Kevin Anderson wrote:
funding - the licence fee. Commercial newspapers are finding their
readership and advertising decline. Unless the licence fee were extended
to a public service newspaper (highly unlikely), the BBC doesn't provide
that much of a model that could easily be transferred to
Bingo :)
Regards, Dave
On 16 Mar 2009, 11:45 AM, Robert (Jamie) Munro rjmu...@arjam.net wrote:
Kevin Anderson wrote: funding - the licence fee. Commercial newspapers
are finding their reade...
I think that news.bbc.co.uk is already a public service newspaper -
albeit one without a print
On 16 Mar 2009, 11:45 AM, Robert (Jamie) Munro rjmu...@arjam.net wrote:
Kevin Anderson wrote: funding - the licence fee. Commercial newspapers
are finding their reade...
I think that news.bbc.co.uk is already a public service newspaper -
albeit one without a print edition.
Robert (Jamie)
On 16/03/2009 11:39, Robert (Jamie) Munro rjmu...@arjam.net wrote:
Kevin Anderson wrote:
funding - the licence fee. Commercial newspapers are finding their
readership and advertising decline. Unless the licence fee were extended
to a public service newspaper (highly unlikely), the BBC
On Mon, Mar 16, 2009 at 12:45, Kevin Anderson global...@gmail.com wrote:
Yes, we're in a post-industrial era for journalism. That's been pretty
clear to most of us who weren't wed to the old model. We don't really know
what comes next.
There was a speech at SxSW on that -
2009/3/16 Kevin Anderson global...@gmail.com:
Going back to some of the previous comments though, the resistance to the
change wasn't just in the boardrooms, it was also in the newsrooms.
It strikes me as exceedingly likely that the bastards in the boardroom
will be joined in the dole queue by
On Mon, Mar 16, 2009 at 2:41 PM, Dave Crossland d...@lab6.com wrote:
My hope with the change is that we'll get an answer to the questions
MediaLens raise about the integrity of the profession.
My hope is that with the change MediaLens will find something better to do. ;-P
- Rob.
-
Sent via
All,
I've been reading this thread with great interest and it seems to sum the
whole current situation up rather well and I would add stuff but I've
buggered my rotator cuff (apparently).
The BBC being a public service newspaper - it is certainly a long way from
the days of Ceefax and
If you look at what The Sun does on mobile, it seems very geared up
to getting 'white van man' to spend the odd £1 or £2 when he is
sitting in his van bored. It certainly isn't what you'd call
traditional public service broadcasting news, but it seems very
cleverly targeted at their market.
all
2009/3/16 Brian Butterworth briant...@freeview.tv:
One thing I am wondering, will News International realise that The Times
brand needs a TV channel more than BSkyB does?
Hopefully not, because that would be an excellent idea for them to do so :)
-
Sent via the backstage.bbc.co.uk discussion
I can't leave that comment unchallenged, Dave.
To summarise then, the bastards in the newsroom should go get another job to
pay the bills so that they can support their journalism in their spare time,
sort themselves out and learn up about internet marketing and the brave new
world.
11 matches
Mail list logo