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Roger Tilbury
Roger Tilbury
4 years ago

Not sure I agree. Always seem to lead with the negative side of the story on Toady e.g. that freelancers are missing out the morning after Rishi’s enormous giveaway.
And when they interview some expert they seem to us disappointed when there’s no bad news.

Rob Grayson
Rob Grayson
4 years ago
Reply to  Roger Tilbury

If you’re a freelancer (and five million of us are), that “negative side of the story” is hugely important.

Colin Elliott
Colin Elliott
4 years ago
Reply to  Rob Grayson

Of course it is hugely important, but continually saying that the self-employed are being ignored or ‘forgotten’ doesn’t help. I would be more impressed if even one journalist had done his/her job and investigated the ways in which such people can be helped. Their situation is NOT similar to employees. Employees are paid by an employer which knows what they are doing and has the means to distribute money directly into their accounts.
In contrast, there is a vast range of self-employed. Bank details may be entered onto a tax return, but usually only when a refund is due, and even then, cheques are often sent. In my opinion, HMG should already have started the process by telling everyone to enter this data online. I’ll be interested in the eventual solution, but it’s bound to take time to implement, and I fully expect numerous problems including fraud.
I was pleased today to hear some of these difficulties mentioned for the first time.

Tom Rose
Tom Rose
4 years ago
Reply to  Rob Grayson

Perhaps a balanced view is more important than simply relying on bad news to get you scribbling. Try it sometime.

Jim le Messurier
Jim le Messurier
4 years ago

The article says that, post the worst of the Cov-19, the challenge will be for the Beeb to resist the buckling down into Remoaner crash position as the countdown to severance from the EU begins. The Beeb’s love of the EU seems too ingrained to be a realistic expectation, but you never know. If the EU gets shaken to its core by this epidemic – as Europeans question the rightness of upholding open borders as one of the EU’s cardinal aims, and the single currency project itself faces possibly unsurmountable difficulties – then the Remoaner consensus in the UK may seem increasingly crankish and be (largely) quietly put aside. At which point there will be no glaring and overriding divergence between what the government and the BBC thinks.

geo.hill
geo.hill
4 years ago

This is not the BBC that I see, the pack hounds of interviewers still snarl and snuffle around no better than than ITV, C4, Sky.
The pressure from the public will be greater than the the pressure from the Government to start doing its duty.
As the article says ‘the Beebs underlying political instincts have not changed’. This is a problem for them when the nation is expecting it to work with the government and that comment alone could be, along with Covoid 19 behaviour, the final nail in their coffin and to be fair they deserve it.

Ralph Windsor
Ralph Windsor
4 years ago

Agree that PM/Evan Davis is quite good but that’s about it. The BBC now has lots of competition for all their output, right across the board, broadcast and online, free and paid. The TVL is unsustainable and they will have to find another, more sustainable, revenue stream. People will simply not be prepared to carry on paying this poll tax for TV or radio services they may seldom view or listen to – or to keep the likes of Gary Lineker (£2 million a year) in clover!

G H
G H
4 years ago

My wife and I turn on the BBC to listen to the daily governmental briefings which have been well managed. Some of the journalists questions have been crass and generally all from the same MSM suspects but otherwise we see and hear what we need. Once over we now turn straight off the BBC to avoid the spin which invariably contradicts the tone we have heard from the horses mouth. We then go to LBC or talk radio for a more balanced commentary. News output aside, the BBC also fails to reflect the mood of the country on so many other levels. Comedy,drama, current affairs all have a woke preachy tone. ITV is now the channel of choice in our household.

Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
4 years ago

Well, perhaps. But I wouldn’t know. I gave up the BBC some time ago and I’m not going back.

Tom Rose
Tom Rose
4 years ago

The BBC has not learnt anything. The tone of this article reeks of bygone days of Empire and class; those days of long hot summers and the glittering prizes of Oxbridge. This is what the BBC dreams of, this is what the BBC was founded on and those old school ties are how it will strive to continue its miserable existence. The tone of the BBC is still sneeringly elitist, the structure still patrician and patriarchal, the agenda still unapologetically ‘woke’. The execution may have been postponed but it is still going to come, and not a moment too soon.