Showing posts with label ITV News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ITV News. Show all posts

Monday, 27 December 2021

The BBC downplays another major story


The BBC News website is leading with another racism story this morning. Nowhere among its headlines is the story of the the masked/armed man who broke into Windsor Castle yesterday - apparently in an attempt to assassinate the Queen in 'revenge' for the 1919 Amritsar Massacre. This is presently the 2nd story on the Sky News website and the 3rd story on the ITV News website and the lead story on the GB News website. The BBC has, so to speak, 'buried it in Berkshire'. They haven't updated it either. 


Update: The story has re-emerged on the BBC home page under the headline Windsor Castle: Queen 'assassination' bid video probed. It's a very circumspect piece.

Wednesday, 8 December 2021

"Courtesy of ITV News"


On that video ''obtained'' by ITV News showing Downing Street staff joking about a Christmas party last year:
Patrick O'Flynn: Great old-fashioned scoop by Paul Brand, no doubt about it. BBC News just had to lead with footage "courtesy of ITV News". That's how good a story it is.

The BBC hasn't even bothered trying its usual ''the BBC has learned...'' game.

Saturday, 16 January 2021

Priorities


One of the main headlines on ITV's News at Ten last night was:
Another hit to GDP as a result as the November lockdown, but the economy appears to be adjusting to the new normal. 
The economy shrinking by 2.6% in November was given over 3 minutes later in the bulletin, including a full report. 

BBC One's News at Ten, in contrast, didn't include it in its main headlines or give it a report but placed it as a minor news item lasting 40 seconds near the end of the bulletin. 

To add insult to injury, guess what that passing 40-second mention came straight after? A report from Simon Jack lasting nearly 3½ minutes on how Brexit has thrown "a new spanner" into the previously "well-oiled machine" of one "export-driven success story". 

The contrasting priorities speak volumes, don't they?

Thursday, 31 December 2020

11pm Brexit Hour, New Years Eve 2020


Well, it says it all.

The websites of the Sky News and ITV News made the upcoming, historic 11pm break from the EU their lead stories in the run-up to 11pm. The BBC News website kept the story in fourth place. 

Typically sour from the BBC. 

11pm strikes. History is made. The BBC moves the story to first place.

ITV (at 11.07pm) goes with Big Ben bonging and a picture of Downing Street: 
Sky  (at 11.08pm) goes with Big Ben and a new chapter:
And the BBC (at 11.09 pm) goes with a police van and a police officer talking to a lorry driver stopped at the border and talk of 'separation':
I rest my case, M'lud. The BBC has surpassed itself. 

And with that, good night, cheers and a Happy New Year from snowy Morecambe!

Update (11.40pm): Still up. The BBC has just changed its picture:


Happy New Year again!

Friday, 20 November 2020

The full story?

 


Before I went to bed last night I noticed that the BBC News website was leading with the summary of a draft report looking into allegations of bullying by Priti Patel. 

At the time the BBC was alone in making this the main story, with neither Sky not ITV making it their lead story. 

The curious thing, however, was that, whether it was the ITV News website or The Daily Telegraph, or the Sky News website or The Times, they all - to varying degrees - reported that the civil servants involved in the affair were also apportioned some share of the blame, not just Priti Patel. 

Naturally, the right-leaning newspapers made more of the criticisms of civil servants than either ITV or Sky, but at least ITV and Sky reported that the findings aren't apparently all black-and-white. 

Yet, as of 10pm last night, the BBC News website's main story was exclusively about how Ms Patel was said to be in the wrong

And it was the same on TV...

The story led BBC One's News at Ten but neither ITV nor Sky. And the BBC didn't mention the criticisms of the Civil Service at all

ITV's News at Ten, in contrast, did mention that the report found that Ms Patel "lacked support" from civil servants and even Sky News reported that civil servants were "found to be working against their boss".

Why did the BBC omit this part of the story?

Here's a theory: Priti Patel was probably always set to be next in the BBC's firing line after Dominic Cummings's scalp had been taken.

Here's a transcript on last night's BBC One coverage of the story:

Newsreader: Tonight at Ten - a draft report into claims that the Home Secretary Priti Patel bullied staff concluded in the summer that she had broken rules on ministerial behaviour. An inquiry was launched in March after the most senior official at the Home Office resigned, alleging that staff felt Ms Patel "created fear" in the department. 

Laura KuenssbergShe always denied doing anything wrong, but after months of investigation into one of the most senior members of the government, tomorrow the Prime Minister Boris Johnson is poised to give his verdict.

Newsreader: Good evening. A draft report into claims that the Home Secretary Priti Patel had bullied staff concluded this summer that she had broken rules on ministerial behaviour. The Cabinet Office began an inquiry into her conduct after the most senior official at the Home Office, Sir Philip Rutnam, resigned in February. He alleged that staff felt she "created fear" in the department, and is suing the Home Office for unfair dismissal. Tonight Labour is demanding that the report be made public. A decision on Priti Patel's future will be made public tomorrow. Our political editor Laura Kuenssberg reports. 

Laura KuenssbergShe's the most powerful woman in the Cabinet, long-standing Brexiteer backer of Boris Johnson, in charge of the police, immigration, one of the most important jobs in the government, but since February there's been a shadow hanging over Priti Patel because of this Dramatic claims made by the man who was her most senior official:

Sir Philip RutnamI have received allegations that her conduct has included shouting and swearing, belittling people, making unreasonable and repeated demands, behaviour that created fear and needed some bravery to call out. 

Laura KuenssbergHe quit, but she wanted to stay, so the government launched an investigation into what really happened. And now, months on, perhaps it's starting to become clear. One source told me the draft report, concluded way back in the summer, says Priti Patel had not met the requirements of the ministerial code to treat civil servants with consideration and respect, and they said the investigation had found some evidence of bullying even if it was not intentional. Another source said the report was unambiguous that Priti Patel had broken the code, the rules that are meant to govern how ministers behave. Yet, for her part here at the Home Office, Priti Patel has always firmly denied doing anything wrong. 

Reporter: Are you a workplace bully, Home Secretary? 

Laura KuenssbergThe reports looked at her behaviour in three different departments and one government source told me it doesn't always give a flattering picture of what Priti Patel encountered. The man who until recently was by the Prime Minister's side confirmed the findings have been in Boris Johnson's intray for a while, but implied that if Priti Patel was found to have broken the rules she might not have to quit. 

Sir Mark Sedwill: The Prime Minister wanted his advice and the Prime Minister needs to reflect and make a decision, that as I understand it is still in train. 

Laura KuenssbergThe expectation here tonight is that there might be some kind of reprimand for Ms Patel, but it's certainly not likely that she will be sacked and Tory MPs are already rallying before the Prime Minister's decision is even public. 

Sir Iain Duncan Smith: I worked with Priti Patel for a number of years and I've always found her strong, robust, but never in any way anywhere near bullying or even threatening any of her staff and most of the staff got on with her incredibly well. 

Laura KuenssbergYet convention matters. There isn't a single example of a minister who has broken the rules who has stayed on. 

Dave Penman, FDA union: What message does it send if the master says actually, although I said there will be no bullying, what I actually meant was a little bit of bullying is OK and it's not a breach of the ministerial code that requires a resignation. That's not the sort of message I think the Prime Minister, who is also the Minister for the Civil Service, wants to send to those thousands of civil servants. 

Laura KuenssbergPriti Patel had to leave government in dramatic circumstances before, almost exactly three years ago departing as soon as she arrived home from a foreign trip after it emerged she had held unauthorised meetings with Israeli politicians. There may well not be an exit for her this time, but there's still a political drama. Sophie, let's be really clear about two things tonight. Number one, Priti Patel has always and repeatedly denied she did anything wrong. But number two, there is no precedent for a minister who has been found to have broken the code, the ministerial Charter, if you like, that's meant to govern how ministers behave, staying on their job if they have actually been found to have transgressed in any way. But after many, many months of all of this it's clear that this is reaching a crescendo, but it also seems tonight that the Prime Minister is very determined to try to stand by her. There's been a not very subtle attempt by Tory MPs all over social media tonight, posting so much about how they think she's the right person for the job, praising her to the skies. But we will know more tomorrow when we actually see the statements that emerge. After many months of being a problem for the government he will try to draw a line under it but I expect the Prime Minister still to try to hang on to her, there may well be questions how he can do so.

UPDATE (13:30): Within the last couple of hours, Laura K has tweeted, almost as a thread afterthought "Worth saying the report also makes unusual criticism of Home Office, says Patel didn't always receive support she should have from her officials". 

She was some 15 hours behind everyone else, but she's arrived at last!

UPDATE (13:30): Sometimes you're much better reading what things actually say rather than have the BBC interpret them for you. Here's the summary in full. I've coloured in blue the bits that are helpful to Priti Patel and in red the bits that are unhelpful to Priti Patel:

The Ministerial Code says "ministers should be professional in their working relationships with the civil service and treat all those with whom they come into contact with consideration and respect. I believe civil servants - particularly senior civil servants - should be expected to handle robust criticism but should not have to face behaviour that goes beyond that. The home secretary says that she puts great store by professional, open relationships. She is action orientated and can be direct. The home secretary has also become - justifiably in many instances - frustrated by the Home Office leadership's lack of responsiveness and the lack of support she felt in the Department for International Development (Dfid) three years ago. The evidence is that this has manifested itself in forceful expression, including some occasions of shouting and swearing. This may not be done intentionally to cause upset, but that has been the effect on some individuals. The Ministerial Code says that "harassing, bullying or other inappropriate or discriminating behaviour wherever it takes place is not consistent with the Ministerial Code". Definitions of harassment concern comments or actions relating to personal characteristics and there is no evidence from the Cabinet Office's work of any such behaviour by the Home Secretary. The definition of bullying adopted by the Civil Service accepts that legitimate, reasonable and constructive criticism of a worker's performance will not amount to bullying. It defines bullying as intimidating or insulting behaviour that makes an individual feel uncomfortable, frightened, less respected or put down. Instances of the behaviour reported to the Cabinet Office would meet such a definition. The Civil Service itself needs to reflect on its role during this period. The Home Office was not as flexible as it could have been in responding to the home secretary's requests and direction. She has - legitimately - not always felt supported by the department. In addition, no feedback was given to the home secretary of the impact of her behaviour, which meant she was unaware of issues that she could otherwise have addressed. My advice is that the home secretary has not consistently met the high standards required by the Ministerial Code of treating her civil servants with consideration and respect. Her approach on occasions has amounted to behaviour that can be described as bullying in terms of the impact felt by individuals. To that extent her behaviour has been in breach of the Ministerial Code, even if unintentionally. This conclusion needs to be seen in context. There is no evidence that she was aware of the impact of her behaviour, and no feedback was given to her at the time. The high pressure and demands of the role, in the Home Office, coupled with the need for more supportive leadership from top of the department has clearly been a contributory factor. In particular, I note the finding of different and more positive behaviour since these issues were raised with her.

Sunday, 22 December 2019

So Stormzy didn't 100% say that the UK is a 100% racist country


Stormzy Weekend has taken another dramatic twist: ITV has 'clarified' an earlier 'viral' tweet:


So it seems he didn't say that the UK is "definitely" a "100% racist" country after all.

For God's sake, the state of broadcast journalism in this country! Just because some ITV journalist bungled a tweet and ITV then took an age to correct it, all Hell has descended on Stormzy this weekend for saying something he didn't actually quite say (though almost said).

(Update: ...though what he appears to have actually said is divisive and inflammatory and open to question too. It's just somewhat less extreme).

Close attention to accurate reporting, including of what people actually say, needs very urgently reviving as a basic journalistic skill. 

Saturday, 7 December 2019

Lead stories



There's a fascinating contrast in lead stories this morning. The BBC News website is leading with Johnson and Corbyn clash over Brexit in BBC debate while Sky News is leading with Leaked documents cited by Corbyn 'tied to Russian group', says Reddit and ITV News is leading with US-UK trade talks cited by Corbyn 'leaked' by Russian group'

Another similarity between Sky and ITV here is that both use the word "refused" in connection to Labour's behaviour over the Reddit story (Sky: Labour has again refused to discuss where it obtained the documents; ITV: Labour has refused to disclose where it obtained the sensitive documents), whereas the BBC is going with the softer-sounding "has not commented" (BBC: The Labour Party has not commented on how they obtained or became aware of the documents.)

Update (3.30 pm): Main headlines now:

Sky -  Corbyn bats away Russian links to his leaked NHS documents
ITVUS-UK trade talks cited by Corbyn 'leaked by Russian group'
BBCOceans running out of oxygen say scientists

Thursday, 5 December 2019

Why?


A leaked dossier on antisemitism in the Labour Party, as submitted to the Equalities and Human Rights Commission, is hitting the headline. 

The ITV News website is leading with it tonight, and Sky News has it has their second story, behind the impeachment of Donald Trump. The BBC News website doesn't have the story at all among its headlines. 

Why?



Monday, 11 November 2019

Early Monday morning thoughts


This is odd. Overnight both the Sky News and ITV News websites have Keith Vaz stepping down as an MP as their second stories. In contrast, the BBC News website doesn't have the story among their headlines at all. Wonder what the thinking is there?

This isn't odd. The rise of national conservative VOX in Spain sees the BBC going into overdrive with the term "far-right" to describe them, whereas the fall of leftist Bolivian president Evo Morales over electoral fraud allegations sees the BBC curiously avoiding terms like 'socialist', 'left-wing' or 'far-left' to describe him. 

Ah, what's in The Times this morning? Ah, here's Matt Chorley. (I do like Chorley cakes. Are they only a Northern thing?)
In addition to holding debates almost every Friday night, the BBC has gone full W1A (the sitcom that tries to spoof the unspoofable corporation). A press release announcing election plans confirms that Huw Edwards will take over from David Dimbleby, but also promises a podcast called Election and Chill, Radio 1 touring the country in the BBC’s “Travelling Living Room” (a campervan) and BBC Breakfast asking normal people what normal people think “over a morning cup of coffee from a specially converted BBC Breakfast Coffee Cart”. I think someone’s had enough coffee already.
I should probably have less coffee. I might have been asleep now.

Tuesday, 8 October 2019

Is Dominic Casciani biased?



The BBC appears to turning the arrest of 13 people over a massive drugs bust into a shameless opportunity to bash Brexit. 

In contrast, pleased note that ITV News is reporting the story straight, without any anti-Brexit editorialising.

So here's the BBC's very own Dominic Casciani giving his 'analysis' on the BBC News website as if he were a New European op-ed writer:
This investigation has got results thanks to cross-border European co-operation. 
Six arrests by Dutch investigators were under the EU's European Arrest Warrant, which aims to swiftly extradite suspects to face justice in the UK. 
But the UK won't be able to use this tool if it leaves the EU without a security deal. 
The UK will also, overnight, leave Europol and Eurojust - both of which were involved in this investigation. 
They co-ordinate the sharing of information and evidence that police and prosecutors use to put serious criminals behind bars. 
The government has, however, today published a 159-page "No Deal Readiness" report. 
If you get to page 153, you will find it admits that leaving the EU without a deal amounts to a "loss of capability" for British police. 
And it further admits that the proposed alternatives "cannot fully compensate for the loss of EU co-operation tools".
And that's it. He's getting ever more blatant.

BBC impartiality, my gluteus maximus!

Friday, 21 June 2019

Unique


Probably meaning today's BBC One's News at One, Allison Pearson tweeted the following early this afternoon:
Police today arrest 44 men - 44! - in Yorkshire over child sex abuse. And BBC News leads with one minister manhandling a woman?
News of that mass arrest (in Kirklees, Bradford and Leeds) didn't appear on either tonight's BBC One News at Six or BBC News at Ten.

In contrast, Sky have been reporting it tonight and it featured as a main story on ITV's early evening news bulletin. 

There is something unique about the BBC. And not necessarily in a good way.

Friday, 7 June 2019

Boris, Boris, Boris. Bias, bias, bias


A tweet I read earlier tonight (after I got in from work) read, "I trust that BBC News,  Sky News and Channel 4 News, who all led with the vexatious case against Johnson will lead with the fact not just that he's not guilty, but that there was never a case against him to begin with?".

And then, tuning into another blog, I spotted StewGreen saying, "Since the summons against Boris was the main headline in each news from 10am to 11pm [back on 29 May], the news of the case getting thrown out will be reported in the same magnitude? Nah, of course not cos BBCnews/Guardian are really a public relations agency in favour of the metro-liberal agendas". 

So, wanting to catch up and check this out for myself, I switched on the BBC One News at Six headlines to see if the 'good news for Boris' was getting the same 'headline news' treatment that the 'bad news for Boris' on exactly the same story got. 

Well, you don't need to be Dr. Mike Galsworthy to guess the answer to that one!

The story didn't even feature among the opening headlines.

At all. 

*******

Checking back (via TV Eyes) BBC One's New at Six on 29 May led with the Boris summons story. The programme began as follows:
Boris Johnson is ordered to appear in court over claims he lied during the EU referendum campaign. He stands accused of lying about the UK giving the EU £350 million a week. 
(Two uses of variants of the verb 'to lie' in two sentences there!) 

At 18:07, the programme moved on to other news. 

Contrast that with tonight's bulletin - which continued precisely the same story.

Boris's legal victory wasn't in the headlines (as we already know). But where in the running order did it appear? Second? Third?

No, it came fourth.

And rather that the first seven minutes or so, it got just over two minutes.

Hmm. This looks like clear bias. But let's pause and think what the BBC's defence might me for such a blatant difference in prioritisation. The only one I can think of is that today's top three stories - the Sally Challen story, the hospital listeria outbreak story and the Peterborough by-election story - might have trumped it for news importance and that the original story got top spot because it was 'a slow news day' - and, checking back, there weren't other obviously major stories that day.

But still, just over 2 minutes halfway through the 30-minute bulletin tonight for the 'great-for-Boris' part of the story after the initial 'damning-for-Boris' part of the story received the first 7 minutes of the bulletin just over a week ago, doesn't look or feel right, does it?

It seems lacking in due balance.

*******

But that's not the half of it. The report on tonight's BBC One News at Six ran as follows:

Helena Wilkinson, BBC: The leadership contest is well under way but today Boris Johnson had a different battle. In court, his lawyers were trying to stop him from facing a criminal trial. This is the man who accused Boris Johnson of misconduct in public office. Last week a court decided there was a case for Mr Johnson to answer and he was due to be summoned. But today, that decision was overturned.
Marcus Ball: We've just given the green light for every politician to lie to us about our money for ever. That's a terrifying idea which I cannot accept, and I'm not going to give up.
Helena Wilkinson, BBC: This was one of the main messages of the Vote Leave campaign. Boris Johnson had claimed £350 million was being sent from the UK to the EU every week. It was a contested claim, with many people saying it was a lie. But did it amount to a criminal offence? In court, Boris Johnson's barrister argued that the offence of misconduct in public office, which is what Mr Johnson was facing, had never been used in the context of a statement in a political campaign. Adrian Darbishire QC said the offence was about the secret abuse of power and that there was nothing secret about what Mr Johnson was claiming. His supporters say the case should never have gone to court.
Jacob Rees-Mogg: To try and fight political debate through the criminal courts is what happens in dictatorships. It's not what happens in democracies. 
Helena Wilkinson, BBC: For Mr Johnson, an unwelcome distraction, now gone away, allowing him to focus on his next campaign, to become the new Prime Minister. Helen Wilkinson, BBC News.

Now, that's obviously, superficially balanced. You've got Marcus Ball, the man who brought the summons against Boris Johnson, and Jacob Rees-Mogg defending Boris. One of each side of the argument.

But why place Mr Ball first?

And look at the way the BBC's Helena Wilkinson lays out the story. The bold emphases in the transcript there are her emphases. And her choice of words steers viewers towards the belief that Boris Johnson had lied about that £350 million claim. 

*******

And while we're on this story, I looked at the main three broadcasters' websites earlier tonight and screengrabbed their headlines for this story. 

Sky's was: 


ITV's was: 


The BBC's was: 


You'll see that both Sky News and ITV News say that Johnson/Boris Johnson "wins" - a word conspicuously absent from BBC News's headline. 

And just look at the words used in the BBC headline/sub-headline, and the word association they conjure: "misconduct", "thrown out", "denied" "improperly". Even though he won his legal challenge, the BBC still makes him sound guilty.

That surely is clearly biased journalism? Can anyone think of a defence for it?

And that's even before we compare the choice of photos! Sky has a smiling Boris, ITV an exuberant Boris and the BBC a tormented (guilty-looking) Boris.

Wednesday, 5 June 2019

Anti-Trump violence on the streets of Britain



The BBC News website has a striking article on the Trump protests yesterday:


It begins: 
If Donald Trump had been inclined to wind down a bullet-proof window in The Beast as he passed through central London, he may well have wound it straight back up. 
The public were kept a long way from his motorcade but the boos were loud, the placards stark and the general message expletive-laden.
Within the first few breezy paragraphs, the BBC reporter - Marie Jackson - twice describes the protests as being typically British ("British satire was on display", "It was all very British").

If you look beyond the BBC though, say to Sky, you find there was a nastier side to these protests. Here's a non-Sky take, so that you can watch the video here:
I see, by the way, that Emily Thornberry has condemned this act - a spur for the BBC to cover it?:
This is wrong and is a stain on a great event. Well done to those who went to this Trump supporter's defence. This is not what we should ever be about.
Yet ITV shows what was probably an even nastier incident:

The elderly man is more than just pushed to the ground. He was manhandled first.

As Maajid Nawaz more accurately puts it, this video shows "vicious far-left “anti-racist” thugs beat to the ground an elderly British Trump supporter". (It provoked Dan Hannan to tweet, "For the love of God, what is happening to this country?")

These incidents, incidentally, led to an interesting exchange on Twitter between a man of the Left and a woman of the Right which I thought I'd share with you:
Paul Embery: I have absolutely nothing in common with the screeching, hectoring, intolerant, group-thinking, fanatical, illiberal modern Left. They - and their apologists - are a disgrace to the fine traditions of the labour movement.
Suzanne Evans: Except this is nothing new Paul. I got ‘Tory Scum’ screamed in my face by an angry mob, just like this, back in 2010. Like anti-Semitism, UK Labour has let it fester for decades, indeed, it’s been encouraging it by saying and doing nothing.

Saturday, 11 May 2019

Of Poet Laureates, UK Broadcasters and the BBC's Will Gompertz


Look! It's Will Gompertz! And he's asking an important question, slowly, like an intellectual! Look! Look!

Simon Armitage - a working-class Yorkshireman made-good - is our new Poet Laureate. 

I'm not very familiar with his poetry (though I've liked some of what I've heard) but his books about walking across England and exploring his home patch on the wrong side of the Pennines are beautifully-written and often very funny, and I'm a fan of his on the strength of them.

News of his appointment broke during last night's main 10 o'clock news bulletins, and I caught the BBC one, which struck me as being particularly 'BBC' in its slant:
In the last half hour, it's been announced that Simon Armitage will be the new Poet Laureate. He says he wants to use the role to ensure poetry embraces major global issues, including climate change.
The following report by the BBC's arts editor, the shy-and-retiring Will Gompertz, began with the end of a poem about climate change:
I'd wanted to offer my daughter
a taste of the glacier, a sense of the world
being pinned in place by a diamond-like cold
at each pole. But opening up my hand
there's nothing to pass on, nothing to hold.
(That's the least impressive bit of that poem. I particularly enjoyed:
"Rotten and rusted, a five-bar gate/
lies felled in the mud, letting the fields escape.")

"Like a rock-star", "taking poetry to the people", etc, were some of Will's words. (Very 'Will'!)

And then came the questions...

As so often with the BBC, viewers were being whacked over the head with a wet halibut of an agenda here - or a very heavy bronze cast of a wet halibut of an agenda. 

More about Will later.

Stay with us...

With ITV's News at Ten, the usual 'viewer-friendly' conversational style resulted in this meandering description of the 'breaking news':
Poetry has been part of Britain's national fabric for centuries, and the names of some of our most famous poets still resonate. Think Wordsworth, Tennyson and Betjeman, amongst many others. They were all, as it happens, Poet Laureates, there's a good pub quiz question, and the new incumbent of this prestigious post was announced just a few minutes ago. He is Simon Armitage, West Yorkshire poet, professor and playwright. Although the role may no longer have the influence on British culture it once did, he says there's still a need to capture moments in words that stretch the imagination
And we got an equally non-political poem to illustrate SA's art from ITV:
As he steps out at the traffic lights,
Think what he’ll look like in thirty years’ time –
The deflated face and shrunken scalp
Still daubed with the sad tattoos of high punk.
ITV then went on to focus on the relevance of the role of poet laureate, without any of the BBC's politics and focus on climate change activism.

And Sky News broke it like this:
His appointment was approved by the Queen, and for ten years he'll be seen promoting poetry, because Simon Armitage is the new Poet Laureate. He says he wants to harness the tools of the multi-media age. And if the rising popularity of poetry among millennials is anything to go by, he'll have a willing audience. 
And Sky then focused on the resurgence in the popularity of poetry and featured a clip of SA reading from 'Kid' and, again, included none of the BBC's politicking or any of their stuff about climate change.

*******

Now, if you think that proves something about the BBC, well try this...

Going back to the BBC, I've held back so far in mentioning what came next. Will Gompertz went on - after all the climate change stuff - to raise another issue not raised by either ITV or Sky:

Yes, the BBC's identity politics obsession reared its ugly head again with ghastly inevitability.

And here it is. Here's Will's 'hideously white' question to working-class Yorkshire poet Simon Armitage:
Did it cross your mind, even for a moment, when you were offered the post to say, 'you know, actually, I don't think this is right at this stage for a white male. Maybe someone from a different point of view, a different background, would be better for this role at this moment? 
As I said, very 'BBC'.

Yes, I know ITV and Sky can be as bad on some things, but - in so many respects - the BBC is well and truly unique, don't you think?

Thursday, 18 April 2019

Headlines


Interesting contrast of takes in the main headlines of the various broadcaster news websites at the moment...

Sky News


ITV News


BBC News


Note that both ITV and Sky use the word "no" in connection to "(Russia) collusion", whereas the BBC doesn't, simply using the phrase "Russia collusion" instead.