Sunday 30 January 2011

BBC

It may come as a surprise to many people who live outside the UK that the BBC is not funded by the tax payer.  The BBC has a unique funding mechanism which extracts money from those who own up to using a television set which receives broadcast material.  It is a criminal offence to operate a TV without a licence and several people are hauled before the courts for non-payment.  The last government in the UK started a process of top-slicing, where the licence fee has been used for digital switchover for TV and radio, the financing of the Welsh language service S4C in Wales, and possibly some broadband roll-out in remote parts of the country.  The BBC World Service has in the past been funded by the Foreign Office; this is going to be reduced and the BBC is cutting staff and services.  Several language services have been dropped in the Balkans, parts of Africa and the sub-continent.  The BBC website is going to be cut back in an effort to save money and to appease some of the commercial web information providers. 

Domestically, the BBC radio service is under pressure to cut costs, cut content and cut original production, while at the same time increase their 'talent pool'.  Domestic radio services which are UK wide include Radios 1-7.  Radio 1 is targeted for the under-20s; Radio 2 for the under-35s; Radio 3 is supposed to be intelligent; Radio 4 is middle-aged, mainly speech, comedy and 'balanced' politics; Radio 5 is news and sports; Radio 6 is music and was going to be axed, but is under reprieve; and Radio 7 is anything that can be dug up from the archives over the last 60 years.  In addition, there are national services in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales, each with Irish, Gaelic and Welsh inputs.  English regions have some regional news, traffic, phone-in, request shows.  Most of the output can be picked up on the internet, though at weekends the local services tend to disappear.  It's well-worth going through the BBC local radio sites for a bit of real life outside the M25. 

The World Service can be picked up in the UK on digital radios, as can most of the output of the BBC.  Digital reception can vary on location, atmosphere, traffic and movement round the receiver.  Digital radios cost around $50 at the low end and give access to virtually all the BBC output.  At some point there are plans to shut much of the FM output, though this is still a hot topic.

Many British people like to moan about the BBC, which is usually referred to as The Beeb or Aunty.  Some people view the BBC as being too liberal, too secular and too elitist.  Others view it as the last stronghold of nepotism and cronyism, and with an agenda of its own.  With the  coalition government there has been some tension with future funding and the culture secretary Jeremy Hunt was introduced on the flagship programme as Jeremy Cunt.  You can listen to this by clicking on: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yjH4arIn-80  Mr Hunt is also charged with deciding on the referral of Rupert Murdoch's complete takeover of BSkyB.  This has run into all sorts of problems, with scandals over phone hacking from one of Murdoch's flagships the News of the World (affectionately known as the News of the Screws).  It appears that Mr Murdoch and family do not like the BBC funding, but they are quite happy to poach talent and thus keep some of the BBC talent very well off, thank you very much. 

In these blogs, I do not plan to reveal much about me, but I will tell  you that I don't have a TV licence and I'm not breaking the law as I don't have a TV.  I have 7 DAB radios tuned to a variety of stations around the house and 1 FM receiver.  I tend to listen to Radio 3,4,5,7 and the World Service, and show little loyalty to any of the programmes.  If they're boring and I don't like the presenter, I hit another button.  In this blog I will try and give sound picture of the BBC radio services.  The pictures are better in radio!  I seldom get news from the BBC web and prefer dipping into other newspaper and radio stations from international publications.  Some of the press in the UK is surrounded by a firewall of some description, but it is not difficult to look for news outside the lens of the BBC, The Guardian or the Murdoch Group.

The big question concerning the BBC is the question of 'balance'.  Is the BBC guilty of obreption, and if it is what is the cure?  Please send your answers ...

Tent slut

I like this:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/belgium/8201723/Most-popular-Flemish-words-of-the-year-include-tent-slut.html

I can just imagine Kenneth Williams saying this in Carry On Camping!    You remember that "Tent up first, bunk up later!" Yes, tent brings up memories of awful weather yet one has to look at the bright side and consider the poor people who have been evacuated due to floods and earthquakes and strife in Haiti, Pakistan, Australia.  Yes, tents is up there.

I think I might need some help in organising these words.  I'm very new at this - in fact, that in German I have a blogmangel.  I think this implies a deficiency in blog skills or a shortage of blogs.  I tried your idea of looking up some linked items and in that Telegraph (Torygraph) piece you sent me it appears that the second most common Flemish word of 2010 was 'pedopriester'.  I was searching through the weekend German press and it appears that your friend Dr Ratzinger wrote about priestermangel in the 1970s. 

http://www.fair-news.de/news/Westdeutsche+Zeitung+Schon+1970+zweifelte+Joseph+Ratzinger+den+Zoelibat+an+Der+Zwang+zur+Ehelosigkeit+muss+fallen+Ein+Kommentar+von+Alexander+Schulte-244416.html

As I don't hold a brief for Dr Ratzinger and I'm sure he doesn't hold a brief for me, I need to consult a suitable blog about the shortage of priests.  Is this on account of demand, celibacy or lack of prospects?

Another item for our discussion - now that we have mangle and tent in the list - is 'a bottle of whiskey'.     The smell of it makes me feel sick and the empty bottle can be an offensive weapon in the wrong hands.  What are the views on whiskey?  If you think whiskey is bad, which is the worst - Scotch, Irish, Welsh, Manx, Canadian, American, Spanish, Thai, Japanese or Chinese? 

Ding Dong!


Saturday 29 January 2011

The Syllabub of Terrors

The Syllabub of Terrors is based on that big obreption in the 19th century.  This is known as the Syllabus of Errors and if you want to undermine authority you can start by going through each of the items and say 'NO'.  If you say no, you will save yourself from being catechised, which can be painful. 

I am looking for new items for the Syllabub of Terrors for the 21st century.  Points will be awarded for those items which can scare the living daylights.  As a taster, my first item or ingredient in this tasty confection is: mangle.

mfg

obreption.

Welcome!

Greetings to those interested in exposing those who would look down on us!  You have nothing to lose apart from your marbles.  Search for: obreption and check out the deceit of those who wish to impose their authority on you ...