Stones Thrown In R5L Glass House

I see Richard Bacon is trying to whip up some anger among his Twitter followers over the fact that most of the new cabinet are privately educated white men. That would be the same Richard Bacon – white male – who went to Worksop College (current fees £5,015 – £7,400 per term). His boss at Radio Five Live – Adrian Van Klaveren, white male – was also educated at an independent school (Bristol Grammar), as were the following white male Five Live presenters – Nicky Campbell (Edinburgh Academy), Peter Allen (Brentwood), Stephen Nolan (Royal Belfast Academical Institution), Chris Addison (Manchester Grammar), Andy Zaltzman (Tonbridge), John Inverdale (Clifton College), Simon Mayo (Solihull), and Mark Kermode (Haberdashers’ Aske’s Boys’ School). There’s probably more, but you get the idea.

And the BBC’s online article “Why has Eton produced so many prime ministers?” quotes Old Etonian Nick Fraser, author of the book “The Importance of Being Eton”. Strangely, there’s no mention of Mr Fraser’s day job – editor of the BBC’s Storyville documentary series.

Update. Just remembered another one – Radio Five Live’s racing correspondent Cornelius Lysaght went to Eton.

ATTACK, ATTACK, ATTACK…..

Anyone catch John Humphyrs “interview” with Andrew Lansley this morning on Today? Here it is if you didn’t.  The sneering patronising and hectoring tone is what we can now expect each time a member of the new Government is interviewed. The Labour attack dogs are located in Broadcasting House. Any idea of balanced neutrality is shot to pieces – the bit at the very end in particular is worth a listen.

WHEN INTERVIEWS GO WRONG…

A biased bbc reader writes…

“Mosab Hassan Yousef is the eldest son of a senior Hamascommander. He was arrested by Shin Bet and beaten by three of their agents. Hepoints out that this is not Shin Bet or Israeli policy, but the actions ofindividual agents who hate Palestinians. He has converted to Christianity andnow works to save lives – Israeli or Palestinian. If that means informing onHamas or Fatah operations he will do it. He blames the war not of Israelis orPalestinians but on ideology – specifically the Koran.

He was presumably asked onto Hardtalk on account of abook he has written. Zeinab Badawi persistently interrupted him, and tried todivert him from points he wanted to make to issues which she considered moreimportant. Badawi is from a Muslim background, though whether she is apractising Muslim is not known to me. It was obvious that Yousef’s criticism ofPalestinians and Islam were getting under her skin. That Yousef should hold upa Koran at the end and blame it for the whole Israel/Palestine conflict musthave shot a dagger through her multicultural spleen. Watch for yourself.”

Richard Black – an apology

I have had a communication from Richard Black of the BBC (and his lawyer) that in the interests of fairness and debate, I must share with you. Indeed, he is threatening to sue me if I do not. He asserts that a piece I wrote about him on this blog, suggesting that he makes money from chairing climate change conferences, is wrong. He writes:

You draw these various strands together by saying that I and the BBC are “in bed” with “shadowy forces” that “pull the strings of the climate debate”.

I will make three things clear to you:
– I was not paid to facilitate at this meeting
– I do not “make a tidy income” from chairing conferences – I usually do so for free
– journalists are asked to chair conferences precisely because we can be objective, impartial referees

I am asking you to display on your page, prominently, a correction to your assertion that I was paid to chair part of this symposium, and acknowledgment that climate change was not its main focus.

In accordance with his wishes, I have printed his remarks prominently and made it a central part of the blog. I am happy to publicise his response to my story and make sure that Biased BBC readers are aware of it. And I accept his assertion unreservedly that he was not paid to chair this conference, and that, on this occasion, climate change was not the main focus.

At least now we know that Richard is above reproach; it’s perhaps a shame that other BBC presenters are not so candid in the terms of their acceptance of speaker roles, and that they freely advertise their services on the web at 10K a pop.

Update (in response to posts): For the record, Richard’s letters threatening legal action came in two stages; one from himself (from which the extract is lifted), the second, three weeks later in much more formal language, from Nick Alway in the BBC’s own legal department. The missive bears the imprint “investors in people” in the bottom right hand corner.

TIME FOR A NEW ELECTION?

It’s been entertaining listening to the BBC do everything possible to undermine the new Lib/Con Government. Every card is being played to give the impression that things look grim. I liked the BBC comment that the press conference in the Downing Street garden looked liked “a civil partnership.” I guess they would know?

TURN OUT THE LIGHTS…

God help us all. The “left-leaning” (BBCspeak for ardent lefty, Europhile, climate change fanatic) Chris Huhne is taking up the environment and climate change brief. Expect this intolerant, self-opinionated noneity to be omnipresent on BBC programmes from now on; and expect an instant stepping up of the volume of climate change moonshine. Oh, and prepare for massive power cuts – because that’s where we are heading.

CAN IT HOLD TOGETHER?

I suppose it was predictable that after the horror of Labour being thrown out of Downing Street has sunk in to the BBC, the fightback would commence. This morning, on Today, between 7 and 7.30am, the meme is “But can it gold together”? BBC line is to question the stability of the Con/Lib pact and to claim that it could all fall apar. Gracious in defeat, eh?

REJOICE – CONTINUED!

Several good laughs tonight. BBC News reported Brown going into to see Her Majesty suggesting he would be in “for some time.” He was out after 15mins. BBC then reported Cameron going in to see Her Majesty suggesting it would be “about 5 minutes” – he was in for at least 20 minutes, BBC stunned! Meanwhile, I was listening to a one of those “special” BBC panels on the World Tonight – noticed no Conservative commentators, so usual BBC balance! They must be gutted that all these years of Labour are over….any champagne bottles spotted in the corridors of Broadcasting House yet?

The Rejoice Open Thread!

Regardless of our views of the next PM, I hope we can all unite in delight at this moment of history:


Update 8.30pm. I knew Mandy was powerful, but I didn’t realise he’d taken on the role of confirming the next Prime Minister:


Another update:

(OK, I’ll stop now)

Sorry – one more update. Is Mishal Husain a secret Tory?