Showing posts with label 'Farming Today'. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 'Farming Today'. Show all posts

Monday, 7 August 2017

We'll tak a mug o' kindness yet, For auld lang syne



Being up with the blackbird for an absurdly early start at work I heard this morning's Farming Today live, presented by one Dr. David Gregory-Kumar (recipient, several years back, of a 'You Betcha!' mug from our very own David Preiser. Wonder if he still has it?). I was so surprised by some of the statistics on UK salmon farming that I made a mental note to share them with you here. 

Farmed salmon - an industry that's been around for some forty years now - accounts for around 40% of the value of Scotland's food exports. It's worth £2 billion to the UK economy. This year it's set to become the UK's largest food export, with some £650 million-worth of salmon being exported to 64 countries. That's quite something, isn't it?

It's controversial though. Anglers and fish conservationists have big problems with it, and a fair airing of both sides of the argument was given today. (Credit where credit's due, and all that).

All very interesting, if you're interested in such things (as I am). And this fine feature apparently kicks off a week of pieces on Farming Today looking at salmon, which I won't be listening to live as I ain't getting up that early for work again any time soon, if I can possibly help it! 

I've got my fingers firmly crossed though that there will not be a feature this week focusing on 'concerns' that salmon will stop jumping up rivers like the Severn, the Lune, the Tweed, the Tay and the Dee or some such thing after Brexit as I really don't want to start worrying that my supply of wild salmon, caught on Lune by a friend, will dry up simply because I failed to heed the wise words of white, middle-class, tuition-fee raising old men like Sir Vincent Cable.


By the way, David G-K, a self-professed "salmon enthusiast", says that he'll be "once again standing with other salmon enthusiasts by the River Severn, just south of Shrewsbury, "watching the salmon fling themselves up over the weir as they arrive back from the icy Atlantic and head up the warmer river waters to spawn". 

Sounds like a good day out to me. Maybe I should pop down, surprise him, say 'hello' and ask him about David's mug - unless, on popping down, I immediately see him drinking from a 'You Betcha!' mug, in which case I won't bother, and will have to talk salmon and BBC bias instead. 

P.S. Talking about salmon...

I'm just watching the sunset tonight over Morecambe Bay from my window. 

A few minutes ago the sky was a mix of light blue, incandescent orange and dark grey clouds tinged with purple. Now the light blue has spread, the orange has turned salmon pink and the shrinking clouds (just declared "the globe's most purple clouds" by the Guinness Book of World Records) are turning deep purple. And now the salmon in the sky has returned to the sea (unlike actual adult salmon who, if they succeed, make love upstream to the crooning of Fish from Marillion and then, alas, die. Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine, et lux perpetua luceat eis) and it's all weak light blue, a weary time-for-bed patch of halfhearted yellow, and micro-clouds where the purple is becoming grimly, brush-your-teeth grey again (prompting the purple-obsessed Guinness Book of World Records mob to shake their heads and walk off in disgust).

I do love living in Morecambe.

Saturday, 31 December 2016

Same old same old same old



Similarly, this morning's Farming Today This Week was another Brexit-focused look-ahead to 2017. 

Previous Brexit-based panel discussions on Farming Today, post-referendum, have been striking in their lack of balance. One soon after the referendum had 4/4 guests who had been pro-Remain in the referendum. Another one in October had 3/3 guests who had been pro-Remain. This edition had 2/3 guests who had been pro-Remain and 1/3 who didn't take a position at the time but was, from her contributions, clearly like-minded. On the 'hard' v 'soft' Brexit question all three of today's guests wanted a 'soft' Brexit. 

And on it goes.

Saturday, 22 October 2016

Farming Today ramps up the bias


This morning's Farming Today This Week might well turn up in Radio 4's Brexit Collection too. 


The three politicians interviewed throughout the programme - Molly Scott Cato (Green), Julie Girling (Conservative) and Huw Irranca Davies (Labour) - all supported Remain in the EU referendum...

...and you could tell!...

...given the underlying mood of gloom they gave off...

...(though, oddly, the Green MEP sounded quite enthusiastic about what could be done for the environmentalist cause post-Brexit).

That fact alone should be enough to prove just how biased this programme was.

To add to it we had three reports. 

The first featured (John-Redwood-bashing) lawyer Hugh Mercer. Googling him it turns out (though you could have guessed from just listening to him!) that he signed a pro-Remain letter for Lawyers In For Britain

Then came a Norfolk farmer (who Googling shows also opposed Brexit), worrying about subsides.

Then came a piece on the EU Water Framework Directive featuring an enforcer of the directive (who supports it) and a famer who, while not knowing much about it, is happy that it makes people care more about the quality of water in our rivers and on our land. 

It was a Leave-supporting free zone, and it's impossible to believe that the makers of Farming Today weren't aware of that fact before broadcasting this edition of the programme. 

That's not to say that it wasn't interesting or that the views expressed weren't worth hearing. It's just to say that the programme was very heavily biased against Brexit.

Monday, 30 May 2016

Au revoir


For my final post before I officially begin my two-week holiday in Raqqa, here's a Bank Holiday Monday smorgasbord...

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Today


I was going to begin it with John Humphrys's interview with Jackie Walker, but Sue and Sarah AB have absolutely nailed it already. 

"Bungled" is le mot juste. My original thoughts were to outline JH's interviewing here with phrases like "gumming" and "whacking her with a moth-eaten feather duster" but "bungled" is a much more precise way of putting it.

JH was simultaneously woefully under-prepared and distressingly OTT. She walked all over him - much to the delight of her fans on Twitter (the usual crowd).

Now Ms. Walker, without refusing to apologise for her false and obnoxious comments (indeed by openly revelling in them), is now back in the Corbynista fold. In contrast, suspended Labour MP Naz Shah, who has apologised and apologised and apologised (and won a good deal of respect from most quarters for so doing), is still suspended.

Go figure!

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Start the Week


This morning's Start the Week from the Hay Festival had me completely hooked. 

Its theme (perfect for a sunny bank holiday morning) was 'Spooks, war and genocide', and I found myself thinking rather more deeply about the issues raised than I might normally do. 

Now, I could share some of those new, deep thoughts with you (and say how fascinating former British soldier Harry Parker's novel sounds) but, instead, I'll just narrow things down to the programme's main point of disagreement: the question of how to get the balance right between the needs of national security and human rights (an issue I've never quite managed to satisfactorily resolve inside my own muddled head). 

The two poles of this vital argument were represented by Michael Hayden, the former director of the US National Security Agency who George W. Bush made Director of National Intelligence and then director of the CIA, and Philippe Sands, the  human rights lawyer who wants to see Mr. Bush tried. They engaged with each other thoughtfully and respectfully, both acknowledging the complexity of the issues involved. And both of them came across well. 

Disappointingly, presenter Tom Sutcliffe - representing the BBC here - marred things a bit by getting excessively hot-under-the-collar with Mr. Hayden on a couple of occasions over the Bush administration's use of 'enhanced interrogation techniques'. If Mr. Sands could remain calm and friendly towards the highly thoughtful Mr, Hayden, then surely Tom ought to have tried to keep his cool too. Plus he stopped Mr. Hayden in his tracks as soon as he began suggesting that President Obama was not only a continuation but, in some ways, an amplification of President Bush on some key national security issues. 

Much as I like Tom Sutcliffe (especially for Round Britain Quiz), I have to say that his own biases were showing through there. He should have kept calm and trusted his listeners. We're quite capable of making our own minds up (or at least trying to), thank you, without having some BBC/Guardian voice vigorously 'virtue signalling' at us.

I haven't so far mentioned that journalist Janine di Giovanni was also a guest on Start the Week there, did I? Apologies. A case of #everydaysexism probably.

Speaking of which...

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Woman's Hour


Also surprisingly fascinating was today's Woman's HourYes, the subject was extremely niche - high-profile media types worrying about (women journalists) getting on (or not getting on) in the media - but it was also curiously thought-provoking, and it got better as it went on. 

Lots more deep thoughts flowed in my head as a result which, again, I won't bother you with. So what will I do instead? Well, I'll simply transcribe the start of the bit about the (in)famous Katie Hopkins, starring 'token male in the lionesses' den' Nick Ferrari from LBC (who you'll be relieved to hear survived the ordeal unscathed). It's quite revealing, I think, about the BBC mindset:
Emma Barnett (Woman's Hour presenter): The digital landscape is changed hopefully. It has also meant that, commercially...you mentioned commercial earlier, Camilla - what sells, what doesn't...we may have got to position where people are more extreme to get hits. So let me bring in somebody who, if you're talking about female polemicists in the modern day: Katie Hopkins. I want to understand. Does she fit in as a polemicist, someone like that? Or is she part of the kind-of internet culture provocateur? Nick, I'll ask you. What would you make of somebody like Katie Hopkins? Is she evening up the score for female polemicists? 
Nick Ferrari: I don't know whether she's evening out the score but obviously she's got a role to play. Yes, she's a voice. She's a voice who has a certain audience. It has a certain resonance. There are people out there who follow her. It might be totally opposite as I see heads shaking just about all around me at this table... 
Emma Barnett: A lot of heads shaking on this programme! 
Nick Ferrari: There's a lot of...they're even shaking in the control room. I've lost the whole...I've lost everybody...I've lost the whole of the BBC on this one!! 
Emma Barnett: Welcome to Woman's Hour, Nick Ferrari!
Indeed, Emma! 

(It was Nick's first appearance). 

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The World at One


For today's The World at One it was back to the Hay Festival. The main news story of the day, however, was the latest batch of Albanian economic migrants getting rescued in the English Channel. 

Interestingly, from yesterday's BBC One news bulletins onwards, the BBC hasn't hidden the fact that these escapees from Calais are Albanians. They haven't exactly gone overboard, however, in stressing the 'economic migrant' point and what that suggests: that there are obviously a lot of economic migrants from (non-war-torn) Albania (or now-peaceful Kosovo) in the camps at Calais. 

Why haven't we heard about them before? And, given that it eventually was revealed that Albanians (and others from the Balkans) also made up a surprisingly large number of those trying to get into Germany last summer, why haven't we heard much (if any) discussion on the BBC as to why that's the case? Just why are so many of these people from the Balkans trying to get here? (They aren't Syrian refugees. They aren't unaccompanied children.) It's a very under-reported (almost unreported) story, isn't it? 

Richard Galpin's report featured two interviewees: very briefly UKIP's Henry Bolton, ("UKIP's candidate to be Police and Crime Commissioner in Kent - a job he didn't get", as Richard introduced him") and, at much greater length, Damian Green PM ("former Home Office minister"). Mr. Green described the people crossing the channel as "refugees" - and wasn't picked up on that. 

We also got the reflections of Salman Rushdie on the subject. (Salman was with Martha Kearney at the Hay Festival.) He waxed literary and somewhat nebulous on matters political. He extolled the wonderful things about immigration for the UK but then conceded that there's probably been too much, too quick recently. That's worrying for him not so much in its own right but more because it's leading to the rise of the far-right across Europe. 

He did tell us an interesting story though about his final abandonment of his Muslim faith as a 14-year-old though. His coup-de-grace was to eat a ham sandwich. (By coincidence, I'd just eaten a ham sandwich before listening to him this lunchtime). 

The closing discussion between a historian, a neuroscientist and a novelist, focused to a surprising extent on the BBC's favourite subject: Mr. Donald Trump. (Boo!)

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Top Gear


How you doin'? 

Well, thanks for asking but I've nothing much to say about Top Gear (though, in true blogger style, that isn't going to stop me). 

I didn't watch it but I've read lots about its disappointing ratings, its largely unenthusiastic critical reviews and its less-than-wildly-enthusiastic public response  - with the exception of Matt LeBlanc, who everyone seems to have found likeable.

('So boring it barely exists': readers review the new Top Gear was the Guardian's less-than-Friendly headline.)

The BBC News website, as is its way, had the news of those ratings as one of the top five stories on its homepage earlier this afternoon. Oddly, they've now dropped it down to their Also in the news section! (O the embarrassment!) 

Despite not being entirely able to disguise the fact that Top Gear's return was something of a flop, the BBC article tried to be as Panglossian about it as it can be, casting that 4.4 million figure in the best possible light, quoting Chris Evans's tweets rather than all those negative tweets everyone else is citing, and describing those reviews as "mixed", #bbcbias.

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Marr


Catching up with yesterday's stuff, The Andrew Marr Show has received lots of comment as usual. I'm still recovering from Amanda Platell's semi-pornographic on-air flirting with Yanis 'Spock' Varoufakis - by far the most graphic flirting I've ever seen on the Marr show (even including all of Andrew's own sterling efforts while interviewing glamorous Hollywood actresses). I felt that the programme's producers missed a trick by not providing the paper review with a Barry White soundtrack.

As David P noted in the comments (after vomiting), Mr. Varoufakis was on fine form throughout. He may have been a complete flop as Greek finance minister, but he's great entertainment - and worrying 'right' about quite a lot of things (though I didn't buy his anti-Brexit point). He's what the Greek's might call 'a phenomenon'.


Doc Fox and Tony BLiar followed.

The Corbynistas on Twitter weren't at all happy at the good doc's appearance (some even blamed the 'Tory' BBC' for inviting him on, saying he's always on)...,but that was as nothing compared to how they reacted when the hated Tony came on. Liam was quickly forgotten, and all Hell broke loose.

Channelling the spirit of the blessed Boris, I'd said that was happened on Twitter at the point of the hated Mr. Blair's arrival was comparable to how Euripides's Bacchae reacted to King Pentheus after he banned their worship of the beloved (Jeremy Corbyn) Dionysus. They went into a wild frenzy and wanted to tear him apart. And Andy Marr went the way of Actaeon at the hands of these hermaphrodite maenads too, purely through association. (The world of 'BBC bias' gets madder and madder).

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The World This Weekend


My 'big thing' yesterday, if I'd had the time to post about it, was going to be Mark Mardell's latest EU referendum special on The World This Weekend

Our Mark had wangled another BBC jaunt (at our expense no doubt), this time to Berlin. He liked Berlin...which is nice.

There all-and-sundry sent us a postcard saying how much they want us to stay in the EU. They love us and wouldn't be too mean to us if we leave the EU but they so want us to stay and they will be mean enough to make us regret leaving.

All voices sang from the same Lutheran hymn sheet...except for the lady from what Mark called the "hard-right" AfD, who rather fancied seeing what would happen if we left.

'Will you punish the UK?' was Mark Mardell's question throughout.

His two studio guests, back in Blighty, were Sir Vince Cable and Gisela Stuart. That was fair enough. Gisela got a little less time than Sir Vince but Sir Vince was interrupted, while Gisela wasn't. Also fair enough.

I saw a detailed comment elsewhere, however, saying that Mark Mardell cut Gisela Stuart off, that there was hardly any time for Gisela, that unelected/kicked-out Sir Vince got an easy ride, that Mark Mardell ignored the main issue of the day "which was the immigration figures", and that there was "a long, biased report featuring only pro EU bigwigs and foreign students"...

...which reminded me of the danger I face, as a blogger, when it comes to the fraught question of confirmation bias.

That commenter spotted that Sir Vince got more time than Gisela but didn't recall that Sir Vince also got interrupted, unlike Gisela. He also didn't notice that Mark Mardell did raise those immigration figures during that interview (if only once). Nor did the commenter remember MM's interview with that striking AfD lady (despite remembering the pro-EU/pro-UK students who appeared for less than 30 seconds). And Gisela Stuart, if you listen back, didn't get cut off by Mark Mardell for reasons of bias. MM was clearly chafing at Sir Vince for time reasons in advance of his Berlin report and when Gisela begun replying to Sir Vince MM had already begun his link to the report. He immediately said he'd return to Gisela and Sir Vince later, which he did (and which is something else that commenter didn't remember).

This isn't a sneer at that commenter. It's a reminder and a possible mea culpa. We all hear what we hear. We only seem, however, to remember parts of what we hear on occasions. Something in us makes us forget the bits that don't confirm our point of view. And we also mishear things, perhaps for the same reason. We're all at risk of doing it. It's human nature. We probably all need to re-check what we've heard. Here endeth the lesson.

This feature struck me as being strikingly pro-EU-biased nonetheless. Please feel free to debunk me if you think I'm hardly any more reliable than the commenter above. I could be wrong.

I don't think I am though. This kind of thing has marked Mark Mardell's The World This Weekend for months.

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Farming Today


Talking about the BBC's EU referendum coverage, it would be wrong (and downright silly) not to acknowledge that certain BBC programmes really have been 'getting it about right'.

I've been fairly studiously monitoring Radio 4's Farming Today - one of the few BBC programmes the Sunday Telegraph's Christopher Booker thinks is beyond reproach - for some time.

And I agree with Christopher. I think Farming Today's EU referendum coverage has been beyond reproach.

Try Friday's edition, perhaps, for a taster.

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Countryfile


Countryfile on BBC One also did an EU referendum feature, courtesy of Tom Heap, this week.

Countryfile is a programme that matters. It has a big audience (bigger last night than the much-hyped Top Gear). Being Tom Heap, about whom we've written before, I expected heavy bias. I don't think I found it.

The structuring was very BBC. First came a section starring pro-Remain David Cameron, with two pro-Brexit voices as 'vox pops'. Then came a section starring pro-Leave Boris Johnson, with two pro-Remain voices as 'vox pops'.

I watched the Dave/Boris interviews closely. I spotted that Boris got more questioning from Tom than Dave and that Dave was photographed holding a lamb while Boris just stood in front of a stream, but I also note that people on Twitter then claimed that Tom - despite all that questioning - seemed to like Boris more. You see what you see. I sniffed hard and smelled a bit of pro-Remain bias. Others sniffed and found pro-Brexit bias. And all of us mainstream political types on Twitter, one way or the other, were utterly overwhelmed by the usual deluge of furious-sounding Corbynistas complaining that it was the 'Tory' BBC featuring nothing but Tories, making crude jokes about Mr. Cameron and pig farms, and wondering why Jeremy Corbyn wasn't appearing.

Complaints from all sides. And, maybe, here they have a point.

I was, however, being in holiday mood, mainly focusing on the lighter stuff. I was concentrating on Dave in his casual jeans, Boris in his traditional farmer's outfit and Anita Rani in her wetsuit - and on the stunning photography from the Countryfile crew of Snowdonia, especially the beautiful shots of Snowdon, Llanberis, the lake of Llyn Padam, ruined Dolbadarn Castle and the mountains guarding glorious Llanberis Pass. I think that's one of the most 'romantic' spots in the UK (only Morecambe Bay beats it for views) and Countryfile really did it proud.


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BBC News at Six


Talking of the BBC's EU referendum coverage...

Our latest stats regarding BBC One's News at Six coverage, specifically monitoring which side's angle comes first in either the headlines or the whole bulletin now shows (not including Monday 30/5, which I've not watched yet), and following on from our last update, now read:
21 for Remain
7 for Leave
Two of the latest batch are, unusually, hard to call, so they haven't been included them the tally (either being neutral or too hard to decide upon). I'll list them among the others below, so please feel free (if you're more certain than I am) to allocate them to one side or the other:

22/5 Referendum battle lines are drawn over the Health Service and the chances of Turkey joining the EU. With controversy over what future migration levels might be David Cameron clashes with one of his own ministers on whether Britain could veto Turkish membership. The head of NHS England says the Health Service would be effected in a UK exit caused an economic slowdown. We'll be exploring the latest arguments from the two sides, with less than five weeks to go.

23/5 Voting to leave the EU would trigger a year-long recession. A bleak forecast from the Treasury. A warning from both David Cameron and George Osborne: at least half a million jobs could go

24/5 David Cameron: I think there's some very strong retail arguments about the cost of a holiday...
Newsreader: Now it's air fares on the line in the EU referendum debate. Claim and counter-claim. How do voters react?

25/5 A top economic group says quitting the EU could mean two extra years of austerity. Leave campaigners say it's propaganda.

26/5 Immigration takes centre-stage in the referendum debate as the annual figures show the numbers are up. The difference between those coming in and those leaving was over 300,000. More than half were from the EU.
Boris Johnson: That is pushing up our population growth. It's putting huge pressure on housing, on services such as the NHS and, of course, on school places and everything else.
Newsreader: We'll be getting the reaction from voters about these new figures.

27/5 Lurid and misleading. An influential group of MPs slams the claims being made by politicians on both sides of the EU referendum debate. The Treasury Select Committee says the public is rightly fed up about bogus and confusing arguments made by the Leave and Remain campaigns.
Andrew Tyrie: What we've got is an arms race of claim and counter-claim. It's not just confusing the public; it's impoverishing the political debate.
He called for an amnesty on misleading claims made by politicians. But is it likely?

28/5 Young people are being urged to register to vote in next month's European Union election. The former Labour leader Ed Miliband said millions of them are yet to register, just days before the deadline. Well, meanwhile the Employment minister Priti Patel has said Britain faces a brighter economic future outside the EU.

29/5 Downing Street says Leave campaigners in the EU referendum are trying to distract voters from the real economic cost of leaving the European Union. It comes after two senior Conservatives told the Prime Minister he must admit he can't cut immigration while Britain remains in the EU.

That's a pretty clear 3:1 ratio in favour of Remain.

The extent to which that reflects the relative fire power of the two campaigns rather than blatant BBC is open to question. The imbalance is clear and striking though.

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Newsnight


As for Newsnightit's a while since I updated you (and a full update will be posted when I get back), but we left our count of pro-Remain, pro-Leave guests,, as of 17 April, as: 
36 Pro-Remain
22 Pro-Leave
7 Questionable  
Well, here's what's happened since:


18/4
Joint interview: Daniel Hannan, Conservative (LEAVE); Liz Truss, Labour (REMAIN); Juergen Maier, CEO, Siemens UK (REMAIN); Nicola Horlick, CEO, Money & Co. (REMAIN); Gerard Lyons, economics adviser to Boris Johnson (LEAVE); Farzana Baduel, Curzon PR (LEAVE)

19/4
Interview: Pascal Lamy, former EU trade commissioner  (REMAIN);
Interview: David Owen, former UK Foreign Secretary (LEAVE)

20/4
Joint interview: Suzanne Evans, Vote Leave (LEAVE); Anne Applebaum, The Washington Post (REMAIN)

22/4
Joint interview: Liam Fox, Conservative (LEAVE); Louis Susman, former US ambassador to UK (REMAIN)

25/4
Joint interview: Penny Mordaunt, Conservative (LEAVE); Alan Johnson, Labour (REMAIN); Richard Walton, former counter-terrorism chief at the Met (LEAVE); Colonel Richard Kemp, former Joint Intelligence Committee (LEAVE); Robert Wainwright, director, Europol (REMAIN); Shami Chakrabarti, human rights lawyer (REMAIN)

28/4
Interview: Andrea Leadsom, Conservative (LEAVE)

9/5
Interview: Liam Fox, Conservative (LEAVE)
Interview: Yanis Varoufakis. former Greek Finance Minister (REMAIN) 

10/5
Joint interview: Kwasi Kwateng, Conservative (LEAVE); David Hanson, Labour (REMAIN); Dr Rohini Deshmukh, GP (LEAVE????); Harriet Sargeant, Centre for Policy Studies (LEAVE); Jonathan Portes, NIESR (REMAIN?????); Rev. Alyson Buxton, Rector of Boston (REMAIN????)

12/5
Interview: Lord Lamont, Conservative (LEAVE)
Interview: Michel Sapin. French Finance Minister (REMAIN)

16/5
Joint interview: Douglas Carswell, UKIP (LEAVE); Amber Rudd, Conservative (REMAIN); Dr Dia Chakravarty, Taxpayers' Alliance (LEAVE; Tara Palmeri, Politico (LEAVE?????); Sir Stephen Wall, former UK diplomat (REMAIN); Minette Batters, NFU (REMAIN)

17/5
Interview: John McDonnell, Labour (REMAIN)

18/5
Interview: Liz Truss, Conservative (REMAIN)
Interview: Suzanne Evans, Vote Leave (LEAVE))

20/5
Joint interview: Peter Oborne, Daily Mail (LEAVE); Polly Mackenzie. former Lib Dem advisor (REMAIN) 

23/5
Joint interview: Andrea Leadsom, Conservative (LEAVE): Chuka Umunna, Labour (REMAIN); Charles Crawford, former diplomat (LEAVE); Ngaire Woods, Oxford University (REMAIN); Kathrine Kleveland, Leader of the Norwegian 'NO to EU' party (LEAVE); Peter Sutherland, international businessman and former Attorney General of Ireland (REMAIN)

25/5

Interview: Alan Sugar, businessman (REMAIN)

26/5 

Interview: Theresa Villiers, Conservative (LEAVE)
Interview: Nicola Sturgeon, SNP (REMAIN)

27/5

Interview: Chris Patten, former BBC Trust chairman (REMAIN)
Interview: Jacob Rees-Mogg, Conservative (LEAVE)


That raises our running total to:

60 Pro-Remain
44 Pro-Leave
12 Questionable  

As for the sub-trend of regarding who gets most of all of the solo appearances (i.e. not in joint interviews), well, that continues as well. I make the totals for that:

Remain - 25
Leave - 14

Both have balanced out more in recent weeks, though Remain still has a clear advantage.

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Newsnight (again)


In the meantime, however, a new feature was added to Newsnight's coverage - a series of personal reflections from non-politicians. I've been monitoring that too. Here's how that's going:

20/4
My Decision video: Dreda Say Mitchell, writer (LEAVE)

28/4
My Decision video: Michael Morpurgo, writer (REMAIN)

4/5
My Decision video: Sir Tom Hunter, entrepreneur and philanthropist  (UNDECIDED)

9/5
My Decision video: Tracey Emin, artist (REMAIN)

My Decision video: John Timpson, businessman (LEAVE)

19/5
My Decision video: Gillian Duffy, 'that bigoted woman' (LEAVE)

24/5
My Decision video: Hilary Alexander, former Telegraph fashion writer (LEAVE)

27/5

My Decision video: Charles Moore, former Telegraph editor (LEAVE)

That's working out (so far) as: 
Pro-Remain; 2
Pro-Leave: 5
Undecided - 1
...which, as you can see, is trending firmly in the other direction to the earlier stats and, thus, somewhat complicating matters.

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Twitter



Some good news. Jon Donnison has stopped tweeting anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian stuff. His Twitter feed has gone from inflammatory to innocuous this year. That's progress.

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Talking of Twitter, the main hashtag on Twitter regarding 'BBC bias' at the moment is #toryelectionfraud #BBCbias. The Corbynistas have gone from nowhere (except Media Lens) a few years back to pretty much 'owning' the 'BBC bias' market on Twitter. Even the cybernats are being put into the shade by the Corbynistas.

A small, utterly unrepresentative social media echo chamber, always righteously banging on about BBC bias without just cause?

Strangely (and apologies for not mentioning this earlier), I'd been seeing this joint hashtag for ages in the run up to the elections this May. I'd particularly noticed that they were furious at Laura Kuenssberg (as they are about most things) for failing to tweet about it. Then on the day after polling day this year, Laura K did tweet about #toryelectionfraud and the BBC One News at Six mentioned #toryelectionfraud and the BBC's Twitter feed mentioned #toryelectionfraud. 

In the interests of disinterested, honest blogging, I could see their point. I don't know what to make of it though.

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Sunday, 11 October 2015

Christopher Booker cheerfully drives his tractor into a ditch



I think Christopher Booker may have published his least popular article at the Sunday Telegraph today

I suspected as much when I saw the surprisingly small number of comments below his article. 

And then when I saw the top-rated  comment, beginning "Sorry Christopher...", I knew something was seriously amiss.

What had he got so 'wrong'? What had so put off his faithful readership?

Well, here's a clue - his article's headline:

BBC is not always as bad as I often say

Not even we've ever dared post a blog title like that!

And it gets 'worse'...

Here's the whole of this part of Mr Booker's Sunday Telegraph column:
Farming Today's Charlotte Smith is entirely at home with both countryside and farming. 
Despite the constant examples I report of the relentless bias and professional shortcomings of the BBC, I am first to admit that here and there in that horribly flawed and absurdly self-satisfied organisation there are still admirable people, whose good work is much appreciated. 
Years ago, when I often wrote here about the mess being made of British agriculture, I several times had a go at how Farming Today had ceased to be a serious programme, featuring certain female reporters who seemed to know nothing about farming or the countryside. 
A shining exception to this recently has been one of its current presenters, Charlotte Smith, who seems entirely at home with both and (like her counterpart Helen Mark on Open Country) can talk expertly, pleasantly and with common sense to everyone she interviews. 
A fine example was last weekend’s item about the man who, amazingly, still happily runs his family’s 200-acre farm, split up into little parcels all around and even inside Heathrow Airport. 
Like all Smith’s reports, it was superbly professional and a fascinating little gem. 
However loud the clamour may grow for the BBC to be abolished – and its failings are so culturally ingrained that it is hard to see how they could ever otherwise be remedied – we would miss the rare contributors like her who alone make one quite happy to pay the licence fee.
Having a bit of a soft spot for Charlotte Smith too, I was happy to read his lovely tribute to her.

And that last, most 'disappointing' paragraph of all, where Christopher Booker grows wistful about some of the collateral damage that might occur if the licence fee were to be abolished, strikes a strong chord with me too...

...if not, it seems, with that many of his other readers!

Friday, 26 December 2014

The dawn of Christmas morn (on Radio 4)



Hope you all had a merry Christmas Day and that Satan brought you everything you wanted (especially our dyslexic readers)!

In the spirit of the season (and this blog), I'd just like to say something nice about a couple of BBC Radio 4 programmes which I woke up to yesterday morning... 

Firstly, an edition of Farming Today which gave us nothing but the voices of those attending a nativity in a barn at a family-run dairy farm adjoining a church in a tiny Devon village. 

We heard from the participating children (the main narrators), the farmers, the local vicar, the villagers, and others in the audience. Plus the cows. 

Concerns over things like the falling milk price weren't ignored, but the fact that a community rooted in farming, in village life, in church life, is still able to get together at Christmas, draw strength from continuing, age-old English 'calendar customs', and find significance in the Christian message really struck a chord with me. 

It also shows that BBC Radio 4 can go beyond pandering to hand-wringing, lefty, latte-sipping, muesli-munching, Guardian-reading, Woman's Hour-listening, Volvo-driving, metrosexual middle-class types (as we say in this part of the blogosphere!)

Only sour-pusses would have failed to enjoy it.



Secondly, I'd like to recommend a Tweet of the Day from Sir David BBCenborough.

It dealt with the Christmas Shearwater - a very-rarely-reported bird whose main call - 'Oh.....Oh....Oh....Oh' - seems to suggest its surprise at being noticed - and, more than that, actually profiled by the world-famous BBC, and by the legendary Sir David BBCenborough at that! 

The bird, which likes to reside on Christmas Island, has the Latin name Puffinus nativitatis (a Christmas puffin!) - and what's not to like about that?

Oh....Oh....Oh....Oh....

Saturday, 30 August 2014

Farming Today


Following Prayer for the Day came Farming Today - another daily staple of the Radio 4 schedule. The BBC is sometimes accused of having a metropolitan, anti-farmer bias, so having this as a regular part of its day is an important gesture (even if it is scheduled at 5.45am). 

Does the programme itself, however, show a metropolitan, anti-farmer bias in its concerns? 

Well, there were four topics on this edition of the Tuesday 26th August edition of the programme.

The first subject was land access, specifically the tension between the public's rights over footpath use in the countryside and farmers' needs to protect their crops and livestock. This is an issue that matters to townies and countryfolk, of course. Presenter Caz Graham talked to Paul Johnson of the rural affairs quango Natural England, who said that there are well over 100,000 miles of footpaths and bridleways in England, plus over 2 million acres of open access land such as commons, heaths and downs where people can wander more widely. (The latter rights are more recent, while the former tend to be rooted in history.) Local authorities and the Highway Authority are responsible for maintaining the footpaths and bridleways in their area. Farmers' responsibilities are to avoid doing anything that will obstruct the path, such as ensuring that crops (such as overhanging trees) don't infringe upon them. Farmers are also responsible for the upkeep of styles, though they may receive help from the Highway Authority in that respect. As for the public, if they stick to the Countryside Code (keeping dogs under control, shutting gates after them, not parking in front of gates, etc) then little conflict should arise, he said.


The next item returned to a subject of the flooding in Somerset. Since March more than 100,000 tons of silt have been removed from two rivers in Somerset (the Tone and the Parrett) as part of the dredging work carried out after last winter's disastrous floods. The project is now over half complete. The silt has been used to fertilise fields and to reinforce floodbanks. A BBC Somerset reporter, Will Richards, went to watch the dredging in action and talked to the contractor, the aptly-named Bill Gush. Mr Gush said the company are working off 1960s profiles given to them by the Environment Agency which are programmed into a small computer screen inside their excavators, thus enabling them to remove the right amount of earth and silt. Then Caz Graham talked to a pro-dredging campaigner, Gavin Sadler, whose rare breeds poultry business was ruined by the floods, and who has been unable to live on his farm since last February. Mr Sadler said that they get weekly bulletins updating them on how well the dredging is going and that 31st October is the date the dredging is meant to be finished by. With still just under half of the work to go in just two months, he's a bit concerned, given that we will be entering flooding season again soon. He is impressed at the work being done though and feels happier going into this winter as a result.


Next ospreys (a move away from specific farming issues onto more general nature matters). Caz introduced this item by saying that the Victorians' passion for having stuffed ospreys in their drawing rooms was part of the reason why they became extinct as breeding birds in England from 1840. (That date, however, suggests to me that the Georgians were the real guilty party). Ospreys were re-introduced to England in 2001 and there are around a dozen breeding pairs in England now. Caz went to a reserve in south Cumbria where some chicks have hatched this year alongside another chap from Natural England, Rob Petley-Jones. Rob said that the parent birds are a young pair, and showed their inexperience last year by trying to a build a nest on top of an electricity pylon. ("That wasn't really a nest, more a bundle of sticks and it didn't last the winter.") Electricity North West funded the construction of an artificial platform on the nature reserve, which Natural England had up by the end of March. Within ten days, the ospreys starting building a nest on it. Mr Petley-Jones was eloquent about the birds: 
It's a very large bird of prey. It's basically brown on top but when you see it flying over it's got this wonderful patterned underwing, and they have this fantastic head pattern that almost looks like a bandit, as if they've got a Lone Ranger mask on. And they're very distinctive. All their patterns on their heads are unique, so we can tell individuals just from what they look like.
When you see an osprey fishing it's one of the most spectacular things in the world - an osprey dropping 30 metres out of the sky, feet-first, into the water and then struggling out of the water with this vast fish.
When birds come into the nest, it's a very dramatic approach. They'll come in behind and then swoop up and then do a little bit of a stall above the nest and then drop gently onto the nest. And when they've got a big fish in their talons it's really very spectacular. There's very little more dramatic in British wildlife I think than seeing an osprey coming to the nest with a fish.

Finally, it was back to farmers' concerns and research from Farmers Weekly showing that 2014 has been a particularly bad year for farm fires. The amount such fires are costing the farming industry has risen by £6 million over the last three years, standing at £50 million last year - which is more than rural crime costs farming businesses. Caz Graham interviewed the magazine's contents editor, Isabel Davies who said they'd spoken to 16 fire services across England who reported 300 farm incidents since 1st June this year. Shropshire, South Yorkshire and Kent have been worst effected. They range from crops being set on fire to machinery and buildings. Some are accidental, some deliberate (including arson). This year's dry July also seems to have been a factor. Quite startling stuff.

Actually, I think this edition of Farming Today was far from unsympathetic to farmers and didn't give any impression of metropolitan bias. Plus it was very interesting. 

Friday, 27 June 2014

Get Hewlett



One of the Guardian's media writers, Steve Hewlett, is now the BBC's go-to-man for media-related stories. 

This isn't exactly news. After all, he'd already become a BBC regular as regards media-related stories even before they invited him to present Radio 4's The Media Show

Since then he's frankly verged on the ubiquitous (on the BBC) whenever any major media story breaks - whether it be the Newsnight scandals, the phone hacking trials, the Patten-Thompson row, you name it. 

Now, I don't think he does a bad job by any means but the BBC's over-reliance on his opinions surely isn't helpful. One voice should not be so dominant, however reasonable-sounding that voice may be.  

This thought struck me again after this morning's Farming Today covered the BBC Trust's newly-released report on the BBC's coverage of rural affairs (discussed on an earlier post). 

There are any number of people Farming Today could have contacted to discuss this report but, no, they chose to do what Radio 4 as a whole tends to do on such occasions - ring for Steve Hewlett. 

Even though I now pretty much take Steve Hewlett's ubiquity for granted, even I was taken aback by this. Couldn't they have put just a few seconds of thought into thinking of someone other than Steve Hewlett to provide their 'expert' commentary on the report? Well, obviously not and, as a result, BBC listeners were again presented with Steve Hewlett's 'authoritative take' on a media-related story - and only Steve Hewlett's take.

This isn't a criticism of Steve Hewlett. It's a criticism of a mindset all too common at the BBC, a mindset that often results in predictable reflex-actions - such as speed-dialing Steve Hewlett whenever a BBC Trust report comes out. 

Sunday, 9 March 2014

A very determined BBC reporter v women farmers



A new blog has been launched today called The Conservative Woman and it has hit the ground running with an amusing piece by Kathy Gyngell about BBC bias - specifically what she sees as Farming Today's attempts at pushing a feminist agenda over the course of the past week:
Saturday’s programme, it turned out, was the culmination of a week-long campaign by the Beeb’s gender warriors to track down the oppressed of the farming industry.  No, they were not seeking out migrant labourers at the mercy of gangmasters or poor peasants drowning on the Somerset levels, but women farmers.  A barrage of emails during the week complaining that the BBC was making a fuss about nothing had not stopped them.
Britain’s women farmers, Farming Today was confident, would be found to be still in the grip of patriarchal oppression and prejudice.  All it needed was to track them down. The only trouble was, having been lined up for interview, that Britain’s female farmers, from the Welsh uplands to the Scottish Highlands, refused to play ball.  They were either bemused or having none of it.
The harder Charlotte Smith, the programme’s presenter and intrepid reporter, tried to make these women’s gender an issue, the more they refused to concede anything.
The interviews Kathy describes sound hilarious, and they reminded me of a piece I wrote last December about an otherwise fascinating episode of On Your Farm:
OK, there was a measure of classic BBC 'ism'-hunting in this programme, as presenter Charlotte Smith tried (and tried) to tempt the female farmers of Higher Melcombe Farm in Dorchester (very Thomas Hardy!) to complain about sexism in the farming industry, though they themselves mostly put the resistance they were getting (from some quarters) more to the youth and initial inexperience of the family's chief farmer, Harriet, than to the fact that she's a woman, but still...
...which all goes to suggest that there are few things in the world more relentless than a biased BBC reporter on a mission!