Great British Bake Off & the BBC

So, if something doesn't interest you, it's moronic? That makes it so much better. :rolleyes:
You really can't tell me that watching someone baking a cake ( or what ever) is enthralling.
Its equivalent to watching grass grow, or paint drying.
 
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You really can't tell me that watching someone baking a cake ( or what ever) is enthralling.

But it's not watching someone bake a cake, is it? It's about people rising to a challenge and competing with eachother. Just because it's a subject that doesn't interest you, doesn't make it "moronic".
 
It's not a matter of being forced but conditioned, if bake off in the jungle on skates is all you ever get to see it becomes all you expect to see.
 
But it's not watching someone bake a cake, is it?

Oh come on, you can dress it up all you like, but that's exactly what it is.
 
It's not a matter of being forced but conditioned, if bake off in the jungle on skates is all you ever get to see it becomes all you expect to see.

So you assume that, because someone watches GBBO, they will automatically watch all the other reality shows because their "conditioned to"? Bold assumption there.
 
No it isn't. You might as well tell someone who watched F1 tat it's just someone driving a car.
Well, when push comes to shove, it is.
 
Wife and daughter like the Bake Off, I can take it or leave it, none of us like the dancing show doesn't make it better or worse though.
 
IMHO if they stopped paying out such high salaries to the so called bosses then maybe they could afford the odd program here there. Just a thought
 
This is what happens when the BBC buy in their programming from outside production companies, they are at that companies bidding.
Of course private investment (Outsourcing) is "All good"* in the eyes of the BBC's paymasters.









A little W1A reference for you there. :)

This
 
I prefer watching it over watching some blokes run on a field after a ball and then once they got it they kick it or loose it. I really don't understand how anyone find that enjoyable. But hey if they like that that is fine, I would not resort to calling them names for it.
 
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IMHO if they stopped paying out such high salaries to the so called bosses then maybe they could afford the odd program here there. Just a thought
Try thinking that through. ;)

I'll help, idiots think that anything they see as 'public money' should never pay managers a decent salary.

But in te private sector, the market should be free to drive salaries up.

How do you suggest good managers are maintained by government, the BBC etc?
 
Then the bbc should drive up the there fees to pay more for programs. I don't think that would go down to well
 
Then the bbc should drive up the there fees to pay more for programs. I don't think that would go down to well
So now you're coming to understand that trying to run a 'commercial venture' whilst constrained by a government who demand some control is never going to be straightforward.

Of course this position isn't helped by the 'media'* constantly attacking them on all fronts.
*again it's quite obvious why they have a vested interest in the demise of the BBC.

We should listen to what our American cousins think of institutions like the NHS and BBC before we accept Murdochs criticisms. ;)
 
So you assume that, because someone watches GBBO, they will automatically watch all the other reality shows because their "conditioned to"? Bold assumption there.

I said conditioning, not hypnotism.

An example of conditioning - back in the 1980s (roughly) retail businesses stopped referring to money in their advertising. They'll say things like "only nine nine nine" instead of nine hundred and ninety nine and will never mention "pounds" because they don't want you to think about the money. When you think about money you think about cost and are less likely to spend. I'm willing to bet that you've looked at a price and said to yourself e.g. three nine nine instead of three pounds ninety nine. I do it and I'm aware of myself doing it even though I know what it is, conditioning.
 
Try thinking that through. ;)

I'll help, idiots think that anything they see as 'public money' should never pay managers a decent salary.

But in te private sector, the market should be free to drive salaries up.

How do you suggest good managers are maintained by government, the BBC etc?
I think you are spot on. Lots of very good people in the public sector, many who could run rings around the best. The difficulty really is to keep and maintain that talent when the hands are tied; granted some is self inflicted by their own bureaucratic staff and structures which determine that everyone needs to be a manager. But public perception and scrutiny is constantly part of it.

The BBC needs to pay well to maintain good talent. I really would not like to see the BBC disappear. And even a handful of programmes are worth the license fee, and is a heck of a lot cheaper than a Murdoch subscription ;)
 
Now Mel and Sue have come out and said that they won't be following the show to channel 4 I hope that Paul Hollywood and Mary Berry quit too.
As @Phil V said, Love Productions and Channel 4 will be left with a £25m tent.

The show was one of the most successful shows on television with it's existing funding, I understand it was about £5m a series. Quite where Love productions get £25m from is beyond me, it's quite a leap!
But, the deal with Channel 4 just demonstrates that where there is demand, someone will provide the supply.
 
Now Mel and Sue have come out and said that they won't be following the show to channel 4 I hope that Paul Hollywood and Mary Berry quit too.
As @Phil V said, Love Productions and Channel 4 will be left with a £25m tent.

The show was one of the most successful shows on television with it's existing funding, I understand it was about £5m a series. Quite where Love productions get £25m from is beyond me, it's quite a leap!
But, the deal with Channel 4 just demonstrates that where there is demand, someone will provide the supply.
C4 surely would have put conditions in their purchase. Would they? I hope so for them and if not then sack the guy/girl.
 
Correct, no matter what device you view on.
Lots of gnashing of teeth and wailing over that, I'd imagine. :D

The change to the licence fee rules make me angry, not angry about having to have a licence to use iplayer, but the way they've implemented it.

It would be relatively trivial to make you need to create a login and match it to your licence number, but no, none of that. Just let people watch it then fine them if they don't have a licence, incredibly underhand.
 
Just let people watch it then fine them if they don't have a licence, incredibly underhand.

Kind of like how the licence system has always worked, you mean? :thinking:
 
C4 surely would have put conditions in their purchase. Would they? I hope so for them and if not then sack the guy/girl.
I would have been a shewd move by Channel 4 and Love Productions to make it a stipulation in the contract that the Judges remain. However they obviously didn't manage this with the hosts. Time will tell...
 
Kind of like how the licence system has always worked, you mean? :thinking:

But there's no technical means to restrict an over the air broadcast to a house, there is a technical means to stop people watching it online if they don't have a licence.
 
Am sure there must be something in the contract about presenters... surely C4 bid that based on the format and people staying the same? After all, without Paul and Mary it will be worth a lot less!
 
But there's no technical means to restrict an over the air broadcast to a house, there is a technical means to stop people watching it online if they don't have a licence.

Yes, but if a person knows they're going to be viewing BBC content on any device, then they know they need to have a licence.
Choosing to view without one is their risk to take, but whining about it if they get fined won't garner much sympathy.
 
Am sure there must be something in the contract about presenters... surely C4 bid that based on the format and people staying the same? After all, without Paul and Mary it will be worth a lot less!
Sue and Mel stated that they'd not been notified of any negotiations, if the same is true of Mary and Paul...

Channel 4 could be screwed.
 
I suspect Mary and Paul are under no obligation to work if they don't want to...
 
I also heard that if you are watching catch up ( why would you do that?) on an iPad etc, you now need a licence to do so.
If you try to watch catch up now you get a pop up that you have to agree to saying you have a license etc. I believe.
Correct, no matter what device you view on.
Lots of gnashing of teeth and wailing over that, I'd imagine. :D

I watch iplayer on my tablet and I haven't been asked if I have a licence.
 
I watch iplayer on my tablet and I haven't been asked if I have a licence.
Doesn't alter the fact that as of Sept. 1st, you need one by law.
 
Its not gone gone I think its moved over to Channel 4, I read that they wanted an extra 24million and the BBC would not pay. I like it and its very popular.
Interesting that Sky own 70% of Love Productions, that might help explain the price increase.

Now the shows two presenters are leaving it would appear the £25m C4 paid might not look such good value after all.

Which implies it was only £1m per series?
 
Not really, people watch what interests them. No-one's being forced to do anything. Just because it doesn't interest you, doesn't make it rubbish.

I understand what you're saying, but sometimes at the end of a long day, it's good to sit down and watch something untaxing to let your brain unwind. It's not rubbish, it's no necessarily thought provoking ut entertaining and engaging.
 
I understand what you're saying, but sometimes at the end of a long day, it's good to sit down and watch something untaxing to let your brain unwind. It's not rubbish, it's no necessarily thought provoking ut entertaining and engaging.
It may be, to some, but it's neither entertaining nor engaging to others.
Why does that make those people any more right or wrong.
Can't it just be that different people's opinions differ, and that's OK?
 
It may be, to some, but it's neither entertaining nor engaging to others.
Why does that make those people any more right or wrong.
Can't it just be that different people's opinions differ, and that's OK?

No-one's saying otherwise except for a few who believe that anything they don't find entertaining or engaging is moronic or that those that do are of somewhat lesser intelligence.
 
No-one's saying otherwise except for a few who believe that anything they don't find entertaining or engaging is moronic or that those that do are of somewhat lesser intelligence.
Exactly that. I don't like soaps but like car programs. My wife ont he other hand.... watches TV in the other room at times :D
 
Which implies it was only £1m per series?

Answer my own question. £7.5m a year it cost the BBC

The corporation is thought to have offered £15m per year to keep the programme on the BBC.

That would have been double the amount the BBC currently pays for the show and its sister programmes such as An Extra Slice and the Sport Relief specials.

But it is understood Love Productions refused to entertain any offers below £25m per year.
 
Ah well the labels just keep on collecting; as I was in favour of Brexit I'm not just dumb but also an uneducated bigoted racist apparantly. The irony is quite strong when those dish out those labels, isn't it just ;)

O missed a trick - should have been BreadXit
 
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