We know more now...
Up to 500 jobs cut in news
600 in the division that makes documentaries and factual programmes
500 across the regions .
10 percent less commissioning of programmes.
More repeats
Thanks to you all for your kind words. Any round of job cuts like this is difficult to bear, and we recognise of course that colleagues outside the ´óÏó´«Ã½ have had it hard for some time. It seems the brunt of the news cuts will be in television news - and through merging the radio, TV and online newsrooms into one. Radio sequence programmes, like PM will share job cuts with sister programmes like Today and the World Tonight.
Anyway, all your comments much appreciated. I'm going to be speaking to Mark Byford, the ´óÏó´«Ã½'s Deputy director General live so I hope to be able to put some of your questions to him.
Ask him how on earth they are squaring the circle that quality will be maintained / middlebrow stuff will be the focus of cuts, when there is a 'slash and burn' attack on Panorama, Storyville, Horizon and other programmes which have already suffered by having to adopt a more 'dumbed down' approach ??
I hate to roll out the cliche, but do these imbeciles really know the price of everything but the value of nothing ??
And ask him, on behalf of Jeff Randall, late of this parish, why he is attacking Newsnight, when it represents less than a fraction of one percent of the Newsnight of the ´óÏó´«Ã½ budget ??
I thought that the whole point of the ´óÏó´«Ã½ was to make stuff like 'Planet Earth' ??
Is the cost of multiplayer/multilevel/multiplatform so much that it is nuking programme budgets ??
Do the numbers of viewers 'online' justify getting rid of boring old 'television' programmes and unsexy rubbish like 'content' ? After all I'm sure there are some people out there thick enough to prefer ITN news, just so long as it is delivered in half minute bursts on to their mobile phone.. !!
Sorry, I'm a bit ranty/ratty at the moment...
Ask Byford why some programmes on the wireless, like PM/WATO/Today cannot be 'red-circled' against these changes in the same way the proverbial 'Crown Jewels' of Sports Broadcasting are ???
At this rate of decay, PM will be reduced to a rolling rota of listeners volunteering to pop into the BH studios and read out their selection of top stories from the ´óÏó´«Ã½ website [including the adverts, fact fans !]..
Actually, sorry, no, don't ask him that Sequin, as he may just think having listeners replace the staff is a 'great out of the box idea' and implement it...
Carolyn,
Having been through the process both as a "winner" and a "loser" in the past, I know it's never easy. I hope you all realise that we already value what you do :)
Carolyn,
Cuts in radio news just aren't acceptable when there's so much junk on television that could be scrapped.
Please tell us how we can get this decision reversed.
Also, don't shy away from asking Mr Byford how he can sit in your studio and look you and the production team in the eyes and say you don't need all the resources you have, to maintain the quality of the programme he's currently being broadcast on.
You might also ask why the ´óÏó´«Ã½ is wasting money developing the iPlayer when there are perfectly good, open standard, free web players already out there. Why re-invent the wheel?
But the top question has to remain how will news standards be maintained when there are 500 fewer people working on it.
My heart sinks.
Frugs dear sequin and the whole team (and Eddie wherever he is!)
It seemed to me that factual programming was slipping a bit anyway, please please please more substance, less style, talking (knowledgable) heads must be better value than vacuous CGI?
Point Mark Byford in the direction of SSCs post (24) on Watching and Waiting thread
No need to guess your breed, eh, Bedd?
Welsh Terrier!
GRRRRRR! Me too!
xx
ed
Bedd (3), I may be completely wrong on this but I believe Sports Broadcasting is covered by ´óÏó´«Ã½ Outside Broadcasts which is a seperate division, still part of the ´óÏó´«Ã½, but is being dealt with in a different manner. I believe (and again some tell me if I am wrong) that the cuts announced today relate to the core ´óÏó´«Ã½ elements of programming, news and radio? But you rant away m'dear, you are quite right to do so.
It is a very difficult question to ask but as we do fund the ´óÏó´«Ã½ I do feel we have a right to say how the money as spent and as such the question that many have asked today should be asked, that is can there not be a ceiling on celebritries salaries. I would hate to think that we could potentially lose another series of something like Planet Earth just so we can have the pleasure of Jonathon Ross's chat show (his Radio 2 show is far superior to this any day)?
Let us hope that you do not take too much of the programme in 'navel gazing'. The is life outside the ´óÏó´«Ã½ !
There is a whole world waiting to be reported
I'm just waiting to hear whether a very young someone very close to me (hope they don't read this!) in a very *precarious* position in a regional office of the ´óÏó´«Ã½ will be affected....
Sympathy with you here of course.
Mollyxx
Sequin....DH (6) has raised exactly the point I wanted to......make sure Mr Byford gives an answer.
Thanks
Please ask Mr Byford why the ´óÏó´«Ã½ feels it necessary to plough so much of our taxes into a grubby soap opera which has consistently promulgated the idea of an East End full of violent, arrogant, inebriated and ignorant folk and which alone has done more damage to the East End of London than WW2 ever managed.
Did I really hear Mark Byford say that 18 million pounds over three years is 'a small part' of the cost of things?
No, Mark, it's a *big* sum of money. It may be smaller than, say, the American national debt or the amount savers have in Northern Rock, but it is not small, and it is not justified. No individual is worth spending that much money on. I don't dislike Ross, and I am sure he's a perfectly darling person (even if he does try to jump queues as if it were his right just for existing) but no, really, perspective is needed here.
The programme said that J Ross's salary £18million over 3 years), is the equivalent of 600 jobs. 18 million divided by 600 is 30000. £30k over 3 years is £10k per annum. Are you suggesting £10k is the average wage in the ´óÏó´«Ã½, or is it rubbish journalism?
George
I think you'll find an irate listener claimed the equivalence, not "the programme"
That's listener participation for you - the loons!
xx
ed
"`A curse,' said Slartibartfast, `which will engulf the Galaxy in fire and destruction, and possibly bring the Universe to a premature doom. I mean it,' he added. `Sounds like a bad time,' said Ford, `with luck I'll be drunk enough not to notice.'"
- Ford ensuring everyone knew where his priorities lay.
Thu Oct 18 17:42:36 BST 2007
For many years I have wondered at the apparent profligacy of some ´óÏó´«Ã½ news coverage. It appears most blatantly in sports news. Take a typical football match: the ´óÏó´«Ã½ has a "on the mike" team of 5 or 6 plus presumably a back-up of many times this present, but come the early evening news we go over to yet another body from the "news" department who stands on the pitch and tells us about the forthcoming match.
The same is true in cricket when 5live goes over to Paddy(?) for an update, meanwhile on Radio 4 longwave there is ball-by-ball coverage.
It appears sometimes as though different parts of the organisation not only do not communicate but do not even recognize the other's existence.
Like everyone else here, I'm shocked at the announcement. IIRC, the £2bn loss was iniated by the charter renewal being agreed before the license fee settlement. Unfortunately, the charter renewal process involved the ´óÏó´«Ã½ agreeing to the Salford move and the digital switchover costs, so when it came for license fee renewal, they expected these costs would be included. Unfortunately, the government decided the ´óÏó´«Ã½ was asking too much...
The salaries of some presenters may seem huge, but since many ex-´óÏó´«Ã½ presenters have been tempted over to other channels by higher paychecks, if a cap was placed on salaries many high-profile presenters would migrate.
And although theoretically, the ´óÏó´«Ã½ shouldn't be bound by ratings, the sheer fact that their ratings are published means that they have to take heed of them. If they didn't consistently produce rating winners during prime-time, even if the programmes themselves were very high quality, some newspaper editors (especially those in charge of the red-tops) would start ranting about the diminishing ratings.
One thing not many people have touched on so far is the potential sale of TV Centre. It would be interesting to know what percentage of TV programming output originates at TVC - although many productions are made elsewhere, I'm sure the majority of studio-based shows are made at TVC. Sure, it's in central London, but IIRC the ´óÏó´«Ã½ own the land as well as the building, so they're not paying rent or anything on it. It's also very accessible - a tube station almost opposite, a major elevated dual carriageway (partially former motorway) just to the North, which provides easy access from outside the capital, an iconic design...
Now imagine other locations, like Shepperton Studios or ´óÏó´«Ã½ Elstree. How many of those features do they share?
Mind you, the ´óÏó´«Ã½ have already done a spot of downgrading - about 20 miles NE of me is the site of ´óÏó´«Ã½ Pebble Mill, the former home of ´óÏó´«Ã½ Birmingham. AFAIK its replacement (on the top two storeys of The Mailbox - a former Royal Mail sorting office, now largely a shopping centre) only has one TV studio (Midlands Today) - the pilot for The One Show was a temporary studio, and relied on an OB truck in the complex's loading bay.
It's awfully hard to get a hog to butcher itself.
-Strom Thurmond, explaining
why Congress doesn't
decrease deficit spending.
From the Bill Wagner Collection
For the Management of the ´óÏó´«Ã½: ´óÏó´«Ã½ equals freedom and entertainment in light of the junk that comes from private stations. If you cut the ´óÏó´«Ã½, most of the customers will not go to commercial TV but may go to other areas such as Press TV and Al Jazeera.
In the blind hope that this ever gets past 502:
Have you noticed how theres' a trend for ´óÏó´«Ã½ TV newscasters to present classical music programmes on R4?
First it was Jim Naughtie, and now Huw Edwards.
btw, is there really such a word as 'coronated'?????? (as heard on Huw's programme today)
1535
Frances O @ 22, yes, there is. The verb 'coronate' is in the 1933 S.O.D., marked 'rare', dated 1623, meaning 'to crown'. 'Coronated' is in there too, dated 1676, a 'ppl a' meaning 'of flowers: arranged in a whorl', or 'in botany and zoology, furnished with a corona' and some special sorts of shells.
But I bet that Huw Edwards didn't know that. The word doesn't seem to be in any of the other dictionaries I've got apart from the S.O.D.s, even the ones less than ten years old. ;-)