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[Politics] The BBC - (Rant about Impartiality)







nwgull

Well-known member
Jul 25, 2003
13,823
Manchester
Five years ago I used to view the BBC as my go to source of news, that I could trust completey. No longer. Completely biased, run by remainers, presenters are remainers, editors are remainers, lots of news getting buried.

Where is the headline news about Jo Swinson's husband receiving £4million from the EU for example? That makes a grope of a thigh 20 years ago look very insignificant but guess which one they're still banging on about!

Got a link to the Jo Swinson Husband thing? Surely the pro-Brexit media such as the Mail or Express would’ve reported it.
 


nwgull

Well-known member
Jul 25, 2003
13,823
Manchester
Five years ago I used to view the BBC as my go to source of news, that I could trust completey. No longer. Completely biased, run by remainers, presenters are remainers, editors are remainers, lots of news getting buried.

Where is the headline news about Jo Swinson's husband receiving £4million from the EU for example? That makes a grope of a thigh 20 years ago look very insignificant but guess which one they're still banging on about!

I’ve looked this up myself now and can see why the thing about Jo Swinson’s Husband hasn’t been reported anywhere. It’s because he hasn’t received £4m from the EU. He works for a non-profit company that accepts funding from a number of governments (including the U.K.) and large institutions, one of which is the EU who donated £3.5M over the last year and I expect that they’ll continue to receive EU donations post Brexit seeing as they’re based in Germany.

The reason that neither the BBC or any other media outlets have decided to report this is because it’s perfectly legit and not newsworthy. The fact that you’ve painted this as of greater significance than Boris’s alleged sexual assault is laughable.
 
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blue-shifted

Banned
Feb 20, 2004
7,645
a galaxy far far away
I’ve looked this up myself now and can see why the thing about Jo Swinson’s Husband hasn’t been reported anywhere. It’s because he hasn’t received £4m from the EU. He works for a non-profit company that accepts funding from a number of governments (including the U.K.) and large institutions, one of which is the EU who donated £3.5M over the last year and I expect that they’ll continue to receive EU donations post Brexit seeing as they’re based in Germany.

The reason that neither the BBC or any other media outlets have decided to report this is because it’s perfectly legit and not newsworthy. The fact that you’ve painted this as of greater significance than Boris’s alleged sexual assault is laughable.

Yup. Giraffe mate, take this this as a bit of a learn that you could do with getting your news from some more independent and editorially mature outlets
 








McTavish

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2014
1,562
I wasn't allowed to comment on a story on the Women's World Cup. It said I was 'too old'! I am not making that up.
You may not be making it up but you are certainly mistaken. It would have said that the story is too old, not you...
 








Brovion

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 6, 2003
19,382
You may not be making it up but you are certainly mistaken. It would have said that the story is too old, not you...

I am most definitely not! It said 'Sorry, it looks like you're too old to comment on this story.'


EDIT: And I've just found another one! (On Diana-Asher Smith, very current.) It says : 'Sorry, it looks like you’re not the right age to use this.' Ok, I got the text wrong (or it has changed), but the end result is the same - age discrimination!
 
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Brovion

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 6, 2003
19,382
Aha - I've worked it out. The story will have been on the CBBC website; comments are only allowed from under-16s...

Ah, it wasn't CBBC, but it was Newsround. I got there by following a link from my Homepage though - and so I'm still calling it a hate crime!.
 






Brovion

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 6, 2003
19,382
https://www.bbc.co.uk/newsround

Newsround is a CBBC programme. Here are their posting rules (and good on them, for keeping a safe-ish place for children to communicate):

https://www.bbc.co.uk/newsround/44086264

Don't be such a kidultphobic Nazi, It's my right to self-identify as a child if I want to - so ya boo sucks to you, smelly.


But yeah I'll take the point. Although I wish they'd made it clearer as just clicking on a link to the page it doesn't come up and tell you that it's an age-restricted site - which they would do if it were an adult site. And being over 60 I am a bit conscious of age discrimination and being aware that all young people hate me because of Brexit.
 


Two Professors

Two Mad Professors
Jul 13, 2009
7,617
Multicultural Brum
Just had a look at their on-line comments on Brexit debate,and makes NSC look quite well balanced!
 


blue-shifted

Banned
Feb 20, 2004
7,645
a galaxy far far away
Aha - I've worked it out. The story will have been on the CBBC website; comments are only allowed from under-16s...

For obvious and sensible reasons.
 


blue-shifted

Banned
Feb 20, 2004
7,645
a galaxy far far away
Don't be such a kidultphobic Nazi, It's my right to self-identify as a child if I want to - so ya boo sucks to you, smelly.


But yeah I'll take the point. Although I wish they'd made it clearer as just clicking on a link to the page it doesn't come up and tell you that it's an age-restricted site - which they would do if it were an adult site. And being over 60 I am a bit conscious of age discrimination and being aware that all young people hate me because of Brexit.


Yes, you're right on that last point
 




dingodan

New member
Feb 16, 2011
10,080
Sorry for the rant but this has been grating me for a while... Does anyone else find the BBC seem to pick and choose on what news stories they allow comments on? Surely as a supposedly non biased platform (paid for by the tax payer) they should either allow comments on everything published or no comments at all? The fact journalists with their own opions/agendas within the BBC can pick and choose what people can comment on is bullshit really!

The BBC are not impartial at all.

Sometimes I think Laura Kuenssberg just makes shit up and hides behind the term "unnamed sources".

I'm pretty sure a lot of journos these days abuse the privalige of unnamed sources to cover for inserting their own opinions, or at best, they get a politically "kindered spirit" to say something which they both know will never be scrutinized or subject to verification, in a kind of wink and nod exercise.

I'm sure it's been going on a while, but I think it's gone to pretty ridiculous levels in recent years.

I think they may end up putting the (actually pretty important) right of journalists to use unnamed sources, and certainly the credibility they have with the public, at risk by abusing the privalige the way they do these days.
 


clapham_gull

Legacy Fan
Aug 20, 2003
25,346
I think Laura Kuenssberg just makes shit up and hides behind the term "unnamed sources".

That sounds like a conspiracy theory, it's really just the way Politician's operate when there isn't a shared vision and party discipline. They "brief".

At the moment the Cabinet is as leaky as a sieve because behind the facade of unity it's all very fragile. They don't trust Boris and Boris doesn't trust them, politically they are misfits.

The "price of Brexit" to the rest of the Cabinet is to allow Boris to make billions of promises to the country and gain the attention and popularity he desperately needs.

He's also keeping cabinet out of all the important Brexit decision making and they hear about them just a few hours before the press.

Raab and Truss are smiling through gritted teeth.
 


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