Society & Culture2 mins ago
Well Said Michael Buerk!
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-22 54682/B BC-vete ran-Mic hael-Bu erk-sav ages-ai rhead-c olleagu es--pne umatic- bird-br ain-str ictly-S orry-Te ss-DOES -mean-y ou.html
I'm sure most of the population agreed with you! Embarrassingly awful! Hope the BBC have now learnt their lesson!
I'm sure most of the population agreed with you! Embarrassingly awful! Hope the BBC have now learnt their lesson!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Ann. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Chaptaz - the coverage was pathetic, silly, giggly, frothy with amateurish presenters who showed not an ounce of respect for such a special occasion. The worst part of it was (we said at the time) not showing or commenting on the tall ships or the little ships of Dunkirk - as the article said it was completely missed!
Well I suppose, it may not have been ALL the fault of the presenters, after all they are told what to do and who to interview, but they had clearly not done their homework on historical facts, names etc. The filming was also at fault, we were so disappointed not to see the tall ships going down the Thames after having seen a few of them in dock a few weeks before. I wonder what the Queen thought as she watched it afterwards in the comfort of own lounge?
I myself prefer weightier matters to be treated in a weighty way, however this was a jubilee celebration, where common folk held street parties, people dressed up like idiots and tried to enjoy themselves despite the appalling British weather. There were young, people old people, little kids, native British folks, foreigners, recent and distant immigrants, straight people, gay people, tall people, short people etc etc etc all trying to celebrate more than anything else. Therefore it didn't need to be a history lesson, dull, or otherwise heavy weight in it's reporting and if it had been you would have lost the interest of the majority of children watching and probably the majority of not very bright people watching too of which I am sure there are millions. The little ships were important and should have been mentioned, but critiquing people individually is crass and rude and gives Michael Buerk the image that he's well named which is a shame because he's a great journalist. Times move on, I didn't personally find it intellectually challenging to watch but then things don't necessarily have to be they simply have to be enjoyable, and as a whole I think it was. If we are going to cringe every time someone fluffs something then it would never be worth making anything and it was a live show, so no room for error. I think all in all people could be a little more forgiving of the odd faux pas and not take the moral high ground quite so much, especially since Her Maj is a well know fan of crap TV soap operas ( so she's clearly not fussy ;-)
from Wiki: Buerk asserted in a Radio Times interview in August 2005 that the "shift in the balance of power between the sexes" has gone too far and that men are now little more than "sperm donors". In particular, he objected to the many women now in senior positions within the BBC
Another Daily Mail rent-a-rant.
Another Daily Mail rent-a-rant.