The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

BBC boost to Scots self-worth

- Alex Bell

Boring is a bias in itself, a bias against an entire subject by making people turn away

Jackie Bird always looks very pleased when presenting the BBC’s early evening news bulletin – perhaps because unlike the audience, she doesn’t have to watch it

Bird’s beaming grin is about the only memorable part of BBC Scotland’s 6.30pm news, a programme which suffers from being dull.

As it ploughs methodical­ly through crime reports and media release stories, the viewer may lose the will to live.

Campaigner­s had hoped it would become essential viewing if it covered internatio­nal news too, and so asked for a “Scottish Six”.

This began back in the 1990s when TVs were the size of small cars and people dreamed of devolution.

The BBC has finally decided on an answer to this request, and it is no.

Instead the corporatio­n announced a Scottish Nine and a whole new TV channel dedicated to Scotland as well as a new radio station.

The news from the Beeb upset campaigner­s for a Scottish Six – as if they’d been told they couldn’t have the slice of cake they wanted. Campaigner: But I want that slice. BBC: You can have this slice. C: No, that one. B: Look, the slices are all the same. C: I asked for that one, I want that one. B: It’s not very nice cake anyway. C: I don’t care. Objecting to whether it’s at 6pm or 9pm is quite baffling to anyone from the 21st Century.

The number of people who watch the news at a fixed hour in the evening is falling. In fact, the number of people who watch any form of edited news programme is declining.

That is because in this century we are all editors. If you want a mix of national and internatio­nal news, then you buy a paper, listen to the radio and click away – in minutes you’ll get what you want.

It is very odd that Nationalis­ts in particular are fixated on the 20th Century idea of a single programme, broadcast at a fixed time, curated by a single person (probably a white man) sitting in Pacific Quay in Glasgow.

This idea made sense before Google, but became redundant sometime in the early 2000s.

It’s as odd as the Nat obsession that the BBC in Scotland is biased.

A lifetime in journalism and politics leaves me in no doubt that Brian Taylor, Colin Blane, Alan Little, James Cook, Bill Whiteford, Isabel Fraser and Douglas Fraser are models of careful, interestin­g journalist­s.

Yet a dollop of chippiness topped off by the stupid decision to send correspond­ents up from London to cover the dying days of Indyref1 has led to many Scots doubting the whole operation.

BBC Scotland’s problem is that it is underfunde­d and often dull. Boring is a bias in itself, a bias against an entire subject by making people turn away.

It has not always been this way – BBC Radio Scotland won station of the year in 1995 because a clever leader in James Boyle showed confidence in Scotland.

But the trend has been for budget cuts and safe editorial choices.

Where is the the documentar­y unit which finds Scottish life interestin­g without mentioning kilts or heroin?

Which is why the BBC decision for a new channel is great news – not because it’s a channel but for the £30 million in new money.

It means more journalist­s, more producers, more money for ideas. Money allows people time to develop good ideas and to execute them to an intelligen­t standard – there are good examples in the series The Mart or the upcoming history of childhood in Scotland.

We need eager hacks to pore over the actions of our public bodies and the governing class to expose the corruption and mendacity.

Scotland’s lack of self-confidence, if such a thing really exists, is not because Scots don’t travel the world and report back – they do, just listen to the BBC’s output right now – it’s because they don’t take their home turf seriously.

They say the unexamined life is not worth living. Well, the unexamined nation is never going to have self-worth if we don’t take it seriously, and the first step in that process is good journalist­s with proper budgets being allowed to do their jobs without political interferen­ce.

Good journalism is the bedrock of democracy – any investment should be welcomed.

 ??  ?? Jackie Bird’s smile brightens a rather dull news programme.
Jackie Bird’s smile brightens a rather dull news programme.
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