-Caveat Lector-

http://www.mediachannel.org/

http://64.224.42.246/weblog/dannylog.cfm

By Danny Schechter, Jul 17, 2003

THE BBC IN THE CROSS FIRE

BBC World covered Prime Minister Blair's visit this morning with its usual
professional distance, far less cheerily than CNN and with less genuflection
than on Fox. BBC News is usually that way. It is there to cover the news but
now is in the middle of it.

While I was in London last week, I got somewhat of an insider look at an
emerging battle royale between Britain's best-known broadcaster and its
embattled political leaders. What's at stake is as troubling as what is
happening in America vis-ŕ-vis the FCC, and not as well known. Your News
Dissector is still investigating and shares a first in-depth report, hoping
for comment and debate.

THE BBC's NEXT WAR
Why the Knives Are Out for Aunty

LONDON: Politics here has become sport. And drama. Call it the Blair
follies. Call it a lynching party. But don't call it boring.

There is a daily dance underway between a probing media that seemed to have
lost its spine in the "fog" of war only to find it in all the discrepancies
in official pronouncements about missing weapons of mass destruction, and a
public that grows more skeptical by the day. Meanwhile the government gets
squirmier and testier by the hour, insisting it was right all along and that
the media, especially the BBC, has got it wrong, wrong, wrong.

Many believe that this trashing of the BBC emanates from the pique of a
disgruntled politician like Blair's media advisor Alistair Campbell, or is
meant only to shift attention away from the WMD controversy. The Times of
London calls it "a weapon of mass distraction."

It isn't.

The Iraq War may be over but the BBC is in the crosshairs of a new low
intensity war. Most of the British press has yet to realize that this new
battle of Britain is more than a case of shoot the messenger.

If the BBC's credibility can be seriously damaged, its global power ands
political impact can be circumscribed. So far most of the media coverage of
this latest controversy is focused on the issues in the foreground, not the
interests in the background.

There is more at stake.

WHY THE ATTACKS ON THE BBC?

A week ago, a study came out from Cardiff University that found that the
BBC, contrary to the impressions of some (especially those in the US who
compared its war coverage with what passed for journalism on the tube here)
was NOT in the bulk of its coverage anti-war but, rather, pro-government and
tilted towards the war.

That shouldn't surprise.

Led by its effective manager Greg Dyke, a partisan of the New Labor movement
headed by Blair, the BEEB is a vast corporation that usually functions as a
member of the establishment in good standing. The BBC rarely goes to war
against the government of the day.

Despite the evidence in the new study, conservatives, as well as I am told
on good authority, Labor politicians and elements of the British military,
charge that the BBC was anti-war, hostile to the British forces, and
one-sided.

They seem determined to do something about it.

While the opening shots in their attack are being pegged to a current issue,
there is a longer-term strategy behind it that does not seem well
understood. Like many conflicts, this one began with a news story and an
incident. But that may only be a pretext for a more insidious strategy.

THE CONFRONTATION BEGINS

History, deceit and small-mindedness in high places has now cast the Beeb
(or "Aunty "as it is known), the world's most respected and self-important
broadcaster) into an adversarial role. The government's spinner-in-chief
Alistair Campbell, ("Tony wouldn't know what to do without me," he is quoted
as saying) is accusing BBC of bias in general and falsely alleging that he
was involved in "sexing up" a dossier that was used to justify and sell
British involvement in the war. He demanded a retraction and apology.

At issue is a report by BBC defense correspondent Andrew Gilligan who had a
high-placed source confirming that information in the renamed "dodgy
dossier" justifying the war had been doctored. The government, which denies
the charge, demands to know Gilligan's source and insists in any event that
one source should never a story make. A parliamentary committee has been
grilling Gilligan, demanding he fess up.

The BBC responds by standing by the story, and says that there would be no
political journalism in the country if every story had to be based on
several sources. The BBC says it believes their source was credible and
could be trusted.

A top BBC official told me he will not under any circumstance reveal his
source. "We don't do that," he said firmly. Others point out that many of
Blair's claims in the dossier in dispute were only based on one source, if
any.

THE NEWS DEPARTMENT HANGS TOUGH

The BBC's own Board of Governors, led by a former intelligence chief
reviewed the issue and backed the judgment of BBC News, which prides itself
in its impartiality. News chief Richard Sambrook is hanging tough, charging
that the government had tried to steer coverage during the war and otherwise
was intimidating journalists.

In a l0-page letter to Campbell, he wrote: "Our responsibility was to
present an impartial picture, and you were not best placed to judge what was
impartial." The BBC prides itself on being a "trusted source" and claims
that 93% of the UK population watched the war on the BBC in the war's first
two weeks.

That is some rating and share. No broadcaster in the US can claim such
viewer loyalty. Also I can't remember either the last time a news executive
in America took on a government so directly. It's been thirty years since
the Watergate revelations and Pentagon Papers battle pitted US media power
against political power.

THE WAR OF WORDS

Blood is boiling on all sides. The war of words is intense, but privately
the BBC doesn't understand why the government is keeping alive an issue that
it clearly can't win with the public. The highly credible BBC is prized by
one and all for its independence and, hence, is no easy target for a
government with shrinking credibility.

At the same time-the BBC IS under attack, but not just from the usual
suspects. Leaders of the Labor government and the conservatives, which
usually oppose each other, are now together and sharpening their ice-picks.
Their real intentions are not being played out in the public arena. This
harkens back to the l996 Communications Reform Bill in the US when Democrats
and Republicans closed ranks behind legislation in the name of promoting
more competition. As we know, it led to more media consolidation. It was
later revealed that the media companies poured contributions into the
coffers of key legislators on both sides of the aisle who gave them what
they wanted.

THE BBC's FCC-LIKE THREAT

As is often the case, what is really going on may be lurking in the
background in the political machinations surrounding the debate over a new
communications bill, just like it was in America. I am referring to the fact
that American media companies were lobbying the Republican dominated FCC for
concessions while covering its war. Few broadcasters wanted to pick a fight
with the Bush Administration when so much money was riding on regulatory
changes.

At least one prominent US media critic now says that media companies were
"kissing the Administration's ass" by downplaying war criticisms. The FCC
rewarded their loyalty with the new rules the companies wanted. One of its
rationales was war related. As expressed by Secretary of State Colin Powell'
s son Michael, who chairs the FCC, only big companies could report on wars
like the one in Iraq.

The situation in England is not exactly the same, but here too a new
Communications "reform" bill is about to be approved, setting up a new media
regulatory body. Significantly David Currie, the head of the new regulatory
body called OFCOM recently held consultations with Powell in Washington this
summer. A British government, which just coordinated its foreign policy,
seems to doing something similar with its media policy.

US COMPANIES ARE WAITING IN THE WINGS

When passed it will open the door to US companies like Clear Channel and
Disney and Viacom to buy up British media properties. A Blair advisor, Ed
Richards, is credited with inserting provisions into the communications bill
opening the door to the American media companies who have been lobbying
London like they do Washington.

Not surprisingly Richards was later appointed to the OFCOM board, which
will, by the way, be allowed to operate without parliamentary
accountability. Chairman Currie has already opposed calls that the new
agency allow citizens' needs to come before business interests.

So far the BBC has been mostly exempted from "oversight" by this
pro-business body. But critics of the independence and power of the BCC want
to change that. They say the BBC has a political agenda without revealing
that OFCOM does too.

Sound familiar? A regulatory body that identifies more with the industry
than the public interest! Politicians who advocate for media interests
becoming regulators that favor those interests! The Campaign for
Broadcasting and Press Freedom in Britain is organizing against this
corporate sell-out. It is an uphill battle.

THE BBC IS CONSIDERED BRITAIN'S "LIBERAL MEDIA"

What does this mean for BBC? It means that just as the right wing in America
is targeting "liberal media," public-service media like the BBC are being
challenged in the UK.

Significantly, the BBC's charter comes up for renewal in 2005. Already The
Tories (Conservatives) are calling for a reduction in the license fee that
TV viewers here pay and which subsidizes the BBC. They are pushing a
subscription fee instead which will have the effect of turning a national
broadcaster into a niche channel. If the fee is cut sharply, it could
cripple the BBC.

The BLAIRites of Labor are joining in with some BBC bashing of their own.
Labor MP Gerald Kaufman now wants the BBC to be fully accountable to OFCOM,
a clear sign of what political role that body is setup to play. Another
Labor MP, Chris Hill, who used to work for the BBC, compared the BBC's
annual report to "an Enron Annual Report" implying corruption. Kauffman went
further demanding that BBC journalists not even be allowed to write for
newspapers, charging that Gilligan wrote "bellicose, contentious,
controversial articles with animadversions on individuals."
"Animadversions?"

The politicians are trying to chip away at the integrity of BBC journalism.
No government wants a really independent news body. (Most independents in
other countries are really "dependents"-forever seeking funding and
distribution. The BBC has that.) In the short run, they are resorting to
intimidation. In the longer run, if they can get away with it, they will use
regulation and deception just as they have in selling the war. This whole
attack on the BBC will be sold in the name of giving British viewers more
choice. More for less! That is how attacks on quality programming are always
disguised.

FOLLOW THE MONEY

While BBC journalism is being debated, the power of the BBC as a sustainable
institution is what is really at stake.

In the private sector, media companies and their backers in Labor and among
the Tories also want the BBC to be tamed. Steven Barnett argues in the
Observer that the BBC's best hope is with Labor, but that may be the case
given their affinity for the private sector. He explains that the BBC is not
like PBS in America or ABC in Australia, which he describes as "minnows in
their respective countries, cowed, underfunded, and ill prepared for serious
battle with the governments that decide their future."

The difference is enormous. Ordinary people in Britain spend an average of
16 hours and 21 minutes a week tuned into some BBC service. We are not
talking about some small time TV station here. It is powerful and
independent, paid for by license fees. According to the 2003 BBC annual
report, "The BBC broadcasts 8 network television and l0 network radio
services as well as 22 TV and 46 radio services for audiences in the nations
and English regions." World Service just marked its 70th birthday. Its
history is impressive, and its brand is increasingly global.

More importantly, BBC's mission is still high-minded. "Our purpose is to
enrich people's lives with programs and services that inform educate and
entertain," says its charter. "Our vision is to be the most creative
organization in the world." No US broadcaster even pretends at such a
mission or makes a claim like this: "trust is the foundation of the BBC: we
are independent, impartial and honest."

This doesn't mean the BBC is beyond reproach. Far from it, their own
governors released a statement indicating that "we have ten key objectives
where we think the BBC can do better." Among them are reaching younger
audiences, serving ethnic minorities, and the underserved. There is
continuing and often heated debate within and without the BBC about how well
it is doing. TV critics frequently skewer their shows as they do programs on
other channels. Financially, the BBC has a big debt and has already sold off
its buildings in a complex leaseback deal set up by a US investment bank.

AS BBC GOES GLOBAL, GLOBAL PLAYERS GO FOR THE BBC

For years now the BBC has pursued a corporate strategy of its own to
demonstrate efficiency and pay its bills, which include generous salaries
and perks for executives. It has created many profitable enterprises
including the commercial BBC World that hopes to launch as a 24-hour channel
in the US this year.

When many Americans turned to the BBC for less jingoistic war news, the
corporation realized they were being given a business opening. BBC
understood that it could do very well competing head-on with US channels.
Amazingly enough, more people now watch BBC shows in the US than watch TV l,
their lead channel in Britain.

The big media companies are not unaware of what all this means. What BBC
sees as an opportunity, they see as a threat. Remember their religion has
little to use for "visions," "values" and public interest missions. They are
driven only by self-interest, worshipping the bottom line.

BBC just released a 2003 annual report showing that annual revenues grew to
$5.63 BILLION last year, while worldwide sales were up 16%. They hope to
earn TWO HUNDRED MILLION pounds by 2007. That is a lot of money. A lot of
money. No wonder US and British media companies are motivated to see BBC's
growth checked, broken up, or even privatized.

All of this money and power will likely now become a target for government
regulators like the merry men of OFCOM who want to contain public
enterprises and serve those avaricious private businesses who would love to
slice off some of BBC's market share. If they perceive the BBC competing
with them, they will compete with it. And they play dirty whenever they can
get away with it.

MURDOCH AT THE READY

A longtime BBC basher a big supporter of the Bush-Blair Iraq War, Rupert
Murdoch is not a disinterested party. He may be angling to buy a lucrative
terrestrial TV station like Channel 5 (he already owns SKY News and
satellite stations). I was told that virtually the entire Blair government
attended a party for an outgoing editor of The Sun, Murdoch's tabloid
newspaper known for the topless page-3 girl and dishing out reactionary
slogans to the working class. This right-wing press lord has been a big
Blair electoral backer. Not surprisingly, it was Blair loyalists in the
House of Lords who killed a proposed amendment to the bill proposed by
moviemaker and now Lord David Putnam to stop Murdoch's ambitions.

Also as a new ITV merger threatens between ITN and Granada, the British
broadcasting environment is changing rapidly. This must affect the BBC's
future.

Also interested in a British Channel is AOL Time Warner and other global
media giants. The Media Guardian this week carries a profile of Michael
Lynton, the head of AOL in Europe. In it, he pitches himself for a job at
BBC. Read between the lines: "I would love to be involved with broadcasting.
The market here is a more interesting one than the US because the
opportunity for innovation is a lot more substantial."

For "innovation," read privatization, You can imagine how AOL type
"innovation" could "enrich' (read decimate) the culture and quality of the
BBC.

And one more ominous note:

MELL HELL

In September the Royal Television Society is holding a convention in
Cambridge titled "The End Game: Winners and Losers in the Digital Decade."

BBC Director Greg Dyke is moderating.

But the lead speaker is none other than Mel Karmazin, the one-time radio ad
salesman who now runs Viacom, Infinity Broadcasting, and CBS. His biggest
claim to fame is as the media exec who unleashed the serial sexist shock
jock Howard Stern on American culture. Mel has never known a media tradition
he was not anxious to dumb down.

Watch out Britain.

Today's winners can easily become tomorrow's losers.

It seems to be the logic of these times.

Just as "Old Labor" was displaced by New, so the "old BBC" can be, shall we
say, "modernized" by the marauders of the market.

Don't say it can't happen here.

In his latest book, BBC's star news correspondent, John Simpson, writes:
"The BBC has changed utterly and out of all recognition since the day I
first went to work there on 1 September l966. And yet at the same time, it
remains essentially the same organization with the same basic values that it
always had. I don't believe it has lost its way.."

Don't rest on your laurels John: That "way" is at serious risk.

...

Posted by Danny on Thu, Jul 17, 2003  at 08:48 AM  EST

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