The BBC

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they won't have a warrant unless unless they have already amassed or feigned enough 'evidence' to convince a magistrate that you require but do not have a tv licence

they very rarely obtain warrants anyway, there are foi reqests to individual police forces confirming this

"I don't even own a TV"

Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Friday, 18 April 2014 17:42 (ten years ago) link

so, they can't come in?

kinder, Friday, 18 April 2014 17:43 (ten years ago) link

bbc scotland news is a disgrace. Biased towards the no to independence campaign. Its really turning me against the news department of the BBC.

― Scooby Doom (۩), Friday, 18 April 2014 18:39 (6 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

the bbc will always act as a state broadcaster, supine to whichever administration, the most credulous of all tv channels during the iraq war and now happily normalizing/rationalizing the current government's welfare polciy (though there are minor correctives and exceptions)

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2003/07/bbc-j10.html

Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Friday, 18 April 2014 17:51 (ten years ago) link

I hate the way BBC News are pushing welfare bullshit, but I've heard that when the government of the day gets more than 60 per cent of the vote, which is the case right now, there's an onus on the state broadcaster not to challenge their policies.

I'm just wary of any privatisation, including handing over the licence monitoring job to Crapita, more than I am exercised about £12/month*.
Besides, you can use iPlayer and/or the radio without a licence. What you aren't supposed to do is watch live TV.

*The last time I had no licence and a Crapitan on my doorstep, he tried to front his way into my flat by pretending he was one of the builders working on my kitchen. He got told. The real builders were massively entertained by seeing him frog-marched out with 'You. FUCK. OFF. NOW!'

baked beings on toast (suzy), Friday, 18 April 2014 17:53 (ten years ago) link

hundreds of thousands of people? really?

― kinder, Friday, 18 April 2014 18:39 (12 minutes ago)

uhuh, ~200k p/a

so, they can't come in?

― kinder, Friday, 18 April 2014 18:43 (8 minutes ago)

~99% time no

Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Friday, 18 April 2014 17:54 (ten years ago) link

Yet they never manage to catch Charles Moore, who writes columns about refusing to have a licence. BTW, if you work at the BBC and are found not to have one, you're sacked.

baked beings on toast (suzy), Friday, 18 April 2014 17:56 (ten years ago) link

they would never catch charles moore cuz the capita salesmen who earn pro rata will always victimize poor areas

they have never visited me in an upper middle class inner suburb of london (full of tv execs and at least one bbc 'talent' nearby)

Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Friday, 18 April 2014 17:59 (ten years ago) link

Why is radio and iPlayer made exceptions? They don't have adverts either, so it is basically free in that case.

This has nothing to do with quality but one of the current weather reporters for Scottish news is incredibly beautiful.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 18 April 2014 18:01 (ten years ago) link

I hate the way BBC News are pushing welfare bullshit, but I've heard that when the government of the day gets more than 60 per cent of the vote, which is the case right now, there's an onus on the state broadcaster not to challenge their policies.

― baked beings on toast (suzy), Friday, 18 April 2014 18:53 (8 minutes ago)

don't think this is true in any formalized sense, bbc kowtows via the natural inertia of hegemony in a a british context

section 4 of their charter covers informality

Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Friday, 18 April 2014 18:04 (ten years ago) link

nb i don't require a tv license, the only live tv broadcasts i watch are russian hd football or tennis streams, which still necessitates having a tv license since they are shown simultaneously via domestic broadcasters, so i take a bottle of wine to my (tv licensed) cuz nextdoors in order to watch them

Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Friday, 18 April 2014 18:10 (ten years ago) link

*The last time I had no licence and a Crapitan on my doorstep, he tried to front his way into my flat by pretending he was one of the builders working on my kitchen. He got told. The real builders were massively entertained by seeing him frog-marched out with 'You. FUCK. OFF. NOW!'

― baked beings on toast (suzy), Friday, 18 April 2014 18:53 (18 minutes ago)

since you had corroborating evidence from the builders you might have reported this to the police as aggravated trespass / harassment / assault / whatever and complained to capita independently (the individual wastemen presumably being logged to certain addresses and identifiable)

Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Friday, 18 April 2014 18:22 (ten years ago) link

lol

caek, Friday, 18 April 2014 19:12 (ten years ago) link

I might have done, but since he didn't actually cross the threshold, all I could do was to escort him from the block knowing the 'trades' button didn't work to get him back in. If you'd registered that important detail you wouldn't have introduced the coulda/shoulda/woulda element, right?

baked beings on toast (suzy), Friday, 18 April 2014 19:26 (ten years ago) link

yeah don't be so pissy, 'frog-marched out' left trespass ambiguous but irrespective of that, attempting to gain entry through impersonation is still worth reporting to the police

Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Friday, 18 April 2014 19:36 (ten years ago) link

Maybe less of the calling others pissy when in the midst of own epic attack of same - but feel free to call the cops if you're ever in that situation, OK?

*sigh*

baked beings on toast (suzy), Friday, 18 April 2014 20:03 (ten years ago) link

nah not really trying to engage yr own ample delusions of reference nor remotely doubting the capacity of fearsome west end matriarch big suze to send the capita bro packing with his tail between his legs so much as avowing the general principle, since the next person they victimize may well lack capacity (linguistic, mental, etc)

these people are cunts who behave entirely unconscionably so it is worth pursuing them when they betray very least their own protocols, and possibly the law too, not that they would ever get convicted for that (although a quick search shows a couple dozen tv license enforcers are successully prosecuted every year) but it's at least dubious enough to report it in order to expedite a private complaint to their employer

Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (nakhchivan), Friday, 18 April 2014 20:18 (ten years ago) link

*sigh*

baked beings on toast (suzy), Friday, 18 April 2014 20:38 (ten years ago) link

hey nakh do "market level" commercial rivals to radio 1 broadcast hour-long documentaries about teenage domestic abuse? do they play 65 hours of specialist music a week? do young people not deserve to have their culture reflected on the radio without being told what kind of pizza to be eating and what sort of mobile phones to buy?

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 19 April 2014 09:36 (ten years ago) link

fuck outta here

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 19 April 2014 09:38 (ten years ago) link

that shit should all be privatized and the less market amenable public interest stuff financed via general taxation

http://www.brandsoftheworld.com/sites/default/files/styles/logo-thumbnail/public/0018/4202/brand.gif

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 19 April 2014 09:39 (ten years ago) link

I hear args (certainly from people in classical music/R3 listeners) that R1/2 is basically just a 24/7 commercial because it broadcasts music that is distributed by private interests. Unlike R3 which has much of its avant-garde funded by public arts bodies.

I love R3 but I never had much for this. The BBC is about all sorts of output, has always been, and then music fundamentally (by what it is an, by whom it is made by, etc etc) muddies the waters anyway.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 19 April 2014 09:58 (ten years ago) link

how much of BBC output is core BBC? I ask because the BBC seems in my lifetime to have essentially become a core outsourcing department (with extremely expensive Big Four consultants and a high level of managerial bureaucracy).

However, presumably buildings (W1 and Salford), the full news chain of production (some journos, playout, engineering etc) are still entirely BBC.

my entire being revolts against BBC privatisation, but a combination of having to money chase the "you get taxpayers' money, be more populist"/"you're indistinguishable from itv/sky" right-wing BBC-hating fork, and an apparently supine news editorial policy means I scrape around a bit when looking for detail. plus an awful lot is spent on the bureaucracy of outsourcing, as I say (crucially, less than in-house production, but of course the money goes to different people).

probably still a higher percentage of arts programming, right? radio: 3 has become a bit of a battleground for the fork mentioned above, but although 4 seems to outsource to external production companies as much as TV, the editorial policy seems sound? Sounds from TH like R1 is still providing something beyond the remit if many popular music commercial stations. Olympics coverage was remarkable, an extraordinary feat of cross-platform broadcasting, but it knew it didn't have to fight it's wearying public funding arguments for that. what else?

Fizzles, Saturday, 19 April 2014 10:23 (ten years ago) link

three weeks pass...

This is essential viewing whilst it is still on iplayer, could listen to Ian Nairn talking forever, wasters like Richard Clay, Helen Czerski and the odious Brian Cox take notes please. Not that any of them will ever be worth shit.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/p01rn270/Nairn_Across_Britain_From_London_to_Lancashire/

under the cobblestones, le dogshit (xelab), Saturday, 10 May 2014 21:17 (ten years ago) link

yeah they're touching & awkward & beautiful & slow. some discussion on the jonathan meades thread

ogmor, Saturday, 10 May 2014 23:23 (ten years ago) link

I am way behind the times as usual, what a brilliant and essential person.

under the cobblestones, le dogshit (xelab), Saturday, 10 May 2014 23:33 (ten years ago) link

"yeah they're touching & awkward & beautiful & slow"
Just watched the Leeds to Scotland one again and that is a perfect description.

How do you rip these fuckers? Just tried it the google way and spent an hour purging all the extraneous malware crap that I got.

under the cobblestones, le dogshit (xelab), Sunday, 11 May 2014 00:55 (ten years ago) link

the last time i tried to rip an iplayer show it was sufficiently difficult that i gave it up

Hastings Banter (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 11 May 2014 08:14 (ten years ago) link

I think it's on iplayer for the forseeable future, don't know if they'll add more nairn but would love to see better quality versions of some of the stuff on youtube.

ogmor, Sunday, 11 May 2014 12:07 (ten years ago) link


673: Nairn Across Britain - 1. From London to Lancashire, BBC Web Only, Arts Culture & the Media,Factual,Lifestyle & Leisure,TV,Travel, default, 0 days 0 hours ago - Writer and journalist Ian Nairn takes a journey to the industrial North. (1972)
INFO: File name prefix = Nairn_Across_Britain_-_1._From_London_to_Lancashire_p01rn270_default

available: Unknown
categories: Factual,Arts, Culture & the Media,Lifestyle & Leisure,Travel
channel: BBC Web Only
desc: First transmitted in 1972, writer and journalist Ian Nairn takes the first of three journeys north through the British Isles to look at the land we live in. Following an imaginary straight line between London and Manchester, and ignoring the motorways, Nairn finds it to be a journey of surprises. Nairn bemoans the pulling down of Northampton's Emporium Arcade and decries the bleakness of the M1 motorway experience. But he is heartened by the preservation of Staunton Harold Hall and church, and by a Stockport shopping precinct.
descmedium: First transmitted in 1972, Ian Nairn takes a journey to the industrial North and finds plenty to comment about in a landscape of surprises.
descshort: Writer and journalist Ian Nairn takes a journey to the industrial North. (1972)
episode: 1. From London to Lancashire
episodenum: 1
episodeshort: From London to Lancashire
expiry: 2099-01-01T00:00:00Z
expiryrel: in 84 years 234 days 11 hours

84 years...

koogs, Sunday, 11 May 2014 12:12 (ten years ago) link

I know bbc are working backwards to digitize everything but it's so slow you'd think they could fish out obviously special stuff like this and get 3 months behind on newsround or whatever

ogmor, Sunday, 11 May 2014 12:23 (ten years ago) link

The slow part of the process is rights clearance, unfortunately.

stet, Sunday, 11 May 2014 13:30 (ten years ago) link

They have collections of stuff that's up for ever already, eg all these documentaries on London:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/collections/p00synd3/london

Alba, Sunday, 11 May 2014 17:59 (ten years ago) link

And these, on postwar architecture:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/collections/p01s0hpy/post-war-architecture

Alba, Sunday, 11 May 2014 18:00 (ten years ago) link

How do you rip these fuckers? Just tried it the google way and spent an hour purging all the extraneous malware crap that I got

You can download them on t0rrentz and then rip them using software like Nero or Toast.

goth colouring book (anagram), Sunday, 11 May 2014 18:06 (ten years ago) link

I have done more research and currently recording an episode using WM recorder, if it is successful I will upload the results.

under the cobblestones, le dogshit (xelab), Sunday, 11 May 2014 19:47 (ten years ago) link

(get_iplayer will download the original mp4s which vlc will happily play (as will my tv from a usb stick). dependencies are a bit of a pain though. easier with linux...)

koogs, Sunday, 11 May 2014 19:57 (ten years ago) link

I tried that one earlier and had an absolute mare. It isn't downloadable from iplayer so I used WM recorder to download it is an FLV and then converted it into an mp4, if anyone is interested I will upload it as a torrent when I have done all 3 episodes.

under the cobblestones, le dogshit (xelab), Sunday, 11 May 2014 20:14 (ten years ago) link

Forget it, i dont think this shit works tbh.

under the cobblestones, le dogshit (xelab), Sunday, 11 May 2014 22:17 (ten years ago) link

Open link in new tab individually and click on download.

under the cobblestones, le dogshit (xelab), Sunday, 11 May 2014 22:20 (ten years ago) link

Fuck you BBC.

under the cobblestones, le dogshit (xelab), Sunday, 11 May 2014 22:21 (ten years ago) link

Don't do that here please

stet, Sunday, 11 May 2014 23:29 (ten years ago) link

Oops sorry. I thought it might be too obscure to be a copyright infringement issue.

under the cobblestones, le dogshit (xelab), Sunday, 11 May 2014 23:52 (ten years ago) link

get_iplayer hasn't worked in years has it? as a very last resort, after trying all the torrent sites (including the ultra-secret tv one that used to be thebox dot bz) then a fairly simple but timeconsuming way is just make the video full-screen and record the footage using a program called 'Replay Video Capture'. done this a few times with the adam curtis videos on his blog that are otherwise completely undownloadable (and seem at risk of being taken down on a whim)

NI, Wednesday, 14 May 2014 02:53 (ten years ago) link

I use get-iplayer all the time, mainly for time-lapsing radio (because I prefer winamp to their little web based widget). The original was forked a few years ago after the bloke lost interest. And it can be a fiddle getting all the dependencies installed, especially on windows, but seems stable enough on Linux (and, indeed, still gets frequent updates)

koogs, Wednesday, 14 May 2014 04:29 (ten years ago) link

(Time-shifting, I think I mean)

koogs, Wednesday, 14 May 2014 04:30 (ten years ago) link

ah great, i'll get hold of that again. but yeah, Replay Video Capture is the ultimate failsafe solution for grabbing protected online video/audio, v useful

NI, Wednesday, 14 May 2014 13:36 (ten years ago) link

bit off topic and only of interest to london ilxors, but given recent talk of nairn some of you might be interested in this

http://www.stokenewingtonliteraryfestival.com/snlf_events/ian-nairn-poet-of-subtopia-with-gillian-darley-and-ken-worpole/

sktsh, Thursday, 15 May 2014 10:59 (ten years ago) link

one month passes...

I notice Hugo Blick has a new series The Honourable Woman with Maggie Gyllenhaal and Stephen Rea, loved The Shadow Line so this looks very promising.

festival of labour (xelab), Saturday, 5 July 2014 21:22 (ten years ago) link

i did too. first ep of this was pretty good i thought. maggie g's accent is surprisingly good

sktsh, Saturday, 5 July 2014 21:35 (ten years ago) link

I didn't like the first episode at all. No sign of any characters I'd support/like/be interested in. And that fucking kid's massive watch thing that records sound just had me rmde.

oppet, Saturday, 5 July 2014 22:03 (ten years ago) link


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