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August 31st, 2010 by Wadds

Sky’s the limit for BBC thrift

BBC director general Mark Thompson’s MacTaggart lecture last Friday at the Edinburgh International Television Festival was defensive and contained few surprises. But that’s understandable.

Last year James Murdoch took the same stage and spent much of his lecture bashing the BBC.

This year Mr Thompson called out Sky for its ”lack of investment in original content” and suggested that the satellite operator pay retransmission fees to other broadcasters. He rounded on critics of the BBC, claiming that it was more popular than ever.

“Systematic press attacks on broadcasters, and especially on the BBC, are nothing new… but the scale and intensity of the current assaults does feel different,” he said.

He’s spot on. It is different. This is why the BBC must change or risk a rising wall of criticism from all-comers, not just other media.

The changes taking place in the UK media are nothing short of a revolution. Meanwhile media owners and hacks look enviously at the BBC with its guaranteed income year-in-year-out.

Everyone must change, including the BBC: it’s not a question of if, it’s a question of by how much and when.

Herein lies one of the fundamental issue that Thompson failed to tackle on Friday. In a multi-channel environment why should consumers pay to negotiate a media paywall when they can access BBC content for free?

Pundits reckon that the BBC will survive the next license fee negotiation. There’s no doubt that the £146.50 fee per household represents extraordinary value, but the business model is an anachronism and leaves the BBC open to attack on all fronts.

Thompson is a moderniser, no doubt, and an incredibly savvy political operator. “Radical and rapid change inside the BBC is… essential,” he said.

The BBC is being trimmed, the pension scheme is under scrutiny and Mr Thompson has suggested that the corporation could forgo planned increases to the licence fee.

But ultimately this isn’t a fight that the BBC can win. Media and technology have evolved too far since the BBC was founded in 1927. And so Thompson puts up a good fight, but inevitably his response last Friday was defensive.

It would be a brave individual that led a discussion about a funding structure beyond the licence fee but maybe that is now inevitable. But for Thompson that’s a taboo he doesn’t seem to want to go near.

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August 15th, 2010 by Wadds

On hols, off grid

I’m off on holiday for a couple of weeks. No phone. No email. No blogging. And no Twitter. Maybe.

I look forward to returning in time to hear BBC Director General Mark Thompson’s McTaggart Lecture. It promises to be a highlight for the media industry for 2010 given the BBC’s ongoing strategy review and the fact that James Murdoch had the gig last year.

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August 31st, 2009 by Wadds

Robert Peston’s manifesto for public service journalism

According to The Guardian’s Media Monkey James Murdoch and Robert Peston engaged in a spat following Murdoch’s MacTaggart Lecture on Friday evening at the Edinburgh International Television Festival.

Peston had the opportunity to formally respond when he delivered the Richard Dunn Memorial Lecture the following afternoon, although he claims in the text of his speech that he didn’t alter the text following Murdoch’s blast at the BBC.

Peston made four points in his speech called ‘What future for media and journalism’:

  • The traditional business model of news providers is broken and needs to be “overhauled”
  • In a 24/7 digital world, individual news organisation may be less powerful than they were, but content and its creators are king
  • Digital requires journalists to work multi-channel – TV, radio, online and print
  • Democracy demands “a choice of high-quality news providers which are confident in their ability to explain complex important issues in a clear and accessible way”

No one in the media industry could find fault with the first three points. The fourth forms the genesis of the row between Murdoch and Peston. But even here Peston appears to find common ground with Murdoch.

[…] I completely understand why James Murdoch has argued that the BBC’s online news service looks like state-subsidised unfair competition. Much of the private sector sees the BBC as crowding out legitimate commercial players.

But Peston has a counter argument. He says that while a fair commercial market is important, so too is the fair distribution of knowledge and information. “Should we be relaxed if ‘can’t pay’ means ‘can’t know’?” he said.

Its an argument that returns to the core tenents of the BBC Charter.

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August 29th, 2009 by Wadds

MacTaggart lecture: BBC vs News Corporation in the war for online news

James Murdoch set out the battle lines for the future of online news in his MacTaggart lecture at the Edinburgh International Television Festival 2009 last night.

“As Orwell foretold, to let the state enjoy a near-monopoly of information is to guarantee manipulation and distortion,” he said. The next 18 months will almost certainly see the closure of a number of major national and regional titles close. Circulation and ad revenues are falling.

Newspapers need to start charging for their content on the web. But in the short term this could hasten their demise driving traffic to sites that don’t charge notably the BBC.

“Dumping free, state-sponsored news on the market makes it incredibly difficult for journalism to flourish on the internet. Yet it is essential for the future of independent digital journalism that a fair price can be charged for news to people who value it,” said Murdoch.

The BBC is distorting the market for online news as it will never charge for its content because of its funding structure.

The full text of the MacTaggart lecture is posted on Broadcast’s web site.

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