Archive for the ‘TV’ category

BBC iPlayer Desktop now out for Mac and Linux

December 18th, 2008

The latest version of BBC iPlayer Desktop has just been released. Maybe that’ll finally get Mac and Linux users off my back ;-)

Click here to download.

Edit: Lots of people have been saying on Twitter that it doesn’t seem to be working. Apparently, there aren’t many clips that support it at the moment. Try Never Mind the Buzzcocks.

BBC iPlayer Day — a lesson learned

December 15th, 2008

Last Friday was iPlayer Day, an event on the BBC Internet Blog organised by myself, Nick Reynolds and Jonathan Richardson.

It was my first major contribution as a BBC employee since starting. Nick added his thoughts on his own blog here, but I thought I’d add some other thoughts in addition. I say addition as I pretty much agree with what Nick has said.

1. Video. I love video on the web — but something didn’t quite sit with our contributions. With a little while between the inception of iPlayer Day (it was planned before I arrived) and the actual day itself, I feel the luxury was a little too comfortable.

Compare it to, for example, a footballer lining up to take a shot. Often, the longer he has to tee it up, the more likely he is to fluff it. Same for cricketers who gather high catches. With so long to think about something, it is only natural to over-think — and miss.

We were caught between a rock and a hard place. Do we create video that was rough and ready, gritty, had tinny audio and wobbly-ish composition? Or do we create professionally shot ‘interviews’? In retrospect, I think we should have gone with the first option. It’s what our readers expected.

And then, of course, in an overwhelming determination to impress, I forgot the basics. Something I don’t feel I’ve done ever since I went to do an interview for our local paper without a pen.

2. Social media. Social media lovers are strange beasts, aren’t they? I should know, I am one. It’s hard to know how we would be able to harness the web 2.0 world, given that a) It’s harder for a MSM company (or corporation in this case) to appeal to the charity-style of contributions found in social media and b) There wasn’t much incentive for contributions other than mild discussion.

A day or two before the event, I believed we’d secured an incentive. A top BBC figure was going to answer Twitter questions. We were to record the clip and post it online — all within an hour.

By Thursday, for various reasons, that incentive was gone. As a result, I feel our social media input ranged from predictable (“I’m a Mac user, and I hate you”) to the nice (and appreciated) but rather mundane (“I love iPlayer!”). I’d have liked a little bite to some of the submissions — and I believe giving the opportunity to pose questions via Twitter would have been our headline moment of the day.

Above all, I feel I let myself down when it came to social media promises. In our initial brainstorm, we chucked around ideas that were exciting, and very d0-able. So far so good. But various ideas for mash-ups and interactivity were quashed by limitations. Given the chance to do all this again, I’d be far more conservative — not because I couldn’t deliver what was promised, but because in the situation they were to be placed, they weren’t deliverable. There are many reasons — but take the ability to use Google and YouTube out of the equation, and mash-ups are much more difficult.

3. Journalism or PR? I was both, I think. The thing is, it was clear from the offset that iPlayer is an immensely popular product. It has done for on-demand video what the iPod did for MP3 players. People don’t say ‘have you got an mp3 player?’ they say ‘have you got an iPod?’. There are adverts all over the Tube for audiobooks which read “Download for your iPod or MP3 player”. They are, of course the same thing. iPlayer is now in that realm.

So the battle was already won. We didn’t have to convince anybody. The teams involved in iPlayer have done extraordinarily good jobs in the past year — and so are very proud.

The by-product of all this happiness and iPlayer-lovin’, of course, is that the blog content read like reams to reams of good PR. It wasn’t intended that way — over my dead body etc — but it was hard not to be over-positive about something that has been such a roaring success.

But I still think I could have applied my journalism hat a little more. Had I been a little more cutthroat, I would have cut the beginning and the end of the video with Anthony Rose, head of online media, and just included a short clip of him talking about iPlayer 3.0. That’s what people had come to see.

The fact lots of exciting information about how iPlayer 3.0 would be social media-based has passed a lot of bloggers and journalists by — and I think the format of the video is to blame: The first six minutes or so consistent of Anthony talking generally about the service. In the video, Anthony spoke about Broadcast 1.0. Well I think the manner of the clips we used were Web 1.0. In future, I’d have much preferred to find him at his desk, ask him two questions, and upload it to the web before I’d even returned to my chair. That’s Web 2.0. That’s exciting media.

But in hindsight, we were all learning. I was learning about high-quality production values — mistakes made on Friday were flagged before I’d noticed. This isn’t something I’m used to, but something I’m feeling increasingly humbled to be a part of. Many people within the BBC were coming forward to point out mistakes. Not because they were being picky, or harsh, but because it’s their BBC too. And they’re not going to let everyone else’s hard work in maintaining the respect of the BBC be let down by me putting in a broken link.

I was learning about how the BBC is put together. Who’s in charge of what, who reports to who. Indeed, in this respect I was well and truly tied. I didn’t know who did what — and there was little time to find out.

Regionals given a lifeline. It’s up to them to use it

November 22nd, 2008

Today the BBC Trust pulled an absolutely stinking howler. With its decision to prevent the BBC from improving local journalism, the only people who are suffering are viewers and listeners.

The money, the Trust said, should instead by used to “improve existing services”. Existing services like, I dunno, local news?

The Trust also concluded that an improved local video service — which would have seen ten clips of hyperlocal news posted online every day in every region — would have a “significant negative impact on commercial providers”.

Ok. There may be a point there. If the BBC are going to be doing great local video, then why would people go to the local newspaper for video as well? After all, the BBC’s national news videos mean that people have stopped visiting Sky News, or the Guardian, or the Telegraph, or the Times, or ITV, or… you get the picture.

Competition ups everyone’s game. If local newspapers offer something unique then people will still come.

The simple truth is this: local newspapers are scared stiff. The likes of Sly Bailey, so critical of the BBC’s plans, clearly has no idea what to do in the next year. In fact, I’ll shorten that to the next six months. She’s got a newspaper group that is flapping its wings about in panic, feathers flying out in all directions.

Pay freezes and job cuts don’t solve the problem. In fact, they put you in a worse position. How will you make any local video content without any bloody staff?

Here’s what I’m going to do. I’m going to take a screenshot of 4 key local news websites. Over the next few months, I’ll monitor any changes. I’ll see if the local press are rising to the challenge. I’ll stick my neck out a bit here and predict nothing will happen. The designs will stay the same. The production values of multimedia will not improve, and more job cuts will be announced.

You know, in some ways I’m glad the BBC Trust has rejected the plans. Perhaps it’s too early. This way, when local newspapers do absolutely nothing to improve local news, they won’t be able to blame the big bad BBC. It will be their own incompentence. A reluctance to get face the times and sort out their shoddy product.

Screenshots after the jump. I’ll take a look at these after Christmas. Lets see what happens.

» Read more: Regionals given a lifeline. It’s up to them to use it

Guardian praises the licence fee

November 21st, 2008

It’s becoming a bit cool to slag off the licence fee since Brand/Ross. Thankfully, the Guardian has come out in support with an editorial. Don’t expect the Daily Mail to.

“Mr Moore would no doubt be ready to unleash a columnist’s fury on any peacenik who dared withhold their income tax payments until Britain scrapped Trident, or pulled troops out of Iraq. He probably objected, too, to all those rebels who refused to pay the poll tax introduced by his beloved Margaret Thatcher. This fogeyish wheeze is both selfish, since he will now benefit from services that others must pay for, and unnecessary, since if he really wanted to stop funding the BBC he could do so by getting rid of his television.”

Official Monty Python channel launches on YouTube

November 20th, 2008

Check out this great trailer for the new official Monty Python channel on YouTube.

They’re appealing for people who enjoy the channel to buy their stuff. Would you show your appreciation of good YouTube content by paying out for the products?

You know, I think I just might. Visit the channel here and laugh your tits off.

Hypocritical BBC viewers must be stopped

November 19th, 2008

Quite often I find myself getting very irate with BBC viewers. Charlie Brooker summed it up beautifully last night when he said that there needs to be a counter complaint procedure allowing normal people to cancel out the actions of easily-offended, over-excitable humourphobes. 40,000 complaints about Ross/Brand, but no way to support them. Is that fair? I don’t think it is.

Complaints processes are necessary to give viewers a voice. But, as Charlie explained so eloquently, it seems that viewers seem to view their television schedules as a reality TV vote, complaining-off any shows they’re not too keen on, whether they watch them or not.

I agree with Charlie when he suggests that if viewers have the right to complain, they should also have the right to uncomplain. After all, there is no official method of praising a program. In reality TV terms, it would be the same as voting for someone to stay in — rather that just being able to boot them out.

Charlie’s thoughts were obviously comical, but I think the point is serious. We can’t let the vocal BBC complaint-brigade, giddy with power, to dictate who keeps their job and who doesn’t. They’re too hypocritical.

Take the Have Your Say forum, for instance. Right now, it’s alight with comments about John Sergeant quitting Strictly. Here are the top comments, as voted for by Have Your Say readers:

Of course not. The public should decide, and we have decided to keep him in.

Does anyone really believe that this has not happened as a result of the overpayed judges making threats to the producers and John being forced to quit, despite what he is saying publicly.

Yet another disgraceful editorial error from the BBC with the public face and the viewer suffering the consequences.

Daniel Porter Jones, London, United Kingdom

Sergreant succumbed to bullying and age discrimination sanctioned by the BBC. What a shame!

Ellie, London

What a shame John feels he has to leave Strictly. I feel totally cheated after all the votes I’ve cast. The programme shouldn’t invite people on if it doesn’t accept the public could vote an ‘entertainer’ to win over a dancer. That’s it – no more votes from me on Strictly.

K Rogers, Wootton Bassett

In contrast, here’s the top comments from the debate after Daniel’s exit from X-Factor last week:

Who Cares?

EU equals, Extremely Useless

Get a life !!!!

These programmes are total rubbish.

Matt Lamb, Portsmouth, United Kingdom

I ‘ve got talent show fatigue. Fed up, I am.

BB

Am I the only one that thinks discussing this rediculous facade of a program in parliment is in itself rediculous.

The program is a bad example of the entertainment industry’s attempt to make filler instead of getting out there and finding people.

Get this reality rubbish tv off my tv. Now.

Dan, London

Wake up Britain. It’s a talent show. It doesn’t matter.

Harry, Manchester

Just so we’re clear of the rules: Talent shows that old people like are important. Talent shows that young people like are not important.

Likewise, comedians that young people like should be off the air, but comedians that old people like — even offensive ones — are OK.

Say what you will about the merits of X-Factor, but there is no denying it’s as worthy of schedule time as Strictly. Ratings-wise, X-Factor consistently comes out on top — and that’s all that we need to know.

I’m sick of the grumpy minority that, without a proper complaints/praise procedure, are speaking on behalf of all the sane people who just like laugh and watch talent shows. On behalf of the youth of Britain, please shut up.

(Views expressed are solely my own and do not represent those of the BBC. Or John Sergeant.)

Simon Amstell takes on Davis Cup Tennis

November 8th, 2008

Thank you to Media Monkey for this stunner from the archives. May I present to you, appearing on the brilliant GamesMaster, the one and only Simon Amstell:

Fantastic. Thankfully Simon dropped his geeky exterior and became possibly the funniest presenter on TV, no?

Nick Robinson: Can you, will you… answer the question?

November 6th, 2008

Great interrogation of Alistair Darling by the BBC’s political editor Nick Robinson today about the interest rate cut. You can see it here. I’d embed it for you, but the BBC don’t let me (or anyone, for that matter).

BBC Election night: Where it went wrong

November 6th, 2008

Election night was great, wasn’t it? I managed to keep up ‘til about 3am, when Ohio officially came in.

My choice of coverage was the BBC. They did a lot right. But they did a lot wrong.

Jeremy Vine is a man I love to watch — or in his normal day job, listen to — and I was hoping election night would be his time to shine. I called it a coming of age in a piece for NewsWire in New Zealand.

But it was all a bit lost. Early doors — before any results came in — we were facing problems. The producers seemed unable to isolate Dimbleby’s voice out of Vine’s ear when he was using his funky touch screen. On one occasion, Vine whipped his ear-piece out, such was the extent of Dimbleby’s waffling in his ear.

Dimbleby is as much a fixture in election coverage as Peter Snow and his swingometer. But last night he looked tired right from the word go.

Amazingly, he made the most exciting night in world politics in a generation seem rather routine. More should have been made of Pennsylvania, that’s for sure, and when the final presidency-clinching result came in? I almost expected Dimbleby to come out with a cynical “who cares” remark.

I’ve seen the effort involved in the BBC election result service being a great asset to the coverage, but there’s no avoiding the fact it was SLOW on Ohio. Fox called it way before the BBC did. Fortunately, the pundits alongside Dimbleby made the public aware that Fox are unlikely to call a battleground state as Democrat given its fiercely Republican bias. They wouldn’t risk it. But Dimbleby refused to get excited. It wasn’t over until the fat BBC sang. Sadly, the other networks were on the encore while the Beeb was still enjoying the mid-way interval.

But where the American networks triumphed, the BBC innovated, right? Maybe. Their ‘less shouting, more statistics’ approach online was a breath of fresh air. Despite my insistence that tonight was going to be the night of social media and bloggers, I soon grew tired of some of the people online getting ahead of themselves. The BBC gave results, expert comment and quality journalism from the off. Good show. Except Dimbleby who, and the Standard agrees with me here, was off the pace.

Back on the television, we had the blog team. Or rather, two geeky-looking women in Times Square transfixed on their iBooks.

Who were they? We weren’t given so much as URL to check out their stuff. And we knew, before they spoke, that they weren’t great bloggers, or else they’d be working on the election in other, more productive ways.

Had Arianna Huffington been sat there casting an eye on the ‘sphrere then we might have had a reason to listen. But these two randoms offered no insight other than the ability to Google ‘Obama+result+florida” and hope for the best.

At one point, one of the bloggers said “My inside source in Florida says McCain’s lost”. Admittedly, she was right. But then many people predicted it. Here, the blogger was playing big-time journo. Inside source? Nobody says that anymore. If you’re going to say it, back it up. On television, you can’t get away with that sort of ambiguity.

I’m not blasting the role blogs played in this election. No way. I am, of course, a promoter of all things bloggy. I even toyed, today, with making my about page say I’m a social media evangelist — such is my determination that social media is the future of news.

But the BBC got it horribly wrong. These bloggers were little more than people with computers. They let the rest of us down. If the BBC plans to take blogging seriously in its coverage of the UK elections in May, they need to get themselves involved with the big name bloggers. Guido Fawkes springs to mind, but I’d be kidding myself if I thought the Beeb would take the risk.

The viewing figures for the BBC’s coverage were huge, but I hope that doesn’t breed complacency within the team producing the UK election show in May. Just because a lot of people watch it, doesn’t mean your coverage is good. If the World Cup Final was live on one channel and one channel only, then the viewers will be riveted no matter the quality of broadcast.

Yes, British viewers had a healthy choice — but only if they had Sky/Cable. And, since this was a night of bedtime viewing, many would have been restricted to the five trusty channels on analogue telly.

So, to sum up: Must try harder.

On a more cheerful note, well done America. While the front pages of today’s papers really, really sucked (owing to the time restraints), it was a wonderful moment seeing one Evening Standard seller shout “none left” outside Liverpool Street Station tonight.

It was almost as if people had to read it in a newspaper in order to really believe it.

US Election online watcher’s guide

November 4th, 2008

NOTE: This page will be updating regularly from now until God-knows-when. Send me your suggestions here or leave a comment on this post.

Exciting times, folks. The hysteria surrounding these American elections really does make the British politics system Palin comparison. Geddit? (Sorry.)

After a brief Twitter chat with a friend, I thought it would be a good idea to make a little guide to all the best places to follow news and opinion as the action unfolds.

So here we go. If you have suggestions of your own, please comment/Twitter/or email. This is by no means a complete list — more the places I’ll be keeping an eye on as the action unfolds. Items listed in bold are personal recommendations.

VIDEO (streaming) – I’ll try and update these on the night as/when they go live

BBC News Channel (UK ONLY)
BBC US Election special section (Video link to come once online. My colleagues on ‘The Editors’ have explained all the things they have planned)
Sky News – Deadline USA (it’s not online yet, but look out for a CoverItLive! page on Sky, it could be good)
Fox News (US ONLY? Not working for me in UK)
CNN Politics
Al Jazeera English (Al Jazeera is also running this Facebook app)
ABC News (potentially awesome. Loads of video, but no live feed it seems. Judging by the comments on their lead story — 26,000 and counting — ABC could be the place for heated debate)

SOCIAL MEDIA

Twitter Election 08 (good for an overall snapshot, although I’m convinced it’s going to go down during the night)
Digg Elections 08 (great for the more quirky/viral viewpoints)
Election applications on Facebook (official election day ‘event’ is here)
Wikipedia (dedicated section that could be a handy resource… or may descend into mindless vandalism)
TwitterVoteReport (this’ll be the grand old duke tonight. When it’s up it’ll be up, but boy, when it’s down it’ll be very down. Hopefully it can stay alive — fantastic idea)

PRINT

Times Online: White House 2008 (The London Times is so confident in its coverage it’s been forced to take out a Google ad. Ahem)
New York Times: Elections ‘08 (nothing too exceptional here, but it’s hard to knock the quality of writing in the Times)
USA Today: Politics (some real nifty interactive features here. And they’re in partnership with ABC News too, so expect some good video)

WEB

Yahoo! Elections (shaping up to be exceptional coverage. Forums, RSS feeds, blog feeds, interactive quizzes and applications. I’ll have Yahoo! open for much of the night. Hardly surprising they’re expecting a big turnout)
MSNBC Deadline Dashboard (I like the name of this… ‘dashboard’. A dashboard is certainly what it is. Change the page to your heart’s content. And turn the USA blue…)

OPINION + BLOGS

Huffington Post (heavily pro-Obama, but plenty of lively writing from big-name bloggers)
Caucus Blog (New York Times)
Guardian Comment is Free US (more of a group blog feel to it for varying viewpoints)
Guardian Deadline USA
Tomasky (Guardian)
Justin Webb (BBC)
Mof Gimmers (Shiny Media)

SATIRE

The Onion

OTHER

PoliticalBetting.com (have a tipple on the results) » Read more: US Election online watcher’s guide