LONDON: On November 14, 1922, the clipped tones of the BBC’s director of programmes, Arthur Burrows, crackled across the airwaves.

“This is 2LO, Marconi House, London calling,” he announced, and with that, public service broadcasting in Britain was born.

One hundred years on, the British Broadcasting Corporation is a global media giant. But its centenary comes at a time of drastic budget cuts that have raised questions about its future. The corporation, officially founded on Oct 18, 1922, has a special place in Britain’s broadcasting landscape.

“The BBC is us,” said Jean Seaton, professor of media history at the University of Westminster in London, and the corporation’s official historian.

“It remains despite the attacks of this government an expression of us, unlike Netflix, which is an expression of the world,” she said. “The BBC is an expression of our sense of humour, interests or values. It belongs to us.”

For nearly seven million people, each day starts with BBC Radio 4’s flagship “Today” programme, which often sets the political agenda.

At weekends, “Strictly Come Danc­ing”, which pairs celebrities with professional ballroom dancers, has had viewers glued to their sets for 20 years and is the most talked-about television programme on air. BBC series such as “Peaky Blinders”, “Fleabag” or “Killing Eve” have been exported around the world.

The BBC’s influence extends far beyond Britain’s borders, making it one of the small island nation’s most visible and respected global brands. It reaches an audience of 492 million around the world every week, according to the corporation’s 2021-2022 annual report.

BBC World Service broadcasts in 41 languages to about 364 million people a week globally. For the last 100 years, the broadcaster has stuck firm with its original mission statement: to “inform, educate and entertain”.

“It underpins everything that we want to do,” said James Stirling, who is head of the BBC’s centenary celebrations.

Impartiality

Another word — impartiality — crops up repeatedly and has become a priority for BBC management given the frequent criticism it has received from the Conservative government.

During Brexit — Britain’s divisive divorce from the European Union — it accused the BBC of bias in favour of those who wanted to stay in the bloc. Ministers have also alleged that it focuses too much on the concerns of urban elites rather than the working classes.

Britain’s right-wing tabloids — never shy of criticising their publicly funded competitor — have lapped it up. But more worrying is a decision in January by Boris Johnson’s government to freeze its licence-fee funding model for two years, raising fears it could be scrapped in future. The annual charge for households with a television set is currently set at 159 ($176).

In response to Johnson’s plans, the BBC in May announced a huge cost-cutting programme of 500 million a year, axing about 1,000 of its 22,000 staff and moving about services online.

The financial situation has been accompanied by an exodus of younger audiences towards streaming and on-demand platforms, prompting questions about why they should still pay for the BBC. “Today” presenter Nick Robinson, a former BBC political editor, said it was vital for the broadcaster to keep proving its value.

“If my kids’ generation... just come to the view that I don’t really need that, I can get all that stuff from YouTube and get it from all these competitors... then we’re done,” he told the Daily Telegraph.

‘Pride’

Successful new formats have emerged, however, despite the BBC often being labelled as “legacy media”. Journalist Ros Atkins has made his name with video “explainers” of major news stories and issues, combining them with analysis, fact-checking and vital context.

Published in Dawn, October 15th, 2022

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