ChatterBank5 mins ago
Cameron not happy with the BBC.
13 Answers
http://www.dailymail....ers-says-Cameron.html
Do we need any further proof that our state broadcaster leans to the 'Left'?
Do we need any further proof that our state broadcaster leans to the 'Left'?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. 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.The Conservatives have always hated the BBC because it is a nationalised industry and goes against all their private commercial instincts. Thereis a long list of Conservatives who have bashed the beeb. Margaret Thatcher and Norman Tebbit were always doung it.
In this interview, Cameron saw attack as the best form of denfence. He was a member of a club notorious for acts of vandalism. It is well documented that he was a member, so all he could do was attack the BBC on a different front.
It is the job of journalists to hold the Prime Minister and ministers to account.
In this interview, Cameron saw attack as the best form of denfence. He was a member of a club notorious for acts of vandalism. It is well documented that he was a member, so all he could do was attack the BBC on a different front.
It is the job of journalists to hold the Prime Minister and ministers to account.
jno
/// you can tell Davis is hitting home when Cameron starts calling him "Evan". I bet Davis wasn't discourteous enough to call him "David".///
What a weak argument surely calling him by his first name is not being discourteous, it is being courteous and showing a sign of friendship.
It is protocol however to address a person holding the office of Prime Minister such as David Cameron as Prime Minister, or simply Mr Cameron.
But it is generally termed hostile and definitely discourteous (jno please note) to just call him 'Cameron'.
"That’s what it can slip into, Evan, if you are not careful."
/// you can tell Davis is hitting home when Cameron starts calling him "Evan". I bet Davis wasn't discourteous enough to call him "David".///
What a weak argument surely calling him by his first name is not being discourteous, it is being courteous and showing a sign of friendship.
It is protocol however to address a person holding the office of Prime Minister such as David Cameron as Prime Minister, or simply Mr Cameron.
But it is generally termed hostile and definitely discourteous (jno please note) to just call him 'Cameron'.
"That’s what it can slip into, Evan, if you are not careful."
Not sure I agree with you AOG. They are two professional people and this was a serious interview. By slipping into first name, could be seen as being patronising or exerting his seniority. It was rather unprofessional. Now if Cameron was on an entertainment show, then it would be fine to address his interviewer as Jonathan or Chris.
Gromit
/// Now if Cameron was on an entertainment show, then it would be fine to address his interviewer as Jonathan or Chris.///
He was being interviewed by Evan Davis
So how should he have addressed him then Gromit?
Lets imagine this scenario?
/// Are there similarities between being a member of a 'youthful gang that engages in violent behaviour' and looters, and being a member of the Bullington Club, Prime Minister? ///
"Well Mr Davis, I think that there is a great deal of difference".
Something doesn't sound right somehow.
Or in the way of the 'Left' (for example George Galloway's normal approach)
"Well DAVIS",......................................
...
or "Well Evan,........................................
Now that must sound so much better, and friendlier?
/// Now if Cameron was on an entertainment show, then it would be fine to address his interviewer as Jonathan or Chris.///
He was being interviewed by Evan Davis
So how should he have addressed him then Gromit?
Lets imagine this scenario?
/// Are there similarities between being a member of a 'youthful gang that engages in violent behaviour' and looters, and being a member of the Bullington Club, Prime Minister? ///
"Well Mr Davis, I think that there is a great deal of difference".
Something doesn't sound right somehow.
Or in the way of the 'Left' (for example George Galloway's normal approach)
"Well DAVIS",......................................
...
or "Well Evan,........................................
Now that must sound so much better, and friendlier?
// "Well Mr Davis, I think that there is a great deal of difference". //
That sounds fine and absolutely correct to me. Evan Davis was the BBC's Economics Editor, and the Today Programme is its flagship current Affairs show. Both interviewer and interviewee should be respectful of the other. Apart from anything else, using chummy names to address each other implies a closeness that should not exist between a journalist and a politician. It does not sound to the listener or viewer to be impartial, and it is important that impartiality is shown at all times.
That sounds fine and absolutely correct to me. Evan Davis was the BBC's Economics Editor, and the Today Programme is its flagship current Affairs show. Both interviewer and interviewee should be respectful of the other. Apart from anything else, using chummy names to address each other implies a closeness that should not exist between a journalist and a politician. It does not sound to the listener or viewer to be impartial, and it is important that impartiality is shown at all times.
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