Time for a spot of comparing and contrasting:

BBC: UK tables final EU budget offer

The UK has tabled revised proposals for the EU’s 2007-13 budget at a summit in Brussels which is continuing into the night after a day of negotiation.

The Times: Blair surrenders more rebate in search of EU deal

Tony Blair made a further concession tonight on the rebate that Britain receives from the European Union to help break the deadlock at an EU budget summit in Brussels.

No difference there then!

Note also the BBC’s picture of Blair – another good ‘un from the BBC’s ‘special’ pictures department…

For today’s edition of BBC Views Online Blankety-Blank

(this is getting to be a habit), study this BBC Views Online article from 20:18 last night, ‘Santa’ party girl dies in crash, then complete the following sentence:

The passenger is described by police as ______, 6ft 3ins tall. The driver is also believed to be ______.

Clue: See this Times article, Girl, 5, dies in hit-and-run after Christmas party, which, unlike BBC Views Online, passes on the Police description of the suspects without the BBC’s censorship.

Update: Since I wrote this post last night a subsequent BBC article was published at 05:27, Grief over hit-and-run death girl, that doesn’t censor the police descriptions. The PC cretin that wrote the first article ought to have their backside kicked – but I doubt anyone at the BBC believes in backside-kicking, metaphorical or otherwise, these days.

Mean spirited, perhaps, to laugh at typos

Mean spirited, perhaps, to laugh at typos, but this is unintentionally rather amusing – BBC News Online have stopped their fatuous Allies on trial online poll (just as the no votes were gaining ground), and have posted bar graphs of the results instead.

I knew we were bad and all, deposing poor innocent Saddam, but breaching “the convention on the methods and means of WELFARE” is beyond the pale!

Update:It’s taken the Beeboids until Sunday afternoon to correct their typo – so much for sub-editing and quality control!

It’s time for yet another edition of BBC Views Online Blankety-Blank

. Study this BBC Views Online article, Ex-Minister fined for being drunk, then complete the following sentence:

The ex-Minister is a member of the ________ Party.

Clue: See this Times article, Ex-minister in wine frenzy, which does manage to mention Twigg’s political affiliation – yes, it’s the same party that’s just pushed through 24-hour drinking legislation.

For advanced players, The Times also provides many more details than the BBC article, with which you can create further examples of BBC Views Online Blankety-Blanks!

You read it here first

– where once we had BBC defends ‘digital face’ trails we now have, according to The Times, BBC drops ‘horrific’ bouncing head:

The BBC dropped a “bouncing head” trailer for digital television after it was described as horrific by viewers and prompted 1,300 complaints. It featured a dismembered animated head, made up of hundreds of tiny heads, bouncing over hills. The head transformed into the face of well-known BBC presenters. One viewer said: “As a registered psychotherapist, I wish to protest that this image is disturbingly psychotic.” The BBC said that it had not been its intention to offend.

It seems the BBC’s version of this story was snuck out ever so briefly in the BBC Views Online Entertainment section, with the usual shilly-shallying equivocation much in evidence:

In a statement, the BBC said: “The digital faces trail was one of a very long series designed to capture the attention of viewers and stimulate interest in the BBC’s digital services.

“The latest, which was first transmitted on 5 November, has been very successful in this respect and early indications are that it has achieved its goal.”

“We have been very conscious that some viewers disliked the nature of the trail, although clearly it was not our intention to offend.

The trouble is, even though the BBC doesn’t set out generally to offend people, they seem to manage it time and again. I’m sure you, like me, can think of a few other BBC horrors that ought to be dropped.

BBC London’s local news programme on Wednesday evening

was devoted mostly to the topic of Christianity in London. The presenter, Emily Maitlis, noted that 70% of Londoners (in common with ~70% of the nation at the last census) describe themselves as Christians, although the media devote more time to other much less statistically significant faiths (although by far the next biggest group in the UK are those of no faith).

Whilst this makes a welcome change, the coverage seemed somewhat over-focused on the divisions within the Anglican movement over the acceptability of homosexual clergy.

I look forward, in due course, to coverage of other faiths focusing similarly on the acceptability or otherwise of homosexuality within those faiths.

J’accuse

Intrigued by Dan’s comments on the people smuggling issue (read comments), I clicked again on the BBC article I had hyperlinked.

It has been changed! The headline said words to the effect “international migrant smuggling ring” (and “people smuggling” was certainly not prominently displayed in the first paragraph). I know that there is such a thing as a screen capture but don’t know how to do it (nor, naively it seems, that I should do it).*

Would readers who are more tech savvy than me see what they can do? There is a way of finding out “what the web looked like” historically or something like that.

Is Dan the mole?

*”People smuggling” most definitely was not the headline, or I would not have posted in the way I did. The front page had a link to “migrant smuggling gang smashed”, and it was the rather curious and clumsy “migrant smuggling” that got me to click through anyway (the sniff of bias was obvious). In any event, google once again shows that “migrant smuggling” very much is BBC preferred house style.

420

…or so hits to go. 1,000,000 will happen while I am asleep Sydney time, so preemptively, congratulations and thanks to the indefatigable Natalie for all of her hard work in “keeping the bastards honest”.*

*Australian political slang (see Don Chipp if you are interested).

PS Remember to vote – the good guys are gaining ground!

Does a mole at the BBC read B-BBC?*

Very subtle, but this on 14 December:

“The large-scale violence in Sydney started on Sunday, when thousands of young white men attacked people of Arabic and Mediterranean background on Cronulla Beach – apparently in revenge for a recent attack on two lifeguards.

Many of the rioters had been alerted to congregate in the area by receiving mobile text messages.

The fighting then spread to other parts of the city, injuring more than 30 people, including police officers.

The violence continued on Monday night, apparently in retaliation, despite calls for calm and ethnic tolerance by Prime Minister John Howard and other senior figures.”

changes to this on 15 December:

“The large-scale violence in Sydney started on Sunday, when thousands of young white men attacked people of Arabic and Mediterranean background on Cronulla Beach – apparently in revenge for a recent attack on two lifeguards.

Many of the rioters had been alerted to congregate in the area by receiving text messages.

Apparently in retaliation for the violence, groups described by police as having “Middle Eastern or Mediterranean” appearance were involved in two nights of violence and vandalism.

On Thursday, Prime Minister John Howard called for calm.” [emphasis added]

“Staged” would be better than the circumlocution “apparently were involved”, but this is a real advance. Don’t worry about the somewhat circuitous description – that is the local Sydney semi-official (police and reputable press) way of describing them.

*See B-BBC 14 December