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BBC Scotland thread

(July 2015)

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SO
SOL
It seems something happened this morning, One of the male CA must have fall ill, He disappeared after the first jct at 10am. at 11.45 and 12.15, Scotland had the network.

A Female CA appeared at 1pm Jct, and she was just a bit fluster, most likely being rushed into the chair to fill the slot. She did say now on BBC two Scotland. Hopeful that guy is alright from this morning.


Your speculation is wrong. There was a fire alarm, the building was evacuated and we were all out in the street for half an hour. I did the BBC-2 junction at 11.30 with my hat and coat on and fled the building immediately afterwards. The shift changeover time is noon, which is why you didn't hear Cameron McKenna again. He went home for his lunch. You will doubtless notice he's back on just now - unless it's his ghost that's doing the junctions......


Is BBC Scotland now doing the junctions all day on BBC 2, Tony? I've never understood why they didn't in any case.
TC
TonyCurrie
Yes we are.

134 days later

:-(
A former member
I was looking for something else ( The Apprentice sting) nay luck within 10 weeks BUT I found this instead.

SC
scottishtv Founding member
You're always good for a laugh... if you like one of these four shows.

It's so naff, it looks like something Grampian would've come up with in the budget cut SMG-era.

Eugh.
:-(
A former member
At least BBC Scotland is making comedy programmes, and some of them are highly popular. This isn't the first promo about BBC Scotland, Im sure there was another one but I cant remember what is was about.

11 days later

:-(
A former member
It is all hot air? Will it work? Will she get her own way and get some decent network content made up north?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-38266253

Quote:

BBC Scotland's new director has pledged to spend more licence fee funds raised north of the border on programming produced in Scotland.
In 2015/16, 55% of licence fee funds raised in Scotland was spent on local and Scottish network content.
Donalda MacKinnon said it was her ambition to see the amount spent "better reflect" what is collected.
The Scottish government has been calling for BBC Scotland to have more power over commissioning and budgets.
Ms MacKinnon recently took over as director, the senior editorial figure for BBC Scotland's output across television, radio and online, after Ken MacQuarrie moved to become director of nations and regions.
In an interview with Good Morning Scotland, she said one of her immediate ambitions was to increase how much of the licence fee money raised in Scotland was spent locally.
'New opportunity'
The BBC's 2015/16 accounts showed £320m was raised from the licence fee in Scotland. Of that, £176.5m was spent on local content and Scottish-made BBC network output, 55% of the total raised.
This was a sharp decline from the £203m spend the previous year, which was 63% of the £323m collected. The funds not spent locally go towards BBC programmes developed elsewhere and aired across the UK.
In comparison, 95% of licence fee funds raised in Wales in 2015/16 were spent in Wales - including on network-wide programmes like Doctor Who, Casualty and Crimewatch - with the figure for Northern Ireland standing at 74%.
Ms MacKinnon said: "I have made it very clear that it is my ambition to change that number. The percentage of the licence fee collected in Scotland I think has to reflect better the amount spent in Scotland.
"I don't want to commit to a figure exactly at the moment, but certainly an increase on what is the case that moment, which is 55% of the licence fee.
"I think we have a new opportunity to define exactly what kind of BBC in Scotland audiences expect and the kind of resource it rightly should claim, relative to the amount of licence fee collected in Scotland."
BBC Scotland headquarters in Glasgow
Image caption
Ms MacKinnon said there had been a "serious commitment" to end the "lift and shift" practice
The new director also pledged to abolish "lift and shift", where programmes traditionally produced elsewhere are moved to Scotland in order to meet quotas.
Holyrood's culture committee issued a report describing this practice as "subverting the spirit of the quota", with MSPs saying this gave them "serious cause for concern".
Ms MacKinnon said this had happened due to a target in 2008 to raise network television productions coming from Scotland from 3% of the total aired to 8.6%. She said she had made a "serious commitment" to see the practice end.
She said: "I understand why that happened early doors, I don't think that should happen any more and we've had a very solid commitment to the effect that that will not happen except in extremis."
'Rebuilding trust'
Ms MacKinnon also said she was targeting an "improvement in appreciation" of BBC Scotland's news output, saying it was "really important" to consolidate public trust in the corporation following events like the 2014 independence referendum.
She said: "We have very successful news output, but there's no doubt that there was a feeling among a significant percentage of the population - not the total population - that trust might need to be rebuilt.
"I think it was proven by research undertaken by the BBC Trust that that we had not breached any impartiality and could not be accused of being biased.
"Did we sometimes get it wrong? Possibly.
"If we get it wrong - and there's no doubt we are all human beings, and we can do - we should put our hands up and say yeah, sorry, we may have got that wrong, but we certainly, as far as I'm concerned, can't be accused of bias."
PQ protestsImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image caption
Ms MacKinnon said it was "regrettable" that BBC Scotland was not more open in defending its journalism during the independence campaign
Ms MacKinnon was asked about the case of Nick Robinson who as BBC political editor was the subject of controversy during the independence campaign.
The BBC Trust and Editorial Complaints Unit found that Mr Robinson's assertion that then-First Minister Alex Salmond had not answered a question put to him during a news conference gave a misleading impression.
But it concluded that his report was not intentionally biased and rejected complaints.
Mr Salmond subsequently claimed BBC bias was a "significant factor" in the outcome of the independence referendum.
Ms MacKinnon said the BBC should be more open about admitting when mistakes are made, while explaining its position and defending its journalism against claims of bias.
She said: "I really do believe that we need to get our narrative right, and we need to be out there a bit more often just explaining some of that.
"It's arguable that had we done that, then the population would have understood better what it is that we're here to do.
"Getting that story out, whether it's from the director general or me or someone else, it's something I will want to address."
The new director said it was "regrettable" that this had not happened more often during the independence referendum.
She said: "I can understand the reasons for the reluctance and reticence to be there, given the tension around the whole debate. But I believe it's really important for us to demonstrate accountability and openness, and to reflect very hard on some of the challenges."

24 days later

SC
scottishtv Founding member
Just to say thanks to BBC Scotland - I enjoyed Tony's proper "good night" and seeing a classic full 60sec+ BBC News countdown on BBC One into the news channel, just before 2am on Wednesday morning. Complete with red satellite signals and finishing with a zoom onto TVC's Stage 6. Ah, memories. Smile

Also, I caught a couple of announcements from Tony on Christmas Day. Upbeat, and fun, they sounded great!
SC
scottishtv Founding member
Slightly odd off-centre version of the BBC Three logo popped up earlier:

*
CO
Colorband
I think that's about the size of a standard BBC logo block. They tried...
SC
scottishtv Founding member
From today's Times:

Quote:
BBC Scotland’s new show brings politics to prime time
------
Will Humphries
January 12 2017, 12:01am,
The Times
------

BBC Scotland has announced the launch of a new weekly half-hour current affairs show after conceding its previous nightly programme failed to draw a big enough audience.

The new show, called Timeline, will begin as BBC Scotland awaits the outcome of a new funding settlement to see whether Scotland can afford to produce its own six o’clock television news programme.

The first episode of Timeline will air on January 26 and will be broadcast live at the peak time of 7.30pm each Thursday on BBC Two Scotland.

The programme is a replacement for the late-night current affairs programme Scotland 2016, which was broadcast at 11pm on Mondays to Thursdays until it was cancelled last month.

A BBC Scotland spokesman said: “Gary Smith [head of news at BBC Scotland] has said he wants more resources put into areas that would make more impact. Scotland 2016 wasn’t getting a big audience and this is putting current affairs into peak time.”

Timeline will be jointly presented by the BBC Scotland political correspondent Glenn Campbell and the BBC Radio Scotland presenter Shereen Nanjiani.

Mr Smith said it would be “the weekly centrepiece of a new engagement with our audience” and would “give context through first-hand experience to the issues of the week”.

He added that the public would help to shape the agenda of the programme through social media.

Meanwhile, a BBC insider said an announcement on the so-called Scottish Six — which would be produced and presented in Scotland — would be made in February.

Donalda Mackinnon, the newly appointed director of BBC Scotland, said last month that the Scottish Six would be rolled out only if there were sufficient funding to ensure its quality. If such funding was not available, she said, she would not sanction the programme.

“We have had a debate about that,” she said. “One of the things that audiences in Scotland tell us the whole time is that quality is the most important thing for them, and it’s not about volume. So whatever we do I will push very hard to see that we have the appropriate investment for it.

“The last thing I want to do is short-change the audience.”

BBC Scotland has already produced pilots for a programme that could replace Reporting Scotland and The Six O’Clock News, and the project was backed this year by the culture committee at Westminster.
GM
Gary McEwan
Fantastic to read that Shereen will jointly be presenting it. She's been off the telly box for far too long!
Bob and JamesWorldNews gave kudos
:-(
A former member
So BBC Scotland will now have 30mins during the week instead of 90mins. It will go up against Eastenders. Thankful Sundays still have Gordon Brewer. I get the feeling, Glasgow will be pushing for Scottish six to make up for this.

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