgan and knocking the BBC for balance, but does the UK really want to follow the Fox News format with its 'fair and balanced' claim when we all know it churns out a right-wing agenda? Do we really want our version of US shock jocks? You need a lot of money to run TV and radio stations and in dissing balance, you're unleashing right-wingers.

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  9. No virus here, all under control. Govt reported figures:

    1,006 (or is it 1,118?) new cases today
    179 (or is it 186?) deaths in last 24 hours
    - No beaches have been closed
    - Some parties shut down
    - Anfield is currently disputed territory
    - France have just won the 2000 European Championship, beating Italy with a golden goal in extra time

    PM Boris is very cross
    NHS Matt is trying to be understanding
    Dirty Jenrick is keeping schtum

    Nothing to see here

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  10. I personally use them exclusively high-quality elements : you will notice these folks during: private investigation

    ReplyDelete