Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Scotsnet

Welcome to Scotsnet - discuss all aspects of life in Scotland, including relocating, schools and local areas.

BBC decision to stop airing the daily briefings

193 replies

Srictlybakeoff · 11/09/2020 09:35

Just as things start to get more worrying again, the BBC have decided to stop showing the First Ministers daily briefings. There is an implication that the decision is political. It seems o me to be a very biased move.

OP posts:
Scotslassie1 · 12/09/2020 11:46

A leaked briefing note, which was sent from the BBC to politicians, said: “… From the 14th, the BBC is applying a consistent approach to coverage of the various government briefings across the UK nations, with our colleague at BBC Wales also making a change at this point.
“Instead of broadcasting every briefing live on BBC One Scotland and the BBC Scotland Channel, we will decide whether to broadcast them on editorial merit.”
A “consistent approach”, which has the end result of making it harder for people to access information, shouldn’t be something that the BBC even considers pursing.

It boils down to this: Scots are being penalised because the UK Prime Minister is too lazy and cowardly to front his own daily briefing. If Boris Johnson could be bothered to update people in England about the ever-changing rules and restrictions, I wouldn’t be writing this column. He would be doing his update, Nicola Sturgeon would be doing hers, and the idea that broadcasters would move either one to online-only would be unthinkable.

Does anybody believe that, if the roles were reversed, the BBC would be arguing for a “consistent approach”? Of course not. Boris Johnson would scrap the licence fee before he would accept any briefing he gave being moved online because Nicola Sturgeon was refusing to hold one of her own.

The BBC’s decision is so irresponsible – so utterly illogical – that I don’t see how it can stand. There is nothing to gain – for either the BBC or their viewers – by not showing all of the daily briefings live. Most people don’t have Twitter. Some don’t have the internet.

A five-minute package on the 6pm news is a poor substitute for watching the full briefing and the question and answer session that follows. Knowing what the rules are is good; understanding why they are in place is much better.

The people that tune in now are doing so because they want information. It’s not an entertaining watch. People aren’t watching because there’s nothing else on the telly and Jason Leitch tells decent jokes.

One of the aims of the BBC is to inform. That remit shouldn’t be disregarded just because Boris Johnson isn’t living up to his responsibilities as a leader.

It’s important to note that this decision will have been taken from on high. The BBC is full of excellent journalists who take their responsibilities seriously and have worked hard during the pandemic to help the public understand this crisis.

Those faces of the BBC that we all know, those that are accessible on Twitter (and are regularly targets of abuse) are not to blame here. They don’t get a say in BBC scheduling. Many of them will be as unhappy about this as the rest of us are.
That idea that politics be put to one side during the pandemic was always a noble goal which was doomed to fail. Those Labour and Tory politicians that sought to make it harder for Scots to access information during a global health emergency, simply because they are scared of Nicola Sturgeon’s approval ratings, are proof of that.

ShamPayne · 12/09/2020 11:47

Any other world leaders giving a briefing every day?

WeAllHaveWings · 12/09/2020 11:50

There was also information on the protect scotland app some people might not have heard of and important for as many people to download as possible.

Just because you know about what was said yesterday you can't assume others do. An update is an update even if it is to say nothing had changed at that point in time and to reinforce previous messages/guidance.

Are you saying, if the Lanarkshire decision was not made until later on Friday they should have allowed the cases there to continue to increase and left the announcement until Mondays update? Or they should have made a rush decision to meet a TV schedule?

Any awkward questions will still be there and answered by SG on Monday, if the BBC decides to let them be asked. That is exactly how ridiculous it is, the BBC will decide if those questions you want to be asked will be asked.

ShamPayne · 12/09/2020 11:53

I think The numerous FACTS adverts broadcast everyday is probably enough to remind people how to behave.

If Sturgeon has anything relevant to say she can say it in Holyrood

Dinnafashyersel · 12/09/2020 12:02

Don't be disingenuous. I'm saying they already knew at lunchtime and should have announced it then in time for people to digest and alter weekend plans accordingly.

Instead they spent all afternoon debating the ins and outs of children's party's and the Nation wide changes - all largely irrelevant to the 1/3 of the population now under enhanced "local" restrictions. There is a certain inevitability to restrictions being extended to Ayrshire, Inverclyde and probably Eastwards also - (Ren and E Dun followed by Lanarkshire was coming a mile off). That will be 50% plus of the population at which point we are not talking "local" and in fact never were.

This is not a criticism of the restrictions but merely a recognition of the demography of the West of Scotland, which anyone who lives there could tell you. Politicians and public health advisers can't expect to be taken seriously if they are not acknowledging this reality.

My Council, in one of the areas covered, spent the evening sending out info on how schools, leisure, business and local care services are affected. These details are all highly relevant to the life of me and my neighbours and are not covered in a BBC briefing. The Scottish Government lunchtime announcements do not cover any of this detail.

Scotslassie1 · 12/09/2020 12:06

Really? Okay, how are schools affected by the new measures? I'm quite sure they're not.

MadameBlobby · 12/09/2020 12:11

@Scotslassie1

Really? Okay, how are schools affected by the new measures? I'm quite sure they're not.
The only thing would be that if someone is identified as a contact the whole house has to isolate. So if one of my kids was IDd as a contact, they’d now need to both stay off
Scotslassie1 · 12/09/2020 12:24

And that only came into place yesterday?

MadameBlobby · 12/09/2020 12:29

Yes for Lanarkshire I guess but we are Renfrewshire and it was from midnight Monday going into Tuesday here.

LizzieMacQueen · 12/09/2020 12:31

@Scotslassie1

And that only came into place yesterday?
I think it applies to council areas under tighter regulation. So up until yesterday it would not have applied to N and S Lanarkshire. So yes, news that would have been relevant yesterday.
Hangingbasketofdoom · 12/09/2020 12:46

@ShamPayne I said I watch the daily briefings. Not every day, but when lunch coincides (or more or less, as with iPlayer you can restart the programme). I have a quiet space, a mobile phone and plenty of data. Why shouldn't I do it at work?

Hangingbasketofdoom · 12/09/2020 12:46

(In the past I'd have sat beside colleagues and had a chat. That's all gone)

Calyx72 · 12/09/2020 12:52

About older people and internet
I am an NHS worker in the community seeing patients over 65 in their own homes
We have been asked to increase the use of Near Me (video calls) with patients to reduce visits but it is proving difficult as 9 out of 10 of our patients don't have wifi or a smart phone or they are not able to manage a video call without assistance.
These are the people most at risk if they get covid and they get their information from TV.
Maybe your relatives etc are Internet savvy but most of the patients I see are not.

WaxOnFeckOff · 12/09/2020 13:07

These are the people most at risk if they get covid and they get their information from TV.

And no-one is suggesting that they are going to get their tv cut off? They can still get the info from tv or can they only hear Nicola's voice?

Straven123 · 12/09/2020 13:08

A trained monkey could give the tri-weekly speel - does not need to be NS

ShamPayne · 12/09/2020 13:10

It’s just a bit odd. The fan girling over Nicola and watching the TV whilst working.

ShamPayne · 12/09/2020 13:13

Yes my parents are internet savvy but Sturgeon ain’t saying anything that you couldn’t find out from the BBC news bulletins. Why are you making assumptions that the elderly are a bit thick?

SockYarn · 12/09/2020 13:21

My parents are the same - they don't have smartphones, no internet. They could no sooner watch a live stream than fly to the moon.

However, they do have a TV capable or receiving BBC1, ITV, Channel 4 and other news channels. They watch the bulletins. They also have a radio and get the Scotsman newspaper every morning. Any one of those three options will give you the information you need about what to do, and what the rules are in your area.

WeAllHaveWings · 12/09/2020 13:24

@Straven123

A trained monkey could give the tri-weekly speel - does not need to be NS
So if your workplace had a massive reorganisation or maybe redundancies affecting you, you would be happy with regular, optional, communications on it read out by John in accounts? Or would you prefer your Managing Director who was making the decisions, explaining their reasons and answering any questions?
TheDragQueen · 12/09/2020 13:26

Is the managing director going to make a half hour broadcast every day? Or more than likely send out a couple of emails? 🤔

WaxOnFeckOff · 12/09/2020 13:31

Well, i've worked for 37 years and gone through many resructurings, tupe deals, redundancy etc etc etc and yes generally the information is usually read out by a local manager via a cascade or just by your own manager in a team meeting and then updates provided via email/local intranet. The CEO/MD etc are rarely available for daily briefing and Q&A sessions. You might get the opportunity to ask Qs to whoever does the briefing but in general they are collated and an a Q&A doc made available with answers - those answers usually produced by HR

TheDragQueen · 12/09/2020 13:32

I’m going through this right now and we’ve received some emails. The ones being made redundant are going through the usual HR redundancy process. If only I had Sturgeon to guide me through. 😂

Dinnafashyersel · 12/09/2020 13:35

And just to put the tin lid on ...
After a week of towing the Party Line on downloading the New App the press have finally caught up to the fact that it is also "a bit rubbish".

Don't usually take my phone out and about so wouldn't have been downloading it anyway. Also I have known for months and months that Bluetooth technology can't work out what side of a wall you are on let alone whether you are within 2 metres of someone.

WaxOnFeckOff · 12/09/2020 13:36

@TheDragQueen

I’m going through this right now and we’ve received some emails. The ones being made redundant are going through the usual HR redundancy process. If only I had Sturgeon to guide me through. 😂
To be fair, the woman could argue black was white so might be helpful? :o

Hope all goes well re your job.

IncludeWomenInTheSequel · 12/09/2020 14:35

@ShamPayne

It’s just a bit odd. The fan girling over Nicola and watching the TV whilst working.
You find it weird that people watch tv on their lunch break? And want to get information on the worlds biggest health crisis in a century?