Yorkshire Post

BBC best placed to show Britain’s values, boss says

Hall hails corporatio­n’s transforma­tion

- HARRIET SUTTON NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

NO-ONE IS better placed than the BBC to “carry Britain’s voice and values to the world”, the corporatio­n’s outgoing director-general Lord Tony Hall has said.

In his final speech in the role, Lord Hall championed the value of public service broadcasti­ng in post-Brexit Britain, saying that success will mean drawing on all “our considerab­le internatio­nal assets. And that means unleashing the full global potential of the BBC”.

Addressing the online Edinburgh TV Festival, he said: “The debate about the role of public service broadcaste­rs is important, vital and necessary.

“Public service values have never been more needed. The public service broadcasti­ng ecology we have in this country is unique. And it works.”

He added: “People outside this country envy what we have. Public service broadcaste­rs are under threat everywhere – of course we always need to adapt and reform, yet we are a vital part of any country’s culture.”

Lord Hall said the raft of disinforma­tion online has made the BBC’s role as a news provider more crucial, adding: “It’s right at the heart of this duty to help bring the nation together.

“The forces of disinforma­tion and social media tend to feed on fracture and drive polarisati­on.

“They’re often specifical­ly designed to exploit division for

commercial or political gain; to unsettle societies or undermine democracy.

“What we do, as a public service broadcaste­r, is a force in the opposite direction. Our goal is to help strengthen society and build bridges by making sure all voices and perspectiv­es are heard.”

He continued by saying that the internatio­nal reach of the BBC is crucial to any vision of ‘Global Britain’, adding: “My goal, when I arrived at the BBC, was to double our global audience to reach 500 million people by 2022 – our centenary year. With two years to go, we are today reaching 468 million people each week.

“We have plans in place to double that ambition – to reach a global audience of one billion people by the end of the decade. But it needs extra investment from Government and that bid is with them right now.

“No-one can do more to carry Britain’s voice and values to the world.

“Independen­t research shows there’s an exceptiona­lly high correlatio­n between places where people are aware of the BBC and places where people think positively about the UK. We even help UK trade.

“This could hardly be more important as Britain sets out to forge a new relationsh­ip with the world, based on an ambitious vision of ‘Global Britain’.”

Lord Hall also reflected on his seven years at the helm of the corporatio­n, saying: “I don’t need to remind you, seven years ago we were an organisati­on in crisis.

“It was in the wake of the Savile scandal, there were failings over executive pay-offs, there were fundamenta­l questions hanging over our future.

“Today we’re an organisati­on transforme­d, inside and out.”

People outside this country envy what we have. BBC director-general Lord Tony Hall said public service broadcasti­ng works in the UK.

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