Tag: BBC

Total Results: 72


"The identity politics Left often prioritises experience over data." Credit: Erik McGregor/LightRocket via Getty
November 23, 2020

The Left’s obsession with subjectivity To properly understand the world we must use data and logic — not only anecdote

David Goodhart

Monday
19.10

19.10

What Mary Whitehouse got right Ridiculed for being on the wrong side of history, her time is now

Louise Perry

Friday
18.09

18.09

The BBC needs to sack the suits Timid and out of touch, it is churning out banal bulletins and screwing up digital output

Ian Birrell

Friday
24.04

24.04

Can British media steer clear of the American sewer? Political TV hosts in America are obsequious, self-congratulatory and inadequate — let's not copy them

Douglas Murray

Monday
20.04

20.04

The unhappy truth about surrogacy BBC drama <i>The Nest</I> romanticises — and normalises — the renting of women's wombs

Julie Bindel

Monday
23.03

23.03

The BBC is having a good coronavirus war The broadcaster has rediscovered its original purpose: uniting a divided nation

Robin Aitken

Thursday
19.03

19.03

‘This Country’ is a modern TV miracle The lives of rural people often go unnoticed, unspoken and undocumented

Barney Norris

Wednesday
04.03

04.03

What is the BBC worth? The licence fee is a relic from a long-gone age, and there are no good arguments left for keeping it

Maajid Nawaz

Thursday
30.01

30.01

How knitters got knotted in a purity spiral A process of moral outbidding is corroding small communities from within

Gavin Haynes

30.01

Lessons in longevity from Nicholas Parsons The steadfast familiarity of the <I>Just a Minute</I> host is what another of our great institutions is lacking

Simon Evans

Wednesday
22.01

22.01

Cultural heroes, please stay out of politics The finest minds lose all their nuance when they get political on Twitter

Freddie Sayers

Tuesday
14.01

14.01

How the BBC could wield soft power The broadcaster could be be an effective instrument of influence — but it needs to raise its game

Mary Dejevsky