Antony Jay: How To Save The BBC

Source: Centre for Policy Studies
Published Friday, 4 July, 2008 - 12:01

The days of the licence fee are over, predicts Sir Antony Jay, one of the leading broadcasters of his generation and co-author of Yes, Minister and Yes, Prime Minster. And once we can all receive programmes on our computers, the justification for the licence fee – both legal and technical – will have disappeared.

With the BBC about to publish its Annual Report, Jay argues that there is only one way to preserve all that is good about the BBC, in How to Save the BBC, published today Friday 4 July by the Centre for Policy Studies.

Is the BBC worth saving?, he asks. Despite the fact that much of its output is indistinguishable from commercial channels; and despite its reputation as a propaganda vehicle for the liberal élite, Jay believes that the BBC should in some form be preserved.

But in what shape? Sir Antony believes that the BBC should ask itself the following question: if broadcasting had started as a purely commercial enterprise, then what would be the role, structure and resources of a public service broadcaster?

He suggests that the BBC should limit itself to one national television channel; and one national speech radio channel (effectively BBC1 and Radio 4). These two channels should concentrate on producing the type of high quality popular programmes which commercial channels are unable to produce. Jay foresees a golden age for production, with the BBC enriching television for all the nation’s viewers.

A slimmed down BBC would be far cheaper (BBC1 and Radio 4 cost £1.5 billion a year out of the total £4.2 billion BBC budget). Jay believes that such an institution could be self-financing, particularly through the investment of revenue from asset sales and more importantly from better exploiting commercially its "rich library of television programmes". As Jay points out, City experts regard the BBC’s exploitation of its huge library of programmes "as a joke. A bad joke". Jay concludes:

The tradition and the skills are all there – for the moment. We have about ten years to reshape the BBC so that it can continue to use those skills and draw on that tradition to maintain a stream of high quality nationally-produced programming after the licence fee has gone.

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Throwing Out The Baby With The Bathwater

Thu, 1970-01-01 01:00

Stephen Reid, Author, SBI
Returning to Britain from America was all the more pleasant because the driven urgent attention grabbing tone of the TV and radio was now gone. Our media pond is much more agreeable, calm and considered. In large part that is because the BBC sets the main tone at calm rational and considered. In my lifetime there has been a vast increase in the nature and number of channels of communication. In all probability this trend will increase. Much of this extra media material is driven by direct or indirect advertising revenue. Advertisers are at heart invasive. They seek to aquire a share of 'front of mind' and to influence our ideas so that we will spend our money in their clients direction. In a competitive market the clamour for attention is not limited to advertisers. The overall tone is also shaped by newscaster or weatherman who each seeks to grab and hold onto more of our attention. A lot of the American broadcasters and TV personailities are 'full on, bigger-than-life and talk as if they are on speed. In consequence in an increasingly competitive market the overall tone of the media becomes increasingly hystrionic. Do we want that to happen in Britain? If we want a society shaped by anxious hyped up consumer driven advertising people then lets throw the BBC out. However once the BBC is culled I cannot see a mechanism for bringing it back. One of the BBC broadcasters recently cited a phrase that stayed with me ever since. He chose the words of a Buddy Holly song 'He got what he wanted but lost what he had'. Personally I believe that £80 - £100 per citizen is a fair price to pay for the BBC and for the tone of our society. Lets put the pressure on for BBC value for our money but lets not forget that the media does, whether we like it or not, shape our society Stephen Reid - Author How To Think and High Performance Thinking Skills