Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
Saturday 15 February 2020 12:00 pm  |  Updated:  Friday 14 February 2020 4:23 pm

Scrap the TV licence, the BBC should just stick to the national news

By: Chris Bullivant

Add as a preferred source on Google
General Views of BBC Broadcasting House

It is good that the BBC model is being disrupted by social media — allowing isolated individuals threatened by brown envelopes and sinister demands to be united in their opposition to the multi-billion pound media enterprise.

Essentially, the broadcaster needs to be radically stripped down to just one channel: BBC News and Weather. All other programming can be cut and funded by the market.

This will allow the BBC to do what it does best: montages of royal weddings and providing a coherent national narrative to current affairs, highlighted by flashing graphics and dramatic introductory music at 6pm and 10pm.

BBC regional news broadcasts should be scrapped. The collapse of local journalism as a result of the BBC’s funding monopoly has robbed many of us from keeping up to date with local, petty frustrations: potholes, neighbourhood planning issues, crime, and the latest locally-elected busybody cutting a ribbon — the sort of trivia that keeps a local community and civic democracy grounded in contextual reality.

The mainstay of the BBC’s output should be focused on radio. Yet the long-term social engineering of the BBC needs to end. Its different radio channels, in serving distinct audiences, have created and embedded imagined class and ethnic enclaves. 

Instead, there should just be one radio channel, and in 24 hours it would need to provide a true celebration of multicultural Britain, with The Archers giving way to Bollywood hits, then rap, then some 60s tune, before Arctic Circle choral chants, and a 20 minute rant on some football game. News readers would just have to pick an accent and go for it. All this programming on one radio channel would help reduce the illusion that Barbican-attending patricians and kebab shop workers don’t occupy the same country.

Local BBC radio stations should be considered up for grabs too, and potentially scrapped. Instead, local Twitter handles funded by adverts from estate agents can keep people up to date with local developments, complementing those council-published newspapers keeping residents up to date with planning decisions and the busybody’s latest ribbon cutting. Hospital radio DJs could see a boom in listeners.

Read more

Wimbledon to stay on BBC as grand slam bucks paywall trend

Business professionals networking at a corporate event with modern office backdrop, engaging in discussion and exchanging ...

These cuts would focus minds at the BBC. Decision makers would have to choose what property needs to be kept, and whether a Soho location is necessary. Does Jonathan Ross need a £9m contract? Do we need to see Graham Norton interview celebrities?

One of the civilising effects of television in previous decades was that the BBC brought millions together in a shared experience: 23m people chuckling in living rooms across the country at Penelope Keith in 1979; 20m dabbing eyes as Scott and Charlene from Neighbours tied the knot in 1988; 16m of us glued to the TV as Hyacinth Bucket made our sides split during the 1995 Christmas Special.

But streaming media and modern lifestyles have blown apart the joint synchronised national television experience. Even Strictly only commands seven million viewers.

Not being able to talk about the latest exploits of Del Boy or David Brent over the water cooler at work may have caused a disintegration in shared national discourse and fuelled Brexit. But perhaps instead we talk about the boxsets that we have binged.

Monolithic TV is over. As a model, it cannot survive and shouldn’t be supported by a tax enforced with the threat of prison. The BBC should shrink down to being the state broadcaster paid by income tax, operating on a single figure percentage of its current budget. 

The billions no longer collected from the TV licence would be available to increased competition in the global streaming market, with truly competitive markets in local journalism and television production. 

If people want to see Emily Maitlis opine, or Paul Merton sneer, or Gary Lineker grin, they can choose to pay for it.

Read more

BBC News faces hundreds of job cuts in major downsizing drive

BBC faces £100k libel trial by top Tory donor over Panorama story on Pandora Papers

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • News
  • Opinion

Categories

  • Business
  • Media
  • Opinion

Related Topics

  • BBC

Trending Articles

  • Billionaire Easyjet founder in line for £800m payday from takeover

  • Pension pressure to help swell UK debt to three times size of economy

  • As it happened: FTSE 100 slump as oil soars; Trump says Iran will be ‘hit hard’ tonight

  • The former African gold miner taking on the billionaire Issa brothers

  • Tesco ‘in talks’ to exit eastern Europe

More from City PM

  • Wimbledon to stay on BBC as grand slam bucks paywall trend

    Sport Business
    Business professionals networking at a corporate event with modern office backdrop, engaging in discussion and exchanging ...
  • BBC News faces hundreds of job cuts in major downsizing drive

    Media
    BBC faces £100k libel trial by top Tory donor over Panorama story on Pandora Papers
  • England 2am World Cup victory smashes records for BBC on iPlayer and website

    Sport Business
    GettyImages 2284822180 showing a significant event or scene related to current general news on a professional business web...
  • Government to take on big tech in bid to boost British news

    Tech
    Breaking news headline image related to a general news article on a business website with no specific tags or categories
  • West Ham sponsor Boyle Sports ‘extremely concerned’ by David Sullivan allegations

    Sport Business
    Getty Images logo on a smartphone screen with a blurred background, representing media and photography business industry.
  • Nestle launches probe over ties to sanctioned Russian propaganda channel

    Regulation
    Nestlé's brands include KitKat chocolate, Häagen-Dazs ice-cream and Nespresso.
  • Procter & Gamble axes relationship with Kremlin propaganda channel

    Retail
    007 PG news article image featuring a business meeting with executives discussing strategy at a modern conference table
  • F*** f*** f***: Tennis star Moutet fined £4k per F-bomb for Queen’s Club outburst on BBC

    Sport Business
    News article image with diverse professionals in a corporate meeting discussing business strategy and innovation trends.

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy