You Know You’re Getting Old When …

June 11, 2010
  • … the World Cup starts, and you can’t slope off from work early to watch the opening match because you’ve got too many “responsibilities”.
  • … you’re carrying around so many keys that you can’t actually fit them into your  pocket.
Keys

Keys

  • … you’re spending £150 a week on food to feed a ravenous and ever growing family.
  • … you go and watch Scotland play cricket, and all the players are considerably younger than you are.  Even Graham Hamilton, the battle-worn skipper, a seasoned veteran who is greying at the temples, looking slightly haggard and carrying a few spare pounds.
Gavin Hamilton

Gavin Hamilton


One in the Eye for the Murdochs, as Ashes fall from the Sky

November 13, 2009

Some well-trailed, but nonetheless fantastic news from the Department of Culture, Media & Sport today - its review panel has recommended that England’s home Ashes cricket test matches should return to terrestrial TV from 2017.

From Sky’s perspective, the timing won’t have gone un-noticed.  Gordon Brown will no doubt have been more than a little miffed by The Sun’s shift of allegiance away from the Labour Party, and what better way to retaliate against News Corporation?

Gordon Brown

Gordon Brown

Rupert Murdoch

Rupert Murdoch

It’s just as shame that we’ll have to wait until 2017, and that it will be fans of rugby union who will miss out.  The recommendation is that the 6 Nations matches which feature the home nations will cease to be protected under the secondary list, which will now be scrapped. 

Unless you live in Wales that is, where rugby is evidently far more important than it is in the rest of UK.


Tyred of Paying Too Much? T’internet is Just the Ticket

September 11, 2009

You can love the internet for many reasons.  But surely one of its greatest benefits as a medium is the price transparency which it promotes.  It’s easy to get bogged down with the proliferation of price comparison sites which abound.  But there’s little more satisfying than doing your own research and saving yourself some cash as a direct  result.  Or maybe I should just get out more.

Anyhow, my car needs new tyres, on account of the 52 mile round trip I do in and out of work each day, and the taxi service I provide for my children.   I was looking to replace two Pirelli P6000 tyres (205/55 R16V specification). 

I checked out Kwikfit: £101 each, fully fitted.  Ouch!  I then checked out Black Circles: £68 a pop, fully fitted.  I’ve used both services in the past, and from experience can vouch that other factors (such as quality of service or convenience) don’t provide any other useful differentiation.  So in this instance, price is the determinant.

Tyres ...

Tyres ...

The net result is that I’ve just saved myself £66.  This certainly helps sweeten the pain of shelling out cash for something as mundane as new tyres.  The £66 saved will cover the cost of something far more enjoyable – match tickets for me and my son to watch the last cricket ODI of the summer between England and Australia in Durham next weekend.

or Tickets?

... or Tickets?

And with England already 3-0 down in a 7 match series, and the star players dropping like flies, I fear the experience will need some sweetening.


In Praise of the BBC

August 31, 2009

James Murdoch’s scathing attack on the BBC and the wider British broadcasting authorities has hit the press – most of which now appears to be owned by News Corporation –  the organisation which he represents in Europe and Asia as chairman and chief executive.  Speaking at the MacTaggart lecture at the MediaGuardian Edinburgh International Television Festival, Murdoch laid into the BBC:

“Funded by a hypothecated tax, the BBC feels empowered to offer something for everyone, even in areas well served by the market.  The scope of its activities and ambitions is chilling.”

Power … ambition … chilling.   Surely the pot is calling the kettle black? 

Twenty years earlier, again at the MacTaggart lecture, his father Rupert was laying into the “anti commercial attitudes” of the British broadcasting establishment.  Now, the “state sponsored journalism” of the BBC, says James Murdoch in an uncharacteristically conspicuous display of thought leadership control, is “a threat to the plurality and independence of our news provision, which is so important for our democracy”.  Blimey!  Has he looked in the mirror lately?  Oh no, hang on, that’s one of the few newspapers he doesn’t own.

The Murdochs’ dominance of the global news agenda for megalomaniacal and avaricious motives has already gone too far, and you only need look as far as sport to realise it.

In the light of the England cricket team’s recent Ashes victory over Australia, it was a desperate shame that this moment could not have been witnessed live on terrestrial TV – as it had been in 2005.  In 2005, the viewing figures peaked at 7.4 million; in 2009, it was less than 2 million.  The reason: Sky bought up the rights.  The result: commercial interests held too much sway over the greater public good.

An Australian correspondent on BBC’s Radio 5 Live the morning after England’s triumph was flabbergasted that the Ashes were not being broadcast on terrestrial, free-to-air television.  In Australia (ironically, the nation of Rupert Murdoch’s birth) – the notion of having to pay to watch The Ashes simply would not be countenanced.  The correspondent’s view was that cricket was the nation’s sport – it belongs to the nation.  So, why would the nation want to give it away, to then have to pay to get it back?

On a personal level, Sky’s stronghold on live cricket coverage is extremely disappointing – my son is 10 and had really started to enjoy the cricket this summer.  However, his enthusiasm has been throttled by the fact that he is restricted to watching highlights or listening to BBC’s (excellent) Test Match Special coverage on the radio.  Children need immediate, visual and real-time connection to their sports heroes to most effectively foster the next generation of sports stars.  I fear that the ECB’s short term decision to take Sky TV’s lucre will inflict long-lasting damage on English cricket, and one which – commercially – will come to haunt Sky, because it won’t have a sufficiently large subscriber-base to market cricket as a premium service.

Perhaps 20-20 cricket will come to the rescue – a bite-sized, easily digestible form of the game, marketed at today’s time-short, easily-distracted sports fan.  Only time will tell, but it is interesting to note that the new form of the game has been conceived and moulded, first and foremost, to suit commercial broadcasting interests. 

And cricket doesn’t have a very happy track record when it comes to heavy-handed interventions by overtly commercial broadcasters.  Witness Kerry Packer in the 1970s and Allen Stanford’s more recent $20m ‘winner takes all’ cricketing fiasco.

Is top-flight domestic football a better sport now that commercial TV revenues transformed it from where it stood in the 1980s?  Some may argue that it’s a more polished product – that the skill levels are higher; the pace of the game is quicker; the pitches are better; the stadia are more comfortable.  For the most part, I’d agree with that.  But, the ‘product’ is still – all too often – a let down, as those poor souls who witnessed West Ham’s 0-0 draw against Blackburn on Saturday will testify.  And we can’t even argue that all-seater stadiums have eradicated football hooliganism, after last week’s sorry scenes at Upton Park. 

And is it right that players are traded for £80 million, and get paid in excess of £100k per week?  The bulk of this wealth has been generated by Sky’s subscriber and advertising models - ultimately paid for by the consumer.

In a sporting context, unregulated commercialism (and overtly commercially-minded broadcasting in particular) has distorted all sense of value – financial, social and moral. 

Talking of huge sums of money, the BBC’s annual licence fee revenue is £3.7 billion.  A staggering amount by any measure, even in these numerically-desensitised post-credit-crunch times.  But I don’t begrudge paying my £142.50 slice of it.  What I do refuse to countenance is then paying Sky a subscription fee on top of this, only to be hit by a triple whammy – frequent and lengthy commercial breaks throughout Sky’s broadcast output.  Surely Sky is having their cake and eating it by charging a subscription and interrupting their subscribers’ enjoyment of the service by plugging constant commercial interruptions!   If that’s what Sky’s commercial broadcasting premise entails, I’ll stick with the BBC thanks.

The quality and breadth of the BBC’s output are world class – from original TV content such as The Office, to award-winning radio output such as Five Live and Test Match Special, to its consistently high quality online and news coverage.  Even when they are obliged to cover their ‘all things to all people’ mandate and provide celebrity programmes, then more often than not they do it with more style and flair than their competitors (witness Strictly Come Dancing).

Granted, the BBC is far from perfect, and there are contradictions and anomalies a-plenty.  They pay Jonathan Ross too much money (a salary which would make most Premiership footballers feel hard done by); they advertise their own programmes across their network; they were guilty of more than their fair share of recent ‘voting scandals’; and, they didn’t even bother to bid for the live Test Match cricket rights (aware that they would not be able to compete with Sky’s commercial might).

But we need look no further than ITV to see a commercial network who manages to get terrestrial broadcasting so wrong.  It increasingly seems reliant on Reality TV and sensationalised news output, sandwiched in between advertisements, to stay afloat.  And that was before the floor dropped out of the market for advertising revenues.  The US provides us with an even more stark reminder that if commercial interests in broadcasting are allowed to ride roughshod over the quality of the programming, then the only loser is the viewer, their viewing entertainment peppered with all too regular commercial breaks.

The BBC is idiosyncratic, eccentric, traditional, some would even say trusted.  It embodies Britishness.  Not for nothing is it sometimes affectionately referred to as “Aunty”.   James Murdoch’s take is that it is more akin to “the Addams family of world media.”

But before we forget, 2005’s thrilling free-to-air Ashes coverage was brought to us by Channel 4.  It had very little to do with the BBC.  Proof, if it were needed, that commercial broadcasting and high quality, public interest broadcasting are not incompatible.   Channel 4 proved that you can enhance the product (all snick-o-meters and expert analysis), without making wholesale, commercially-driven changes to the underlying and fundamental format of the game (20-20 cricket).

Both the BBC and Channel 4 have demonstrated that the public is best served when the public isn’t hoodwinked into handing its prize possessions to Sky, only to then be restricted from seeing them again unless it pays a monthly fee to Sky for the privilege. 

And whose activities and ambitions are chilling, Mr Murdoch?


Commercial Advertising on the BBC? It’s Just Not Cricket.

July 14, 2009

Whilst in the States, I checked out the BBC Sport website, to find out the result of the first Ashes Test.

As I hit the site, the first thing which struck me was that it contained loads of advertising.  You know you’re in the US of A, when even the good, old British Broadcasting Corporation is looking to monetise its service offering.   American Express and Toyota monopolised premium screen real-estate in a manner which would be quite unthinkable in the UK.

It's Just Not Cricket

It's Just Not Cricket - Screenshot of BBC Sport Website

Back home, any kind of advertising by the BBC is forbidden, as part of its license-fee payer funding model, and public service broadcasting remit.  It stretches these rules as far as it can by ‘advertising’ its own programmes, and public service campaigns such as switching to digital.  However, any kind of commercial advertising is outlawed.  Well not in the US it isn’t. 

The second thing which struck me was the picture of Ricky Ponting’s face.  The Australian captain’s weary visage betrayed a combination of anguish and disbelief, the Aussies somehow having just allowed England to escape from almost certain defeat to salvage an undeserved draw. Hard luck Ricky, better luck next time, eh?  I feel I may live to regret those words.


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