Peter Horrocks, the head of the BBC Newsroom, has given a fascinating speech about BBC editorial policy regarding public interactivity. It didn’t get much notice, partly because it was given to Leeds University rather than a London media correspondent but is well worth reading in full. In it Peter gives a typically thorough and thoughtful analysis of how the BBC dealt with a flood of texts and emails after the assasination of Benazir Bhutto. Horrocks reveals that at one point the BBC considered cutting off public access to the comment facility. Now to someone like me who believes in public access to BBC platforms this sounds horrendous, but read on
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Our public trial of TV ended with a vote in which our audience voted 60/40 that they did not trust T...
I’ve made plenty of mistakes in two decades of broadcast journalism but I am still surprised at a co...
This is the text of the speech given by Peter Horrocks, the BBC’s Director of Global News, as the PO...
Peter Horrocks, the head of the BBC Newsroom, has given a fascinating speech about BBC editorial pol...
After a year of fakery and phone poll fiddling the BBC has come out fighting on trust. In a lucid, i...
A trip back to the BBC newsroom means I bump in to a few old colleagues spitting with rage about the...
Professional journalism is under extraordinary pressure: not only are its traditional business model...
The BBC Trust wants to know what you think about BBC.co.uk but it doesn’t know how to ask. So it is ...
The BBC is facing multiple pressures to change its structure and even its funding, but what about it...
At the heart of the government’s White Paper on the future of the BBC is an implicit accusation that...
Journalistic objectivity sits at the heart of public service broadcasters’ - such as the BBC's - mis...
Charlie Beckett argues that the Savile scandal is not only damaging for the BBC’s reputation but als...
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) is a long-standing institution with a worldwide reputatio...
It is a fact that all modern governments operate within the unflinching gaze of the media, and that ...
Our debate on Impartiality and the future of public service broadcasting proved that we are going th...
Our public trial of TV ended with a vote in which our audience voted 60/40 that they did not trust T...
I’ve made plenty of mistakes in two decades of broadcast journalism but I am still surprised at a co...
This is the text of the speech given by Peter Horrocks, the BBC’s Director of Global News, as the PO...