The Sunday Post (Inverness)

‘Selling off Channel 4? Nonsense, madness, vandalism’

Bill Bailey on ministers’ TV privatisat­ion plans

- By Paul English news@sundaypost.com Bill Bailey, May 9 and 10, P&J Live, Aberdeen and OVO Hydro, Glasgow

Bill Bailey fears government plans to privatise Channel 4 are the thin end of the wedge for the arts in Britain.

The comic and actor, who has appeared on a host of Channel 4 shows since making his breakthrou­gh as one of the country’s most popular funnymen, has accused the UK Government of “cultural vandalism” over its plans to sell off the broadcaste­r and claimed it is misleading the public with “double-speak.”

Channel 4, with its 11 spin-off platforms including Film 4 and E4, is a state-owned broadcaste­r but derives its funding from advertisin­g, unlike the BBC which gets its money from licence fee payers. All shows are made by independen­t companies and profits go into programmin­g.

Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries says the broadcaste­r is failing to compete in a time of declining advertisin­g income and rising programme-making costs, and the channel struggles to keep up with streaming platforms.

But Bailey said: “The thing they think privatisin­g Channel

4 is going to do, it does already. Nadine Dorries says they need a company that invests in the industry but that’s literally what Channel 4 already does.

“We’re living in a time of Orwellian double-speak, where black is white and up is down. The government have consulted on this idea, people said it was a bad idea, and they’re going to steam ahead with it anyway.

“It’s madness. It’s an act of cultural vandalism. Do they think there’s going to be some sort of windfall from it? They’ll get a one-shot deal at most and then the value will be diminished. It makes no sense.”

Bailey was speaking weeks after his most recent Channel 4 appearance on Grayson’s Art Club. His other credits on the channel include Wild Thing I Love

You, Grand Designs Live, Space Cadets, Spaced and Black Books.

“Channel 4 has a remit to be different from other channels, and it always has,” said Bailey. “It looks for new and interestin­g artists and writers. The news is the finest TV news we have in the country. Investigat­ions, documentar­ies – it has been a powerhouse for all this stuff since its inception and it’ll be a terrible loss to the cultural life of Britain if it is privatised.

“And if it happens it doesn’t bode well for the arts, as once you start monetising assets like that then people running them make decisions about doing less of one thing and more of another just because it makes money. That starts polarising the brief around monetisati­on and that’s never a great direction to go for artists.”

For acts like Bailey, who have spun successful touring careers off the back of their popularity on TV, the platform is sacrosanct.

Bailey’s humour is droll and his appearance is that of a Status Quo roadie. But audiences love such an unvarnishe­d package. It played no small part in his triumph on Strictly Come Dancing and has seen him rise to playing arena-sized venues on the comedy circuit.

He was due to see out 2021 and welcome 2022 with a series of gigs in Scotland before the emergence of Omicron. Citing a lack of guidance from the authoritie­s, he was one of many acts including Amy Macdonald, The Charlatans and Deacon Blue who were forced to take the decision themselves to cancel or postpone big gigs in the build-up to Christmas.

Bailey said: “We had to make that tough decision for ourselves. It felt like the government just shrugged. It’s a tough call to make when you’re at the sharp end because we then become responsibl­e for people’s safety. So basically we had to make the call ourselves.

“A lot of artists and promoters felt they were being put under real pressure, and it was very much on us. It felt like the days of government giving us rules were suddenly the olden days but they were rules that the government were breaking anyway. It felt like it was very much on the artists to bear that responsibi­lity, and that makes artists very resentful, cynical and sceptical of government.

“On a wider point, whenever there’s a charity gig, or a thing when people are being asked to support a good cause, it’s people in the arts who are asked. People like us. But when the chips are down, when the artists were struggling and live performanc­es decimated, it wasn’t there. So no wonder people felt let down. “My sound technician had to get a job driving for Tesco. There was no work for these people.” Happily, there is now. The festive shows the comedian had planned as part of his En Route To Normal tour will now be staged next month. Their cancellati­on wasn’t the only unexpected turn he faced at the end of the year, when Covid ran through his house.

Bailey said: “Me and my wife caught it at Christmas. We were shuffling around under blankets

and my dad, who is 89 and had come to stay, ended up running around after us. Then he caught it but thankfully it was less serious for him. I was so drained of energy, disorienta­ted with huge fatigue.

“But it’s one of the consequenc­es of the strange times that it throws up these positives. My dad hardly ever stays with us very long, he maybe comes up for a couple of days. But we ended up spending every night watching an old movie together, like The Day Of The Jackal or The Guns Of Navarone.”

Bailey admitted the experience of the last few months had led to him tweaking his material.

“The show has had to evolve,” he said. “Normally when I do a big tour like this I’ll go and try out all kinds of different material – songs, stories, sketches, whatever. I’ll have a notebook, pieces of paper, on a music stand, and work through them.

“But this is like flying by the seat of my pants. In a curious way, it’s quite liberating.”

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 ?? ?? Bill Bailey at RHS Wisley Flower show last year and below, winning Strictly with dance partner Oti Mabuse
Bill Bailey at RHS Wisley Flower show last year and below, winning Strictly with dance partner Oti Mabuse

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