BBC News, 17 Nov: Katie Price returns to the jungle.
BBC News, 23 Nov: Katie Price quits I’m a Celebrity.
BBC News, 24 Nov: Katie Price apologises for her behaviour since divorce.
Normally I try to swallow hard and keep down the rising bile in my stomach when I see corporate press releases masquerading as news on the BBC. I’ve come to expect it in the Technology section where rational discussion of technology and its effect on society appeared to die along with Tomorrow’s World back in 2003 (just about the time that the rest of the population outside of Broadcasting House started tuning in to this fact).
But, really. Have we now go to the point where an interview by a fake celebrity on a fake reality TV programme on another channel is worthy of a spot the the FRONT PAGE of BBC News Online?
Clearly, I’ve been out of the news business for far too long. Here am I thinking that deaths due to political violence in the Philippines, the head of the IMFs damning indictment of the state of the UK economy or the largest ever rights issue by a UK bank were important events, but no, all of them are missing from the front page of BBC News right now, while Katie Price not only gets a slot, but a picture, too.
Still, thank goodness the BBC newroom has found space in their lead story on Sir John Chilcott’s Iraq Inquiry to insert a Have Your Say box, to let us “Richard, UK” opine:
I confidently predict that by the end of this inquiry the British public still won’t know why we sent troops to Iraq or what advice the government was given regarding the war’s legality.
Hmm. Commercial messages masquerading as news, editorial choices masquerading as opinion.
As Nick Cohen said recently in the Guardian:
The paradox of the BBC’s strategy is that the more it spends on expanding into cyberspace the less it has to say.
BBC News Online appears to either be terrified of setting the agenda (because that would be elitist, maybe), or appears simply functionally unable to do so. After a proud tradition of the like of Dimbleby and Paxman standing up to political pressure, its management are allowing it to fall victim of the Curse of Hello! - death by a thousand well-meaning, inclusive, edits designed to chase the clicks of the masses. It no longer leads. It barely follows.
Cohen ends by saying:
In this time of upheaval, the BBC has a public duty to invest and broadcast the journalism that others cannot afford. It is failing spectacularly to live up to its responsibilities.
Quite.