Tag: Helen Boaden

  • BBC News plans life amid cost cuts

    BBC News plans life amid cost cuts

    MUMBAI:BBC aims to preserve the public‘s trust in its impartiality and keep its news independent from political and commercial pressures.

    In a speech delivered at VLV Annual Spring Conference, BBC News director Helen Boaden said as long as it holds on to the principles that have guided the BBC since 1927 – to tell the truth as we see it, to the people who need it, independent of government and commercial influence – then BBC News should be in the right shape to meet the difficult challenges of the future.  
         
      “In a robust, deep-rooted democracy like ours, I think our relationship with politicians is a bit like a tug of war. It‘s right that each side should pull. In fact, it‘s part of the democratic process. Testing those in power but being accountable for it. So when it came to the government‘s comprehensive spending review, it was right that we set out to examine the policies and the consequences – and right that our coverage came under scrutiny.”

    Scrutiny in different shapes and sizes. Sometimes it‘s a polite letter from an MP. Sometimes it‘s a phone call from a Government Special Advise, or even a Minister – to an Editor. Those calls are often at varying degrees of volume and politeness. “We‘ve even had very public advice from the pposition! As I say, it‘s their prerogative to complain. But it‘s ours, to defend our independence and make the case for our coverage, “ said Boaden.

    There should be a balance right between explaining the government‘s plans, why it says they‘re needed – and examining their impact.

    “That‘s why we ran wide coverage – across the whole of BBC News, in the nations and the regions – under the heading “The Spending Review: Making It Clear. It seems to me that all politicians, of whatever party, embrace the BBC‘s independence in theory – but have occasional difficulties in practice, especially when they‘re in power. So I‘m afraid that as Director of News, I‘ve got used to the sound of incoming fire,” Boaden said.

    She said there was plenty of it when the BCC ran a Panorama programme alleging corruption among Fifa officials – ahead of the World Cup vote. The pubcaster was accused of being “unpatriotic.” But afterwards 80 per cent of the public backed the BBC for broadcasting the programme. And even a member of the 2018 bid team said that the BBC had been right to do it when they did.

    “It‘s important to do the right thing – whatever the pressure. That way, you build your reputation for independence and impartiality.”

    Last year, the BBC News channel had record audiences for many major news stories. It recorded the highest reach of any UK news channel 7.4 million – on the day that Gordon Brown resigned and David Cameron became prime minister. The day after the general election, 7 million watched, and 6.9 million watched the rescue of the Chilean miners.

    More recently, on 11 March, the channel reached a new record of 8.5 million for the Japanese earthquake. On the same day, the BBC website, too, had record traffic internationally with 15.8 million unique users.

    Boaden said audience research suggests that the ratings for trust and impartiality have also improved over the last three years.

    “Well evidence collected by the BBC Trust shows impartiality to be an important factor in determining an audience‘s choice of broadcast news provider. And in a major survey published last year, Ofcom found that 91 per cent of people thought it was important or very important that “news in general is impartial”.

    “So if partisan reporting is allowed under a new Communications Act – and there are detailed arguments for and against – then the BBC will do everything it can to maintain and strengthen its tradition of impartial journalism.”

    That will be the UK pubcaster’s guiding principle for the future. But there‘s a more immediate challenge – money.

    With less money available, BBC News needs to row back. “Of course, we are never going to give up on the big stories that matter: covering the uprisings in the Middle East and Africa for example, with a team of specialist journalists. Ensuring we have the best possible Specialist Editors like Nick Robinson, Robert Peston, Stephanie Flanders and Jeremy Bowen,” said Boaden.

    However this year, to cut cloth, the BBC only sent one person to the Oscars rather than a full team – and used specialists in London for background coverage on the website.

    “We have to try to match our journalism to our budget and to our audience‘s expectations. And that will be hard,” Boaden clarified.

    Doing more for less in tough financial circumstances isn‘t new for the BBC – in fact since the Nineties when the BBC started moving into the digital era, it has brought running costs down from 24 per cent of the licence fee to around 12 per cent today – and to nine per cent or less by the end of the Charter period in 2016. These savings have been invested back into programmes and services for the public, including the BBC News website and the development of the iPlayer.

    Though the pubcaster needs to do fewer things, the stress is to be a position so that it can do them better. The World Service will be merged with BBC News in 2014. “We believe that the protection of the Licence Fee will be of benefit to the World Service. It will destroy once and for all any idea that because the World Service is funded directly by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, it is omehow not entirely independent. It will protect it from arbitrary cuts as part of the Comprehensive Spending Review when it can lose out to louder voices at the Foreign Office,” said Boaden.

    Last year, the Government decided that World Service funding would decline by 16 per cent in real terms over four years. These cuts will bite deeply. Over the next three years, a quarter of the World Service workforce – 650 posts – will go.

    “We need to find savings of ?46 million. We can‘t do it all through being more efficient. We need to stop doing things – and that‘s why we‘ve reluctantly called a halt to five language services. There are programmes we are cutting too. This is not being done indiscriminately, however painful it might be. There is a rationale behind the decisions we have made,” Boaden said.

    Overall, the changes will result in loss of audience – the pubcaster estimates that there will be an immediate drop of several million.

    In order to sustain its services and to cope with the savings, the BBC has decided to share content more effectively.

    “For many of our audiences – for instance in Somalia and Burma – we will continue to produce a highly localised offer. But in other markets, the BBC delivers global newsgathering and expertise – which local news providers can‘t do. So a significant shift to a greater proportion of global journalism makes audience and economic sense,” Boaden said.

  • BBC News appoints Will Gompertz as Arts Editor

    BBC News appoints Will Gompertz as Arts Editor

    MUMBAI: BBC News has appointed Will Gompertz to the newly-created post of Arts Editor. Gompertz is currently Director of Tate Media.

    Gompertz has worked in the arts since he was 18 years old and founded a successful visual arts publication at the age of 25. Since then he has written, produced, published and commented on the arts in the UK and internationally. He will take over his new role soon.

    Said BBC Director of News Helen Boaden, “This is an exciting appointment. Will has great passion, experience and knowledge of the arts. He is a great communicator and is full of ideas about how we could use new media more effectively, share arts news with out audiences. He will make an important contribution to our arts coverage in News and across the BBC.”

    The creation of an Arts Editor role for BBC News is part of the BBC’s deeper commitment to arts and music on the BBC throughout 2010 with a wide range of initiatives aimed at supporting cultural Britain and better serving the public.

    These include ideas like the recent pan-BBC Poetry Season which saw poetry sales surge and BBC Radio 3’s year-long celebration of Purcell, Handel, Haydn and Mendelssohn.

    The BBC has made a new commitment to partnerships in the arts, including working with the Arts Council England to transform public engagement by showcasing young talent, sharing technology and collaborating on live events.

  • Stephanie Flanders is BBC News’ economics editor

    Stephanie Flanders is BBC News’ economics editor

    MUMBAI: UK pubcaster BBC has announced that Stephanie Flanders will be the economics editor for BBC News in early April following Evan Davis’ appointment to Today on BBC Radio 4.

    Flanders is a former speech writer and senior adviser to the US Treasury, where she worked on the management of emerging market financial crises along with other global economic issues from 1997 to 2001.

    Flanders said, “Evan is unique – and not an act that any sensible person would want to follow. But then nor is BBC Economics Editor a job that you turn down. I’m thrilled. And I am almost as tall as him, which helps.”

    BBC News editor of the Economics and Business Centre Jeremy Hillman said, “Stephanie has a formidable track record as an economist and journalist. She will bring huge depth and insight to the role at a time of significant global and domestic economic uncertainty. She will also make a strong addition to the team of senior BBC editors, and play a central role in leading and shaping the BBC’s coverage across the UK and across the globe.”

    BBC News director Helen Boaden said, “Stephanie has a terrific track record and will build on her reputation at Newsnight for bringing clarity, authority and wry humour to this important but difficult area.”

  • BBC News triumphs at International Emmys

    MUMBAI: BBC News has won won two awards in the news categories of the International Emmys. The BBC’s coverage of last summer’s Lebanon conflict won the International News award.

    A current affairs commission took the only other international award for Baghdad: A Doctor’s Story which was broadcast on BBC Two as part of the This World strand.

    Guardian Films made the documentary with Ben Summers producing and with assistance from the BBC News Baghdad team. Louise Norman was the executive producer for This World.

    Baghdad: A Doctor’s Story was shot by an Iraqi doctor in a Baghdad emergency room. He agreed to film his own hospital anonymously to bring the truth about the civilian casualties to light.

    The 28th Annual News and Documentary Emmy Awards ceremony was held in New York. Media industry executives, journalists, and producers attended the event which honours outstanding achievement in television journalism by individuals and programmes, distributed via broadcast, cable and broadband.

    BBC director of news Helen Boaden said, “Our overall coverage of the Lebanon conflict was an outstanding collaboration between teams across all platforms and this award recognises the journalistic excellence of BBC News.

    “Baghdad: A Doctor’s Story by Guardian Films was a brilliant commission by Current Affairs. It took a lot of nerve and tremendous bravery on the ground, to deliver this extraordinary and memorable film.”