VLV@30: Standing up for Citizens Presentation to VLVs 30 th Annual - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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VLV@30: Standing up for Citizens Presentation to VLVs 30 th Annual - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

VLV@30: Standing up for Citizens Presentation to VLVs 30 th Annual Autumn Conference Conference 27 November 2013 Steven Barnett, Professor of Communications, University of Westminster s.barnett@wmin.ac.uk @stevenjbarnett Voice of the


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VLV@30: Standing up for Citizens

Presentation to VLV’s 30th Annual Autumn Conference Conference 27 November 2013

Steven Barnett, Professor of Communications, University of Westminster s.barnett@wmin.ac.uk @stevenjbarnett

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‘Voice of the Listener’ Press Release 11 April 1983

Quoting Richard Francis, MD BBC Radio, on the future of Radio 4, 9th Jan:

“If we would decide… to switch Woman’s Hour and Afternoon Theatre, such that we have the and Afternoon Theatre, such that we have the play from 2-3 p.m. and Woman’s Hour from 3-4 p.m., Woman’s Hour itself would be much more flexible in accommodating the occasional visit to Parliament”.

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‘Voice of the Listener’ Press Release 11 April 1983

“The flexibility of programming which BBC journalists desire, particularly on R4, puts at risk many dramas, feature and magazine programmes on national networks. They stand programmes on national networks. They stand in danger of being rescheduled or slipped sideways to BBC local stations on a ‘temporary’

  • basis. And ‘temporary’ has a habit of becoming

permanent”.

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‘Voice of the Listener’ Press Release 11 April 1983

“What the Voice of the Listener wishes to ensure is that temporary considerations arising ensure is that temporary considerations arising

  • ut of ‘finance’, ‘bias’ or ‘change for the sake of

change’ should not force upon the listener national radio networks which are not what he

  • r she wants in content or in quality”.
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Voice of the Listener Inaugural meeting 17 November 1983 Agreed “objects of the association”

  • 1. To increase public awareness of the vital role played by radio in the

quality of national life.

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Voice of the Listener Inaugural meeting 17 November 1983 Agreed “objects of the association”

  • 1. To increase public awareness of the vital role played by radio in the

quality of national life.

  • 2. To promote the maintenance and improvement of broadcasting

standards, both technical and artistic, throughout the United Kingdom standards, both technical and artistic, throughout the United Kingdom

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Voice of the Listener Inaugural meeting 17 November 1983 Agreed “objects of the association”

  • 1. To increase public awareness of the vital role played by radio in the

quality of national life.

  • 2. To promote the maintenance and improvement of broadcasting

standards, both technical and artistic, throughout the United Kingdom standards, both technical and artistic, throughout the United Kingdom

  • 3. To provide a forum for discussion between listeners and programme

makers.

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Voice of the Listener Inaugural meeting 17 November 1983 Agreed “objects of the association”

  • 1. To increase public awareness of the vital role played by radio in the

quality of national life.

  • 2. To promote the maintenance and improvement of broadcasting

standards, both technical and artistic, throughout the United Kingdom standards, both technical and artistic, throughout the United Kingdom

  • 3. To provide a forum for discussion between listeners and programme

makers.

  • 4. To educate and inform members about broadcasting developments.
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Voice of the Listener Inaugural meeting 17 November 1983 Agreed “objects of the association”

  • 1. To increase public awareness of the vital role played by radio in the

quality of national life.

  • 2. To promote the maintenance and improvement of broadcasting

standards, both technical and artistic, throughout the United Kingdom standards, both technical and artistic, throughout the United Kingdom

  • 3. To provide a forum for discussion between listeners and programme

makers.

  • 4. To educate and inform members about broadcasting developments.
  • 5. To secure an assured future for radio broadcasting through the

support of an appreciative and responsive audience.

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Chairman’s address, inaugural meeting

“Our concern is that, while apparently creating wider choice, this explosion may ultimately destroy existing services and with them the concept of public service broadcasting as we concept of public service broadcasting as we have known it in this country for the past 60

  • years. BBC and Independent radio will both be

affected if this choice fragments audiences to a degree which can no longer justify the costs”.

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Chairman’s address, inaugural meeting

“The BBC has only its appointed Council of Governors and its advisory committees…. It is Governors and its advisory committees…. It is this gap in collective representation which the ‘Voice of the Listener’ must try to full. The task was, and is, formidable”.

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Voice of the Listener Newsletter Vol 1 No 1, Spring 1984

“By battery , Radio York kept us constantly informed of local conditions; music by candlelight added a whole new, delightful dimension to winter. What might have been a period of doom and gloom became a pleasantly been a period of doom and gloom became a pleasantly interesting part of life’s varied tapestry”.

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Voice of the Listener Newsletter Vol 1 No 1, Spring 1984

“By battery , Radio York kept us constantly informed of local conditions; music by candlelight added a whole new, delightful dimension to winter. What might have been a period of doom and gloom became a pleasantly been a period of doom and gloom became a pleasantly interesting part of life’s varied tapestry”. “I do hope that Voice of the Listener will not turn out to be the voice of South-East Britain, suburbia and professionalism”.

Rosemary Rothwell, Grossmont, Near, Whitby, North Yorkshire

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Voice of the Listener Newsletter Vol 1 No 1, Spring 1984

“For myself and many, many other people, [BBC radio] is part of the family”.

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Voice of the Listener Newsletter Vol 1 No 1, Spring 1984

“For myself and many, many other people, [BBC radio] is part of the family”. “When I am not in prison, I am a cook deckhand aboard trawlers and radio plays a great part in our lives at sea”.

RJF, HM Prison, Kirkham, Preston

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The new (old) challenges: the BBC…..

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The new (old) challenges: the BBC…..

“It’s probably time to reopen the debate on advertising

  • n BBC channels, given we now know from recent polls

that a majority of viewers believe the BBC licence fee should be reduced. Whilst its online video platform and news service is widely celebrated, and rightly so, its and news service is widely celebrated, and rightly so, its broadcast channels largely remain in a status quo, failing to offer the plurality, variety and democracy of received content that today’s consumer demands. This is evidenced by my favourite example, Dad’s Army, first aired between 1968 and 1977, [which] remains peak viewing on Saturday night.”

Baroness Buscombe, Member, All-Party Parliamentary Media Group, WMF, 21 November 2013

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The new (old) challenges: …..and PSB

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The new (old) challenges: …..and PSB

“I have to say, you ask most people out there what PSB is, they haven’t a clue. What does PSB really mean in 2013? Is it Dad’s Army? What purpose does it serve? Should some channels continue to enjoy entitlement to Should some channels continue to enjoy entitlement to special treatment on the basis of delivering PSB? Channel 4 is a particular example where in my view searching questions should be asked, given the channel has become a one stop shop for voyeurism.”

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The new (old) challenge: broadcasting itself

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The new (old) challenge: broadcasting itself

  • Universality
  • Preserving free-to-view
  • Single tier for PSBs
  • Single tier for PSBs