Quote Originally Posted by baggieal View Post
Does any one bother now? Just that almost every person I speak too does not have one?

Impossible to be caught unless you have I player on or of course they see the programme whilst visiting.

Just started to resent the huge costs and
k nobs like Linekar and woke stuff.
Quite a timely post for me as our youngest was just discussing the value of public funded broadcasting and the BBC in particular with his home tutor for Media Studies!

The original charter was for the BBC to "inform, educate and entertain" and this is still key to its mission alongside a promise to serve the public interest and all audiences through the provision of impartial and high quality product. The charter is regularly updated but these remain central. As the longest running-and largest-public broadcaster, the BBC has not always represented all facets of British society (a failing that the creation of Channel 4 sought to correct in addressing the needs of both younger and minority audiences) but it's high level of funding has allowed it to vastly improved on this as well as expand into other medium to match technological needs.

Of course the main issue at the moment is over its "impartiality" whether on political issues (e.g. reporting on domestic politics or the Gaza conflict) or cultural ones (e.g. the "woke" agenda"). The waters are further muddied by the issue of internet conspiracy theories, advances in AI manipulation and Trumpian claims of "fake news" where the need to report on events asap is matched by an ever increasing need for "fact checking".

I personally am in agreement with you about some of the woke stuff but as regards impartiality (always a hard thing to achieve in polarizing times of economic difficulty) I think my lad and his tutor concluded that-overall- the BBC gets it about right. This was probably based on the fact that if the BBC pi ssed both the Right and Left off, it must be doing something right regarding impartiality 😀

As for value for money, I don't think that anyone can deny that it has produced some great product over the years and continues to do so. It may also produce what some may view as dross but it's charter is to appeal to all so there are bound to be programmes that appeal to some not others.

Over all the BBC retains its global reputation but you are quite right to question the high level of public funding it gets. I think the more moot point however is to imagine a media landscape in Britain without a public broadcaster like the BBC. In the UK, ITV and Channels 4 and 5 also produce some excellent programmes (as, increasingly, do streaming services like Amazon and Netflix) but being left to independent sources alone could be a very slippery slope in which "impartiality" is likely to be the first victim. Think the case of the US in particular with the likes of Fox and it's agenda.

The BBC may not be perfect, but personally I think that it is striving to meet its mission and mostly doing so. Value for money? Amazon Prime is £9 a month, Netflix more. The licence fee works out about £14 a month but the BBC provides so much more than either such streaming services or the advertising funded independents. In addition to this, it is also, of course, a major employer in the UK whose product sold abroad also brings in revenue.