BBC to Cull the Cult TV Repository 145
malkavian writes "The BBC has announced that it's going to be ceasing to host it's Cult TV Repository. At a meager 700,000 users per month, it was decided that this was no longer a significantly useful public resource, as the information was also available elsewhere on the net. Many people believe this to be a grievous mistake on the part of the BBC, to allow the history of their own broadcasting highlights to fragment, and possibly be lost like so much of its other content."
This is strange... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This is strange... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This is strange... (Score:1)
espically as the program quality has gone down.. and while on that 'advert' note, I have noticed that they do advertise espically on the radio, but only their own programs on BBC1 etc.. are they allowed to do that?
Re:This is strange... (Score:2)
They do also have 'commercial arms' though, some of which are joint ventures which get access to show old BBC shows on subscription based digtial and satillite.
UK Gold used to fall into this category (and may still do) with old Doctor Who, Red Dwarf and Blackadder shows, though it also shows non BBC shows from the UK.
Re:This is strange... (Score:3, Insightful)
That's their own fault. How can you possibly have a web page with 700,000 monthly users and not be able to pay for it? I'm not saying spam the hell out of your users with ads, but geez. Try to sell them a coffee mug or t-shirt about the programs they have already shown interest in.
Give any webmaster 700,000 monthly visits targeted to a particular niche and they'll be able to make money on it, or at least not go broke.
N
Jobcuts (new management) (Score:5, Informative)
No matter what people thought of Greg Dyke - he wasn't actually Evil(TM) but he wasn't without a fair share of legitimate critics either - pretty much everybody, both the general public and BBC employees, hate Mark Thompson (something which on his announcement as new Dir. Gen. was fuelled by the media, who have plenty of material owning to his own past behaviour).
I rather suspect this is all to help make the BBC better suited to transition to a subscription based service (rather than a license fee funded one), though this won't be till after 2008-12, and would probably co-incide with a move to switch of analogue TV all together and go digital (so the government can go through with it's plan to sell of the valuable airspace to next generation mobile/wireless operators).
Re:Jobcuts (new management) (Score:3, Insightful)
What the BBC should not be doing is spending money on broadcasting sports, soap operas, by-the-numbers drama, blockbuster films an
Re:Jobcuts (new management) (Score:3, Insightful)
I thought that Strictly Come Dancing and Strictly Dance Fever were far superior reality TV offerings to the likes of How Clean Is Your Toilet, Big Brother, Celebrity Love Island and the rest.
Re:Jobcuts (new management) (Score:2)
Remember the BBC had Fame Academy. And it has Top of the Pops (dumbed-down TV at its worse. Cancel it and put Jools Holland in its place. That doesn't need constant noise, flashy graphics and attention-whoring presenters.)
If the BBC wants to save money, they could cut a lot of those useless presen
Re:Jobcuts (new management) (Score:2)
That's not head and shoulders, its a couple of hair widths at best. How about showing something in prime time that isn't a worn out old soap or reality TV for a change.
Re:Jobcuts (new management) (Score:2)
Back then, on a Saturday, the whole family could sit down and watch TV for the entire evening by just watching a couple of channels.
It would something like:
ITV
16:00 - 17:00 US Cop Show (Cagney & Lacey or The A-Team,TJ Hooker or Magyver )
17:00 - 18:00 Blockbuster/Family Fortunes (college/university quiz show)
BBC
18:00 - 18:30 News
18:30 - 19:00 Childrens TV (Basil Brush/Muppet show)
19:00 - 19:30 Dr Who (+
Re:Jobcuts (new management) (Score:2)
So you're saying they shouldn't broadcast things we actually want to watch? Why shouldn't we get sports on the BBC? It's the only place we can watch sport that isn't inundated with awful adverts. ITV's coverage of anything sporting is useless. Channel 5 is even worse. Sky is only available to those who want to pay for it (and still watch awful adve
Either that, or... (Score:3, Interesting)
TV licensing & Sheep herding (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:TV licensing & Sheep herding (Score:2)
Re:TV licensing & Sheep herding (Score:1)
Re:TV licensing & Sheep herding (Score:2)
Re:TV licensing & Sheep herding (Score:2)
The most bizarre I ever ran across was on BBC2 one early morn. I saw a programme in the Radio Times called "Naked Yoga." I thought it would be an essential guide to yoga or an introduction to yoga basics. But no, it was just 30 minutes of people doing yoga while actually naked. No commentary or anything, just mostly wrinklies in various yoga positions with no clothes on.
Do remaining colonies have to pay? (Score:1)
Which raises the question: do UK colonies such as the Falkland Islands pay the licence fee ("telly tax") as well? I know that "commonwealth" countries that still consider themselves subject to the Crown in some way (such as Canada) do not pay it.
Re:Do remaining colonies have to pay? (Score:1)
The BBC has to save money (Score:3, Interesting)
and whats the betting that most of those 700k users are not licence payers ?
perhaps the BBC should just cut of access off to those outside the UK and bring a subscription models in for non-licence fee payers
Re:The BBC has to save money (Score:5, Insightful)
No, no, no, no, NO!
As someone who is not in the UK, I can tell you that (for me anyway) I would be happy to pay for a subscription to the BBC (both for television and web, but not BBC America since it's watered/dumbed down). I think that modifying your statement to say "Perhaps the BBC should implement a subscription model for those outside the UK and the non-lincense fee payers" would be a bit more appealing to me. I would gladly pay for quality programming from them, since most of the programming in the US is crap.
Non-UK BBC subscriptions (Score:2)
Too bad that I see so little chance of that happening.
Re:The BBC has to save money (Score:2, Interesting)
Funding the Beeb (Score:2)
As a licence fee payer, I have no objection to supporting a national broadcasting organisation that provides good quality TV, radio and Internet services. The price I pay is a bargain compared to the subscriptions demanded by inferior networks in many other countries, and the BBC remains one of our strongest national assets.
What I do object to is the fact that the only people who pay for it are those in the UK with TVs. Why should someone who only listens to BBC radio not contribute, for example? Simply o
Re:Funding the Beeb (Score:2)
Re:Funding the Beeb (Score:2)
That's untrue. "Radio only" licences were abolished in February 1971.
If you own a radio and not a TV, you are not obliged to pay a B&W license fee.
BBC funding makes more sense than PBS... (Score:2)
Re:Funding the Beeb (Score:2)
Well, for one thing, I don't know a single person for whom that's true, while I know several who only use the radio and/or Internet services but don't have a TV. I'm sure there must be such people, but IME there are far fewer of them than any other group relevant to this discussion.
Secondly, and perhaps more significantly, I believe that everyone benefits from having a good quality national broadcaster, in the same way that everyo
Re:The BBC has to save money (Score:1)
I pay the license fee for a public service, not just a British public service.
Perhaps instead of building idiotic and unenforceable iron walls around our intellectual assets, we simply ask for donations from overseas?
Everything produced should be available (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Everything produced should be available (Score:1)
I expect this is the first part of the site to go, I doubt it will be the last. It's a great shame though.
Re:Everything produced should be available (Score:1)
I had hoped that the BBC would be able to hold out against the corporate whingers who complain about it's content since although it's true that other companies can provide the same content as the BBC website the BBC by and large does a much better job of it than their rivals and it does it more o
Re:Everything produced should be available (Score:2)
Perhaps what's really going on is that those who want to make money off of providing said content are pressuring the government to kill off their competition.
Maybe this will change now (Score:5, Funny)
Damn, it's just so hard to be funny at work on fridays. Sorry.
HHGTTG!!! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:HHGTTG!!! (Score:2)
Thankfully they are not pulling that one out.
this is like the black & white film. (Score:3, Insightful)
What? (Score:5, Interesting)
This isn't about, "Oh that's a grand show. It should stay on the air." This is more akin to your local library deciding they're going to get rid of hundreds of popular books which are being checked out, on the basis that "They're available at other public libraries and bookstores."
Honestly, it's deplorable that the BBC has gone back to their long-standing tradition of willful destruction of archive material.
Re:What? (Score:1)
Re:What? (Score:2)
Do you really believe that they will destroy all traces of the Cult website from their backup archives? The reason they destroyed their media in the past was because the archive of video was expensive, and at the time they didn't believe they had a real reason to justify the costs. However, there's no real reason for the BBC to 'destroy' this data, the only large cost is keeping
Re:What? (Score:2)
The BBC has plenty of (free; they peer with everyone) bandwidth to keep stuff like this online indefinately. Archiving it offline and only offline is silly.
Re:this is like the black & white film. (Score:1)
You obviously don't live in the US. Nobody I know here would ever say that about most programs. :-)
Many, eh? (Score:4, Interesting)
700,000 hits is really not very many.
And the idea that the closure of this small part of the webpage is going to result in BBC archivists deleting the programs is just idiotic scaremongering. The BBC are more than aware of the stupid mistakes made in the past w.r.t. Not Only But Also, The Goons and so.
Re:Many, eh? (Score:1)
You're right about the BBC learning from the past though as I believe that they are now pretty strict about archiving.
Re:Many, eh? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Many, eh? (Score:2)
Re:Many, eh? (Score:1)
Charter renewal is round the corner, and the external pressure from other broadcasters is starting to get felt... So, they've got to cut costs. So, how due you pick which things to shut? Well, it's those in which there is a marked lack of interest.
Re:Many, eh? (Score:2)
Re:Many, eh? (Score:2)
700,000 unique users, not 700,000 hits. And they're not closing it due to lack of interest; they're closing it because of financial reasons. See http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/news/2005/06/29/2 0 281.shtml [bbc.co.uk] for full details, but in a nutshell they're closing websites which they feel "do not provide sufficient distinctive public value for the investment required".
I suspect it also really means "sites which we can close without people noticing or getting upset about"
Re:Many, eh? (Score:2)
Re:Many, eh? (Score:2)
Commercial Pressure on the Beeb (Score:4, Insightful)
Don.
Re:Commercial Pressure on the Beeb (Score:2)
Re:Commercial Pressure on the Beeb (Score:1)
Their culture spokesman, John Whittingdale said
""...I am not persuaded that there is necessarily a case for a public service website. I'm not persuaded that anything on the BBC site could not be provided elsewhere, [for instance] the newspapers are mostly providing sites, which provide news and comment.
"They [the newspaper sites] are essentially trying to provide for the same market and therefore you can argue why
The BBC are acting like total Smegheads! (Score:1)
Re:The BBC are acting like total Smegheads! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:The BBC are acting like total Smegheads! (Score:2, Insightful)
Standard Reply? (Score:5, Interesting)
We recognise that the Cult website has attracted a large following. However, efficiency savings are needed to pay for new projects which will ensure that the BBC continues to offer distinctive and innovative services, so it is necessary to close this site.
As Ashley Highfield, Director of New Media, explained in December "...to meet the 10% target set out by the BBC Governors, we are announcing today a further 7.5% reduction to be achieved through lowering investment in areas where we feel this will not cause a reduction in public value...These changes build on the first steps we took in July to close those websites which we felt did not offer sufficient distinctive public value for the investment required. The savings we made in July represented 2.5% of our web output."
Furthermore, the BBC outlined in November its commitment to offer more distinctive content. We felt that many areas covered by the Cult site were already being replicated on other areas of the web. This meant there was very little distinction between the BBC and the commercial sector.
The exception to this is Dr Who, the largest of our Cult sites, which has now evolved into its own website, as an extension of the hugely successful BBC ONE TV series. We hope users will continue to visit and enjoy this site.
Regards
Sophie Walpole - Head of iD&E
And
Chris Chalton - Communications Manager, MC&A
It's not a shame it's a crime (Score:3, Interesting)
God Save The Queen!
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:700,000 not correct, response from BBC (Score:2)
We assure you that we are listening to the feedback given to us.
We are closing the site.
Wha?
But how will the world survive.. (Score:1)
Re:But how will the world survive.. (Score:1)
Is it a Good Thing (tm) that we've lost a lot? Maybe not. Have we gotten on without it? Yep.
What about all the collective memories of people who've died, or fires destroying historical artifacts? One of the more interesting (to me at least) WWII museums is the Yankee Air Museum [yankeeairmuseum.org] outside Detroit MI. Last October they had a huge fire that wiped out most of their records and interior displays, among which were large quanti
Re:But how will the world survive.. (Score:2)
Re:But how will the world survive.. (Score:2)
The real reason? (Score:1, Interesting)
Over the last few years, the BBC has built up a pretty vast online empire, going well beyond the normal news, sports and weather sections that most people use. Smaller, private enterprises complained that they were being forced to compete with what was essentially a rival taxpayer-f
Re:The real reason? (Score:1)
It's true, the BBC got into the Internet fairly quickly and in a big way which is why they have such an extensive all encompassing and generally excellent web presence, other potential web site operators who came to the party a little later are moaning about their ability to compete with an already established BBC and would like it to remove content which they feel they can provide for a fee.
There is a debate to be had about this, personally
Re:The real reason? (Score:1)
Or, is it fair to be forced to pay the licence fee ("Telly Tax") when those who view the content online and/or outside of the UK do not have to pay it at all?
Re:The real reason? (Score:2)
The content has already been produced and paid for and so long as making it available to the world at large doesn't cost an unreasonable amount then it's easier to just let anyone view it rather than implement some kind of daft DRM scheme or impose geographic restrictions. The main thing is that it is primarily geared toward the UK licence
This is NOT strange... (Score:4, Interesting)
Are there any notable british or german (Score:2)
Re:Are there any notable british or german (Score:2)
Then there was Monkey Dust which was like a sketch-show but in cartoon form. Quite dark and hilarious. I don't know what happened to it.
2DTV is good as well. A sort of political satire thing, like those impression shows (Dead Ringers etc.) but a cartoon. Short sketches of various politicians (mainly British), but often Bush, Saddam and bin Laden.
Um (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway the BBC is supposed to be pushing the masses up not dumbing down. A commercial network might bow to the biggest demographic but the point of a socialist/communist/whatever corporation is that it gives the masses good intelligent programming whether they like it or not, both types are needed - commercial TV is more 'fair' in its finances, non-commercial tax-funded TV is more 'fair' in its representation of all demographics. I call on the BBC to go back to educating people so they will realise how valuable a service it is and continue to make sure its funded.
Re:Um (Score:2, Informative)
They are :)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/imp/ [bbc.co.uk]
How to complain (Score:4, Informative)
2. the suit responsible: Jonathan Kingsbury jonathan.kingsbury@bbc.co.uk [mailto] He looks forward to hearing from you.
If you don't like what's happening... (Score:1)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/make_complaint_
Select the "Make official complaint" option, and say what you want to say.
I wrote to them suggesting they may be able to turn it into a more community-based site. IMHO it would make sense to keep a base of loyal fans than to put them out in the cold.
They never advertised this site.... (Score:3, Insightful)
I just have to ask the question... (Score:2)
What part of the concept of ``cult'' do they not understand. If they wanted lots of hits it wouldn't been very ``cultish'' now would it? They were hoping that their viewership would have number like, say, Star Trek?
Sorry if I seem to be struggling with the problem they claim to be having over putting up content that is decidedly less than mainstream and then complaining that the number of viewers isn't what they hoped. (If it pleases the court, i'm going to plead lack of caffiene.)
Mirror it (Score:1)
Help out. (Score:2)
wget -o
Government policy (Score:5, Interesting)
Currently GB PLC is demonstrating that public enterprise is often better than private, contrary to the official government line. Failed privatised railways had to be rescued; private prisons are a humanitarian disaster; privatised schools are failing. So let's get the absolute flagship of public service, the BBC, and wreck it.
The amazing thing about this is that some of the British politicians who spout the privatisation nonsense - the unlamented M Thatcher among them - don't have a clue about how much the US depends on charities, not for profits, and local government at many levels, when it comes to delivering essential services. Sorry about the rant, but this whole thread is about the Government cutting BBC funds so it cannot do its job of ensuring that minority interests are heard. I guess next they'll be bringing in Fox to do the fair and balanced reporting that the BBC is famous for (but obviously getting wrong since sometimes it opposes the government...)
Re:Government policy (Score:5, Funny)
Take the example of their recent new law to ban unauthorised protesting within a mile radius of parliment ( not sure it's a mile but some distance anyway ) which seems to be purely aimed at getting rid of the guy who has been sat outside protesting about the Iraq war for a few years. They have tried to get the courts and police to get rid of him but failing that they are willing to make up a specific law just to get rid of this one person who disagrees with them.
As someone who pays a licence fee (Score:3, Insightful)
If not, then I would be contributing to the maintenance and upkeep of a 101 sites of which are of little interest to anyone.
The BBC serves the public licence-paying viewers interests and if they are not interested in something, then it should not be wasting its money on such a project.
Without trying to sound completely negative, I hope that the BBC will be sensible enough to allow someone else to host the content and continue to maintain it.
Everything but Doctor Who... (Score:2, Funny)
Where to download episodes? (Score:2)
Re:Where to download episodes? (Score:2)
Submitter!! (Score:2)
Malkavian, read this important announcement [img104.echo.cx]!
It's not that tough!
The reason for the cull... (Score:3, Informative)
The fact is that the BBC is a state broadcaster. It is funded by the license fee, (read: television tax) paid for by the general public, and maintained by government charter. Every so often this charter comes up for renewal. This gives the government of the day a chance to push its own agenda and influence the future of the BBC to its own advantage. If the BBC doesn't play along, the government can ensure that the threat of charter non-renewal hangs over the organization (effectively the end of the BBC as we know it).
The current government (the Blair administration as our American cousins may call it) is blatantly in love with private industry and wishes to ensure that the BBC does nothing to infringe on areas in which the private-sector could otherwise profit. The Blair government believes that the BBC has an unfair advantage in that it has guaranteed funding via the license fee and does not need to compete with other private-sector companies to maintain its profitability. Therefore the government has decreed that in order for the BBC to receive charter renewal, it has to relinquish anything that is not a "core public service function".
In a nutshell, the government argument to the BBC is: "If you're providing something that the private sector could do, it doesn't matter how useful, beneficial, or loved by the public it is... Kill it... We want our friends in big business to line their pockets with some half-assed imitation of what you do so well".
Sadly this has resulted in a severe over-reaction on the part of BBC management, who have subsquently decided to close down anything which doesn't fit this "core public service function" and have a demonstrable benefit to the license payer. Cult TV just doesn't cut it as far as they're concerned.
Re:The reason for the cull... (Score:2)
The BBC should be allowed to offer whatever services they want, as long as they keep the quality higher than commercial alternatives.
Thanks a lot... (Score:2)
So now I take a look, it looks interesting, and they're shutting it down. Bloody typical.
Oh well I'd best get emailing the BBC to compain then eh ?
Mirror? (Score:2)
Not Auntie's fault (Score:1)
The BBC had to sell off a bunch of it's departments in order to please our privatisation loving government.
Whilst I have no problem spending 120quid or so a year on the BBC a lot of other people do.
I expect the licence fee wont survive the next charter renewal and the BBC needs to reposition itself so th
Not surprised (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Solution (Score:3, Funny)
The Vogons have taken over the BBC! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Looks shite! (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd help pay for a wiki (domain registration, hosting, etc) that indexed the content formerly hosted by the Cult TV Repository.
Re:It's (Score:2, Funny)
Dont worry. Their mispelling things like this all the time.
Re:It's (Score:3, Funny)
Hmm, us [sic] unsophisticated Americans use "its" - is this one of those British things?
Yes, it is...