BadFish
Huge Member
- Oct 19, 2003
- 18,202
Oh no, not the old the-BBC-is-a-hotbed-of-lefties myth.
The current chairman of the BBC Trust is Lord Patten, who served Prime Minister Thatcher and our nation so loyally, here and abroad. The Political Editor used to be chairman of the Young Conservatives. The long-serving Chief Political Correspondent recently left to take up a job as Boris Johnson's PR man. The current Editor of live programmes was in a right-wing organisation that was so extreme that even Norman Tebbit was obliged to close it down for being too right-wing loopy. That was the Federation of Conservative Students. Remember them? Maggie's Militant Tendency, they called themselves. Hardly a gang of swivel-eyed Marxist nutters plaguing our airwaves. And you don't get Labour supporters citing these facts as evidence of supposed right-wing bias at the BBC.
I have no idea how many influential people who work at the BBC you have met, and I'd be happy to be shot down in flames if your experiences are radically different to mine. By influential, I mean decision-makers like commissioning editors, anchors, producers, reporters, editors, presenters and the like. My job has obliged me to come into contact with the BBC from time to time so I've met quite a few of these people over the last few decades and, if I was asked to take an educated guess at their political leanings, I would say that they all gave the appearance of being natural Tory voters. All of the ones I have met, without exception, come from relatively well-off backgrounds and every single one was educated privately. I've only met a few dozen such people in this huge organisation, but natural-born lefties appear to me to be thin on the ground at the Beeb in my experience.
I am not suggesting that private education therefore equals right-winger. But the likelihood that they are all raving Trotskyites is, at the very least, open to question.
These arty-farty pinkos with tweed jackets, beards and elbow-patches you talk about....where are they then? I would be amazed, absolutely staggered even, if you were to spend a month wandering the corridors of the BBC and you found even one person who resembled this ridiculous stereotype. Of course, you are entitled to your views about the BBC, but is it really fair to state stuff like this with no evidence at all?
Just because a news organisation does not express traditional right-wing views does not automatically mean it is left-wing, or vice-versa. Just because a news organisation poses what some, on the right and the left, might consider to be uncomfortable questions, doesn't make it necessarily against that particular view; it means it's being neutral and asking for opinions to be clarified on behalf of their viewers and / or listeners. This is exactly what it is supposed to be doing. Indeed, it is obliged by law to do exactly this; to uphold impartiality. Just the same as ITN and Sky News.
The idea that an organisation this vast could possibly lean one way more than the other is difficult to sustain; it's just too bloody big and spread out. If it were possible, however, the balance of probability is that it would bend to the right, if anything. And I don't for one moment think that it does.
Don't forget you are talking to someone who bases all his opinions on these ridiculous stereotypes. Be it left wingers, black africans or any other group of people small or large 'People like him' (my favourite of the vague generalisations) will always default to the lowest common denominator of the popular stereotype.
Must go i have to sew some organic, free trade patches onto my tweed jacket.