Home & Garden4 mins ago
Bbc India Sports Women Of The Year ?
whats india have to do with the bbc, does indian tv have a british sports person of the year, or china for that matter...
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /news/w orld-as ia-indi a-50850 202
https:/
Answers
Remember Fender, there are those who adore the idea of State Broadcasters . Russia, N Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, etc. etc. are their templates when it comes to forcing opinion and agenda upon people who are not part of their captive home audience. The people who have secured positions in these propaganda organisation s are always looking for more devious, and...
20:14 Thu 19th Dec 2019
Well why not? What's not to like for the luvvies? Brown women who are possibly downtrodden(not by us even) and prior victims of British colonial abuse. We will need to identify any with disabilities that elevate them to hero status, or gender fluidity issues, that in spite of overwhelming disdain from the general populace, have managed to find a safe space in the full on glare of social me dea and remained defiant in the face of no discernible opposition. "Sports fans can cast their votes on any of the BBC's Indian language websites - Hindi, Telugu, Marathi, Tamil, Gujarati and Punjabi." ????Can't wait.
The BBC World Service is one of the most important arms of the BBC and broadcasts in over 40 languages. Up until 2014 it was funded through 'grant-in-aid' from the Foreign & Commonwealth Office. That was an arrangement which meant that
(a) it wasn't a drain on licence-payers' money ; and
(b) the funding was 'at arm's length' from the Government, ensuring that the BBC could remain independent of it.
Then the Government decided, as a cost-cutting measure for the public purse, to cease such funding (although, in reality, some grants continue to be made by the FCO). The World Service remains as a 'public corporation of the FCO' (with the FCO being involved in deciding which languages the World Service should broadcast in but with editorial decisions being made solely by the BBC) but, despite that, it is now forced to obtain most of its funding through the licence fee. (The need to do so was largely responsible for BBC3 being taken off air as a TV channel and for cuts to the BBC's website).
The BBC has called for the funding situation to be reversed so that, once again, it won't need to take any money from licence fees to fund its services. (i.e. the BBC itself isn't happy that it uses licence-payers' money to fund the World Service but the Government has insisted that the World Service must continue to operate as part of the BBC's Charter and that it must be funded from licence fees, rather than by the FCO).
The BBC World Service is regarded as a lifeline of independent broadcasting by millions of people across the world, with 50 million people in India alone listening to, or watching, its programmes regularly. (i.e. there are far more people in India who rely upon the BBC as a trustworthy source of information than there are in the UK):
https:/ /www.bb c.co.uk /mediac entre/l atestne ws/2019 /bbc-in ternati onal-au dience- record- high
So I can't see anything wrong at all in the BBC promoting an award for Indian sports people.
(a) it wasn't a drain on licence-payers' money ; and
(b) the funding was 'at arm's length' from the Government, ensuring that the BBC could remain independent of it.
Then the Government decided, as a cost-cutting measure for the public purse, to cease such funding (although, in reality, some grants continue to be made by the FCO). The World Service remains as a 'public corporation of the FCO' (with the FCO being involved in deciding which languages the World Service should broadcast in but with editorial decisions being made solely by the BBC) but, despite that, it is now forced to obtain most of its funding through the licence fee. (The need to do so was largely responsible for BBC3 being taken off air as a TV channel and for cuts to the BBC's website).
The BBC has called for the funding situation to be reversed so that, once again, it won't need to take any money from licence fees to fund its services. (i.e. the BBC itself isn't happy that it uses licence-payers' money to fund the World Service but the Government has insisted that the World Service must continue to operate as part of the BBC's Charter and that it must be funded from licence fees, rather than by the FCO).
The BBC World Service is regarded as a lifeline of independent broadcasting by millions of people across the world, with 50 million people in India alone listening to, or watching, its programmes regularly. (i.e. there are far more people in India who rely upon the BBC as a trustworthy source of information than there are in the UK):
https:/
So I can't see anything wrong at all in the BBC promoting an award for Indian sports people.
Remember Fender, there are those who adore the idea of State Broadcasters. Russia, N Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, etc. etc. are their templates when it comes to forcing opinion and agenda upon people who are not part of their captive home audience. The people who have secured positions in these propaganda organisations are always looking for more devious, and hopefully unfathomable, ways of getting the "message" across.
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