Tag Archives: BBC

Cool Jay Hunt gives birth to Channel 4’s future

C4′s Jay Hunt: “I think it’s a little bit like becoming pregnant: It doesn’t really matter how impatient you become, you can’t deliver anything for 10 months. But the good news is I’ve been in post for 10 months now…”

G’day mate, Digital Britain can go XXXX itself

Lord Carter presenting Digital Britain

“First, I have to start with an apology, we’ve spotted a mistake in the report… has anyone else spotted it yet?”

As far as agenda-setting Government launches go, Lord Carter’s opening gambit to the press pack at the RSA as he unveiled Digital Britain this week was far from reassuring.

What followed can best be described as a cagey preamble on some of the report’s key findings, delivered by someone who already seemed painfully aware of its own shortcomings.

At one point a member of the press read out a quite ludicrous sentence, overly complicated and full of disclaimers, and used it to question claims the report was clear and transparent.

“Yes, that could have been written better, so full marks for spotting that,” came Carter’s concise, sarcastic reply.

At another point, when asked for the second time to clarify the report’s recommendations regarding top-slicing the BBC licence fee to help ITV’s regional news, a weary Carter said he would be counting the “number of column inches” the BBC gave to the rest of the report, in the interests of fair and balance coverage.

Mildly amusing, it raised a titter, but hardly fair. The changes Digital Britain describes in its Public Service Content chapter pave the way for the first major overhaul of BBC funding in its 87 year history, you could understand the interest.

For Carter to become so exasperated so quickly offered some indication as to the many hours the creation of the final White Paper had already stolen from his life.

Another pesky member of the press pack launched into an attack on the Government’s plans for a universal 2Mb connection speed by 2012, surely it’s not enough and already behind the curve?

You’ve misunderstood, replied a patient Carter. He went on to blame his own “failure to communicate” that the 2Mb had been set as a minimum level, to ensure the pockets of the country currently without any decent service would not be handicapped or overlooked in the future. And so it went on.

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Is the unveiling of Top Gear’s Stig the lamest scoop of the decade?

Pssst, have you heard the latest? No, not about Barack Obama becoming the new president of the United States, nor December’s sharp fall in inflation. 

No, today’s ‘big news’ comes courtesy of the Daily Mail, where a dogged investigative hack has unmasked the identity of Top Gear’s tame racing driving, known only as the Stig. 

He’s the guy in the white helmet and jump suit who, among other things, helps ‘stars in a reasonably priced car’ speed round Top Gear’s race track.  The man in the gloves is apparently a James Bond stunt man and has previously driven in Formula Three, Le Mans, GT and NASCAR, as also reported in yesterday’s Telegraph Who is the Stig? The answer – Telegraph 

While having no qualms in naming the Beeb’s driving stooge, both the Telegraph and Associated’s mid market paper opted to protect the identity of the tenacious reporters behind the scoops. Perhaps, say those over at Aunty, this is because for lovers of the car series, the Stig’s unmasking is akin to finding out there is no Father Christmas? Maybe, or perhaps it’s because the Stig’s identity has been one the worst kept secrets for years…

The Bristol Evening Post made it clear they knew who the Stig was two weeks ago, but decided not to out him. Similarly, the News of the World ran a story at the start of the month about who he was, where he lives and his marital status, but again chose not to name him. http://www.newsoftheworld.co.uk/news/124186/Top-Gears-Stig-unmasked.html

This week’s Daily Star Sunday went a step further and named him, although the article has been removed online. In fact, the Stig’s cover, if it is the man revealed today, was first blown more than two years ago by the News of the World among others (also removed online), although no one really took any notice.  

Following Richard Hammond’s crash in September 2006, a Health & Safety Executive report recorded the driver in question had been at the scene as a “high performance driver and consultant”. 

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