Sunday, 10 January 2010

BBC Luvvies For Labour

>> SATURDAY, JANUARY 09, 2010

The BBC is going big on "Doctor Who star David Tennant 'backs Gordon Brown'". Tennant, a Scot recently replaced by a younger man, is quoted:

"Clearly, the Labour Party is not without some issues right now and I do get frustrated. They need to sort some stuff out, but they are still a better bet than the Tories."
Meanwhile, election year sees the start of a new topical comedy show on Radio Five Live presented by Chris Addison, the only person who comes anywhere near to matching Tennant's recent levels of BBC ubiquity. So, will Addison's new programme offer a fresh perspective on current affairs, or will it be the same tiresome worldview from the BBC's left-wing comedy establishment? Addison's opinions on the Conservative Party could give a clue:
"It's very difficult, if you were brought up as a child during Thatcher's period, to ever contemplate being a Tory. There is no way I can physically bring myself to vote Tory. That will stay with me till I die."
On Twitter a couple of days ago he was asked what he thought about the current government and responded:
"Better than the alternative."
A little later he tweeted:
"My political leanings are decidedly liberal."
Which, coincidentally, is the first box you have to tick if you want to present a Sunday morning programme on Radio Five Live.

Update 5.05pm. Perhaps we'll be treated to some of Addison's views on Europe. From an interview with him on the BBC's comedy website:
I am fiercely pro-European. I would very much have liked to see this country join the Euro a few years back. Not least because it would greatly annoy the kind of people that I don't generally like.
I'm fiercely pro-European as well (OK, maybe not "fiercely"), but I don't buy into the anti-democratic EU project.

Book of Revelation

BBC environment correspondent David Shukman has a book out in April: "Reporting Live From the End of the World". A suitably alarmist double meaning in the title there, but I guess it's more catchy than "Reporting Live From a Temporarily Low Reservoir (Rain Sure To Follow)".

In his tips to schoolchildren on how best to report on the environment Shukman offers this advice: "If it's about rubbish, get yourself right in the middle of it." Like this:


At least he knows exactly what will happen to all the unsold copies of his book.

Eats, shoots and leaves

I commented in the open thread about mistakes and shoddy editing. Here’s one.

‘Six Palestinians killed in West bank, Gaza attacks’

Was this responsible for another piece of carelessness that shows how one thing can lead to an other?

“Israel yesterday shot dead six Palestinians in two separate incidents in the West Bank”

It appeared in an anti-Israel editorial in the Observer the next day.

Of course the two incidents were separate, but one was in the West Bank, the other in the Gaza strip, and a comma is different from a forward slash. But if I'm right, it suggests that carelessness, combined with agenda-driven churnalism is alive and well, and that some of us don't bother to read beyond a headline.

James Cove Update

On Monday I blogged about some of the 'global warming is going to kill the ski industry' stories produced by the BBC over recent years. Many of those news items came from the BBC's long-time 'man in the Alps' James Cove who, I pointed out, had just started his own online ski news venture. For some reason I was in an uncharacteristically generous mood because I offered Cove my best wishes for his new PlanetSki website.

I'm feeling less generous today.

Cove spent a decade producing global warming scare stories for the BBC, but in December on his PlanetSki blog he said, "the snow level has been pretty similar on average throughout the last decade" and quoted a 73-year-old mountain guide who said, "Overall things really haven't changed that much." That's not the impression Cove was creating with his articles for the BBC. He knew what his editors wanted and gave it to them. It's what hacks do.

Now I see that Cove's PlanetSki website is facing accusations of plagiarism. A writer for another ski website, PisteHors, has noted the similarity between an article of his about Corsica and one written by Cove in August 2009 for PlanetSki (the Internet Archive shows that the PisteHors article first appeared in June 2006 and was last updated in April 2008). Cove even embellished his version with invented quotations:

PisteHors:
The snow is usually very good above 1800 meters and can be found down to 1400 meters depending on the conditions. Skiing is possible from December through to April but you can only rely on snow after mid-January. There are currently three downhill ski areas on the island and always talk of projects of creating a real ski resort in the style of the Southern Alps.

James Cove:
The snow is usually very good above 1800 meters and can be found down to 1400 meters depending on the conditions.
"Skiing is possible from December through to April but you can only rely on snow after mid-January," says a spokeswoman from the island’s tourist office.
"There are currently three downhill ski areas on the island and always talk of projects of creating a real ski resort in the style of the Southern Alps."

PisteHors:
In 1934 the worst avalanche of this century occurred on the slopes of Castagniccia at only 700 meters altitude, sweeping through the village of Ortiporio and killing 37 people.

James Cove:
In 1934 the worst avalanche of this century occurred on the slopes of Castagniccia at only 700 meters altitude, sweeping through the village of Ortiporio and killing 37 people

PisteHors:
The regional ski committee has a long standing plan to develop a ski station in the bowl at La Lattiniccia on the road pass close to Corte The proposal is for 30km of pistes between 1550 and 2400 meters altitude with the possibility of doubling the area in the future. The total cost of development is estimated at 12.5 million € including necessary artificial snow cover. Presumably a large part of this money would come from European funds. Whether this project will ever be realised remains to be seen.

James Cove:
Corsica has several small ski stations and one, near Corte in the centre of the island, has ambitious plans.
The regional ski committee has a 12m euro plan to develop the bowl at La Lattiniccia.
The proposal is for 30km of pistes between 1550 and 2400 meters altitude with the possibility of doubling the area in the future.
It would however need funding from the EU for the project to go ahead but, so far, that is not forthcoming.

PisteHors:
Before you get ideas of snow, sex and sun in the isle of savage beauty you should be aware that Corsica is basically a 2,500 meter high rock surrounded by huge expanses of ocean. As such it catches every weather system as it tracks across Europe. Off piste skiers and freeriders need to carry an altimeter, maps and compass and know how to use them.

James Cove:
Corsica is basically a 2,500m rock surrounded by huge expanses of ocean. As such it catches every weather system as it tracks across Europe.
Off piste skiers and freeriders need to carry an altimeter, maps and compass and know how to use them.

PisteHors:
In the winter violent storms are somewhat less frequent but the constant wind drives the snow into potential slab avalanches. Powder is rare due to the wide daily temperature variations which leads to its rapid transformation. This stabilized snow-pack is favourable to extreme skiing.

James Cove:
In the winter constant wind drives the snow into potential slab avalanches. Powder is rare due to the wide daily temperature variations that leads to its rapid transformation. This stabilized snow-pack is however good for off piste skiing as it makes the snowpack safer.
With that level of journalistic integrity is it any wonder Cove's alarmist articles for the BBC were so unconvincing?