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(FILES) In this file photo taken on October 30, 2017 A general view of the headquarters of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) in London on October 30, 2017. Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS / AFP |
The BBC is to axe 1,000 jobs and scrap some broadcast channels in traditional form as it prioritises digital and copes with a funding freeze, the British public service broadcaster said on Thursday.
Aiming to โbuild a digital-first public service media organisationโ, the BBC said it would โchange in step with the modern world, giving audiences the content they wantโฆ in the ways they want itโ.
The network will create a single 24-hour television news channel serving the UK and abroad, absorbing BBC World.
Channels including childrenโs channel CBBC, BBC Four and Radio 4 Extra will stop traditional broadcasting, while โa numberโ of World Service language services will become digital only.
Director-General Tim Davie made a speech to BBC staff on Thursday in which he hailed โa fresh, new, global digital media organisation which has never been seen before.
โWe need to evolve faster and embrace the huge shifts in the market around us,โ he told them.
The first phase of the changes, including job cuts, will save ยฃ500 million (585 million euros, $630 million) a year, ยฃ200 million of which will help offset the ยฃ285 million funding gap caused by the government earlier this year freezing the television licence fee.
โThe BBC will also reinvest ยฃ300 million to drive a digital-first approach, through changes to content and output and additional commercial income,โ a statement said.
Further details are to be announced in the coming months, said the BBC, which marks its centenary this year.
The broadcaster has faced increasing claims from right-wingers since the UKโs divisive Brexit referendum in 2016 of political bias, and pushing a โwokeโ, London-centric liberal agenda.
The BBC, founded by Royal Charter and operating independently of government, has faced similar accusations from the political left.
Critics accused Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries of โcultural vandalismโ and wrecking a world-renowned British institution when she announced the licence-fee freeze.
The fee โ payable by every household with a television set โ funds BBC television, radio and online services, as well as programming, many of which are exported commercially worldwide.
Supporters maintain the fee โ currently ยฃ159 for a colour TV โ provides excellent value for money, and a range of services from news and current affairs to wildlife documentaries, childrenโs output, drama and music.
But opponents, including rival commercial broadcasters, have long complained the guaranteed funding model, which criminalises non-payers, is unfair.