Independent review of the BBC's digital-only channels concludes that:
That last sentence really annoys me, because it seems to completely ignore the fact that at the moment, many people don't have access to the digital channels, full stop. I want to be watching many of those programmes; I just haven't been able to justify spending fifty pounds on a digital box yet. What I don't want is to get the channel and then for it to be watered down. And to be honest, I thought the whole point of BBC4 was that it didn't have to have wide appeal.
They have all largely met their remits and had a limited impact on their commercial competitors, it said.
But low viewing figures meant BBC Three and Four were poor value, it added.
BBC Three should relax its focus on 25- to 34-year-olds, the report says, calling it an "obsession" and a "creative straightjacket".
BBC Three and BBC Four need to increase their impact and value for money, while retaining their public service ethos
The channel's daily news show at 7pm should be scrapped because it "achieves nothing and attracts tiny audiences", while the BBC Four news show, The World, which airs at 8pm, should be substantially revamped or replaced.
And it says BBC Four should also have wider appeal and fewer arts programmes that "virtually no-one watches".
That last sentence really annoys me, because it seems to completely ignore the fact that at the moment, many people don't have access to the digital channels, full stop. I want to be watching many of those programmes; I just haven't been able to justify spending fifty pounds on a digital box yet. What I don't want is to get the channel and then for it to be watered down. And to be honest, I thought the whole point of BBC4 was that it didn't have to have wide appeal.
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Date: 2004-10-13 03:23 am (UTC)*The other reason being that we don't own a television.
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Date: 2004-10-13 03:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 03:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 03:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 03:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 03:37 am (UTC)And to be honest, I thought the whole point of BBC4 was that it didn't have to have wide appeal.
Well, quite.
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Date: 2004-10-13 03:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 03:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 03:39 am (UTC)What annoys me is that the TV manufacturing industry aren't building DTV receivers into new televisions. It is like they are sticking their fingers in their ears and singing 'lalalalalala'. Once the coverage is there and the government decides to switch off analog there would be much less pain if recently purchased TVs (say, in the past five years - i.e. from now given that the switch off should be by 2010) already had the functionality.....
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Date: 2004-10-13 03:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 03:40 am (UTC)Absolutely. I want the shows that only me and three other people are interested in, so I also want the shows that only four people, none of whom are me, are interested in.
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Date: 2004-10-13 03:41 am (UTC)Really? I thought they had to?
If and when I'm ever able to buy a new TV, will have to pay close attention to that bit.
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Date: 2004-10-13 03:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 03:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 03:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 03:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 04:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 04:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 04:47 am (UTC)I bought a new TV last week - three hundred quid and I had to get a digibox too. I never stopped to think 'this is a damn ripoff' but it is isn't it?
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Date: 2004-10-13 04:48 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 04:56 am (UTC)The thing is, it's only a temporary situation. In five years, BBC4 will be (to a first approximation) as widely available as BBC1 is now. I can't imagine it would have made any kind of sense to launch it as a traditional broadcast channel when you know you'll be switching to digital in the near future. This way, they get to try out the technology and add a good channel. Yes, you can argue that they should have just changed BBC2 rather than inventing BBC4, but to be honest I can't imagine that that would ever have happened.
So I don't really fault the Beeb too much on this one; if it's not a least-bad approach, it's pretty close to it. I'm rather more concerned that these independent reviewers want to bland up BBC4 before I ever get to see it!
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Date: 2004-10-13 04:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 05:21 am (UTC)It's only 50 quid because you have to include the overall box, the user interface, the power supply, and a few other things that a TV already has. The decoding hardware is really cheap.
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Date: 2004-10-13 06:22 am (UTC)Interesting disconnection
Now, it seems, BBC has heaps of digital programming for a market lacking in receivers and TV systems.
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My own view - now that I have to consider Larissa's vision, I may have to seriously considering getting large viewing systems ... but my limited house-space means I cannot realistically use one of those beheamouth systems. A wallmount plasma might be feasible (depending on cost), but for my earthquake concerns.
That leaves me with mobile screens and projectors, which I like most ... but digital programming will be of little value.
Re: Interesting disconnection
Date: 2004-10-13 08:56 am (UTC)If presidential debates were moderated by SF fans ...
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Date: 2004-10-13 08:58 am (UTC)I've had the Playstation going through one Scart socket while recording the tuner through another, so you can do something other than watch what you are recording, but I'm not sure you can actually watch different TV whilst recording.
Nothing stops you watching the digital channel live and recording BBC1 with the analogue tuner in the VCR of course.
FYI bought my Wega about three years ago in the days when everyone else who could get digital TV had OnDigital: it cost £1200 when a similar analogue TV would have been £700.
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Date: 2004-10-13 10:19 am (UTC)I'll say. I'm well and truly in that demographic - and I don't think that I have ever found anything I wanted to watch on BBC3.
The [BBC3] daily news show at 7pm should be scrapped because it "achieves nothing and attracts tiny audiences"
There's a simple reason for that. The people who watch the news, aren't watching BBC3 - the people who watch BBC3 don't care about the news...
And it says BBC Four should also have wider appeal and fewer arts programmes that "virtually no-one watches".
BBC4 has some great programmes; but unfortunately the big problem with it is that they seem to only cater for "one quarter of the circle". Where are all of the quality science programmes? Where are the history programmes? Why are there so few current affairs programmes?
What I don't want is to get the channel and then for it to be watered down.
Honestly, at the moment it needs changing. Most of the time it is really only appealing to those with a very limited taste. If that's you, then it's great - otherwise, not so much.
Re: Interesting disconnection
Date: 2004-10-13 10:28 am (UTC)Well, 13 million households can receive digital programming so the market isn't exactly lacking. It's just not 100% which is what the BBC needs it to be in eight years time.
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Date: 2004-10-13 11:58 am (UTC)Shame.
And I was ranting about this general topic last night - there don't seem to be any decent documentaries on BBC2 anymore.
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Date: 2004-10-13 12:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-10-13 12:15 pm (UTC)*CBeebies
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Date: 2004-10-14 09:08 am (UTC)There are precious few decent documentaries on tv, period, but BBC2 is getting worse and worse. I vaguely perked up at the thought of The Natural World (I had been enjoying Ray Mears' programme) until I discovered that it was going to be Simon King emoting all over the place this week. I'm sure he's wonderful but I do not like his style of quasi-anthropomorphising. I like my camera operators behind the camera, not in front of it.
And Horizon has become remarkably hit and miss, not that it's just a sink-hole for anything vaguely scientific, archaeological (and what is wrong with the Timewatch slot, exactly) and 'weird', and Timewatch is ...
I know that it's just that I'm getting old, I've seen it all before (I mean, I remember them doing the original stuff about the crater at Chixalub, etc.) and so on, but I can't believe I'm the only sentient being in the UK who's over forty and wants to be intelligently engaged by tv programmes.
And even Channel 4, which has had a surprisingly good run of history stuff this year (in among the dross, which has been legion), has taken to dotting individual episodes of series all over the bloody shop. I missed the rest of the series on Jewish Law because it was not shown on Mondays at 8 p.m., like the first one.
I'd get rid of the tv tomorrow except that it's not worth the hassle of having to deal with the TV Licensing Authority, who refuse to believe that anyone might do such a thing.
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Date: 2004-10-14 09:20 am (UTC)Or indeed under 40. But hang in there; with the way demographics are going, youth tv will be a thing of the past in ten years' time.
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Date: 2004-10-14 09:26 am (UTC)The problem, the Beeb keeps saying, is that people aren't going over to digital fast enough. Which may be true, but I think they've got to be looking at why people aren't going over to digital fast enough rather than suggesting that the channels aren't attracting anyone.
I actually suspect many people are holding out until the cut-off date, waiting to get a brand-new tv with added extras, rather than jury-rigging the whole thing together. I mean, I'm fairly unimpressed that, for example, I can't watch one programme and video another if I'm using the digibox (and it is copper-bottom guaranteed that if there are two programmes in a week that I want to watch they will be on at the same time). I'd quite like to wait until they've sorted that out.
And I'm just mutinous because the BBC is so bloody patronising about the whole thing, ditto the independent reviewers.
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Date: 2004-10-14 09:33 am (UTC)Isn't this whole focus-by-age group thing utterly ridiculous? It makes far too many assumptions about what PK (52 and seriously into guitar bands of the early 21st century – I let the guys in the CD shops think I'm buying stuff for my sons) and I (45 but feeling more fogier than fogey with every passing day) ought to like, and has no consideration of the fact that in common with most people we know we have a fairly broad taste in stuff. I like to be able to indulge my inner Mona the Vampire and watch Robert Hughes talking about Goya. That's a well-balanced life, that is.