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.
Related articles:
- Mark Thompson’s case for the BBC (guardian.co.uk)
- Murdoch and the BBC: They Both Lose (newser.com)
- Stephen Glover: Thompson’s attack is more than it seems (independent.co.uk)
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.

BBC Strategy Review: BBC 1 – commercial sector 0
Almost every speaker during the last two days at the FT Digital Media & Broadcast conference has spoken of their plans to grow their digital business.
BBC Director General Mark Thompson was the exception. In his strategy review of the BBC set out yesterday he proposed that the BBC pull back its online effort. The review calls for a 25 per cent reduction in the budget for bbc.co.uk and half the number of sections on the site. Savings will be reinvested in the generation of content elsewhere within the BBC under five new editorial priorities.
Whether or not this will be sufficient to pacify critics in the commercial media sector only time will tell. John Ridding, CEO, Financial Times, said that the BBC web site hadn’t helped publishers in their bid to build revenue around news online.
James Murdoch has traditionally gone further. He has been fiercely critical of the scale of the BBC’s free-to-access new web site.
Speaking at the conference yesterday Thomson said that the proposed strategy review will “create spaces for others to fill”.
The proposal also calls for the closure of the BBC Asian Network and BBC 6. Both measures have already resulted in fierce opposition from the audience with a variety of forums, Facebook groups and petitions already in circulation.
By attempting to pacify the commercial sector with its proposals yet also keep its audience onside the BBC has created a smart leadership platform for the ensuing three-month consultation period.
The Financial Times chief media correspondent Ben Fenton has suggested yesterday that the timing of Thompson’s review is incredibly shrewd.
The three-month period of consultation on the proposal means that it has been kicked out beyond the date of the UK election meaning that the BBC charter is unlikely to be an election issue.
Related stories
- BBC To Make Deep Cuts In Internet Services (news.slashdot.org)
- 10,000 sign petition against BBC cuts in 48 hrs (liberalconspiracy.org)
- BBC confirms 6 Music and Asian Network closure (current.com)
- FT.com: BBC review confirms plans to cut website and digital stations (blogs.journalism.co.uk)










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