Perhaps The Prince Should Sort Them Out.
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The BBC license fee is �112 per year total funds �2.3bn. Do you think they spend the money wisely or do you think the BBC should start advertising and abolish the license fee? Are you happy with the BBC as it is?
No best answer has yet been selected by rod. 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.i never really thought about it much untill today, when radio 5live was all recorded rubbish, and i realised i would probably pay the liscense fee just for that (with a bit of little britain thrown in)
i love the breakfast show and also 5livedrive, and occaisionally i get to hear a bit of simon mayo. There is also something glorious about listening to sport on the radio, as they are so eloquent, and you can really counjour up the pictures
Yes stevie,If it was 34p a Day payed daily but it isnt . Its �112 upfront .He has to pay �104 a week rent with no meals.plus hes got is own tv which he had for xmas.And yes he will have to find part time work,But dont assume every student is a clone of your self .Every body is in a different situation.There are 46,000 students where he is going would you claim to know all of there finanancial predicaments!!
Test Match Special, Andrew Marr, 5Live on a rainy Saturday afternoon, Terry and his TOGs, HIGNFY, Paxo, Concerts on R3, Everything on R4, Royal weddings, The Sky at Night, New comedy, Dr Who, The World Service on a cheap tranny on a beach in West Africa, Blue Peter, Jools Holland, etc, etc, etc. It's the greatest broadcaster in the world. �112 is a bargain. Rupert Murdoch can't even give us a tenth of the quality for a lot more money.
The point about advertising is that it is a driver to simply cater for the biggest most "advertiser friendly" audience.
If the BBC were forced to advertise it wouldn't be long before we'd loose the high quality, lower audience coverage that they do.
I'd think Radio 4 would be first against the wall.
If you've ever been to America and seen their television you'll know where that road leads.
The real future for the BBC lies in pay per view on demand access to their archive on-line.
Imagine being able to browse that and have it streamed to to your TV set when you want!
VINNY100_2: You can pay monthly by direct debit, so there's no need to think of it is an 'up front' fee. It's the price of 4 pints a month and it can provide as much knowledge as a textbook.
The licence fee keeps the quality of British TV and Radio up as a whole. If commercial networks didn't have the BBC to compete with they'd be free to aim for the lowest common deniminator to maximise advertising revenue, knowing that everyone else was doing the same thing too.
The licence fee will continue to be well worth it for as long as the amzingly beautiful, gorgeous, handsome, attractive lovely James Alexandrou stays in "EastEnders".
(whj - presumably you are outside the UK: the licence fee is a flat-rate tax which has to be paid each year by each household owning a TV set. It is ostensibly to fund the BBC, which is for public service broadcasting and does not have commercial advertising. It was OK in the old days when the BBC was the predominant channel watched by most people, but it has become increasingly unpopular in recent years because of the proliferation of extra channels and more diverse TV services.)
Far from being a spur to competition and quality standards in other broadcasters, is not the licence fee anti-competitive, as the BBC does not have to "earn" the income from what is essentially a Government tax?
Let's all be up front, Policticians and broadcasters alike, and fund the BBC out of general taxation whilst maintaining the precious political independence.
Of course the government would have to increase some tax somewhere to do it, as nothing comes for free, but let's ditch the idea that it is a "licence" in other words a fee to operate the equipment, paid only by the equipment owner. Let's all taxpayers chip in and let it therefore be related to personal income and expenditure.
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