16-02-2023, 10:34 PM
I don’t get why they would refurbish Studio A when they have just refurbished Studio D, they wouldn’t need 2 UK opt-out studios.
(16-02-2023, 10:13 PM)DTV Wrote: I don't think the BBC have ever tried to hide the fact they are a British channel, particularly not with regard to the American audience - World News America's lead presenter has always been British. I think it was more of a case of having your output suit your audience. While there has always been a case for covering certain British stories, fundamentally BBC World News' two key audiences are a) general news source for English-speaking Commonwealth and b) high-end news channel for English-speaking professionals and you have to focus on what is relevant to them - hence why you do get a shifting news agenda throughout the day as the 'prime' times in different regions come and go.
(17-02-2023, 11:44 AM)damian Wrote: If the new BBC News is going to be like the past 45 minutes to World News viewers then I personally am not interested in the merger. Al Jazeera far superior news content.
(17-02-2023, 12:12 PM)Radio_man Wrote: I agree that broadcasting a sentencing from the Old Bailey for over 30 minutes is hardly news worthy to World viewers, or even UK viewers.It's a very odd choice editorially, particularly to go for over half-an-hour for a not particularly high-profile case. Really the kind of thing that'd be better edited down to a few key moments - I can't imagine many viewers stuck with it beyond a few minutes. If BBC Parliament wasn't such a reduced entity, it'd be really the kind of thing that belonged on there.
(17-02-2023, 12:37 PM)DTV Wrote:It felt like the NC team had run out of reports for the rest of the hour, so just stuck on a niche hearing from the Old Bailey and went for a coffee break. A very strange choice during a World simulcast hour as well.(17-02-2023, 12:12 PM)Radio_man Wrote: I agree that broadcasting a sentencing from the Old Bailey for over 30 minutes is hardly news worthy to World viewers, or even UK viewers.It's a very odd choice editorially, particularly to go for over half-an-hour for a not particularly high-profile case. Really the kind of thing that'd be better edited down to a few key moments - I can't imagine many viewers stuck with it beyond a few minutes. If BBC Parliament wasn't such a reduced entity, it'd be really the kind of thing that belonged on there.
(17-02-2023, 12:12 PM)Radio_man Wrote:Dare I suggest that given the Old Bailey sentencing was of someone guilty of selling secrets to Russia that politics may have been a factor in showing it, both to UK and World viewers. I can imagine that the UK government and intelligence agencies would have been quite keen for the BBC to broadcast this sentencing around the world.(17-02-2023, 11:44 AM)damian Wrote: If the new BBC News is going to be like the past 45 minutes to World News viewers then I personally am not interested in the merger. Al Jazeera far superior news content.
I agree that broadcasting a sentencing from the Old Bailey for over 30 minutes is hardly news worthy to World viewers, or even UK viewers.
The difference between the 10-11am weekday hour now and the new channel, is that the 10-11am hour currently is produced by the UK news channel team for World.
The new channel will be produced by a World team 24/7. So you won't get niche hearings from the Old Bailey broadcast in full.
(17-02-2023, 01:54 PM)Keith Wrote: Dare I suggest that given the Old Bailey sentencing was of someone guilty of selling secrets to Russia that politics may have been a factor in showing it, both to UK and World viewers. I can imagine that the UK government and intelligence agencies would have been quite keen for the BBC to broadcast this sentencing around the world.
Quote:Staff on the venture were told last week about plans to launch the channel on April 3 with pilots beginning on Monday and a dry run scheduled from March 6. They were assured that “it won’t be a big bang moment”; instead there would be “a lot of trial and error” for a few months, prompting mixed reaction.There was some speculation about whether pilots for the new channel had begun yet. According to this Times article, they don't start until Monday (20 February) with dry runs starting from 6 March.
A senior journalist involved in the venture was heard dismissing its chances of success. “It’s going to crash and burn like Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng’s experiment,” the insider said.