BBC To Axe 1,000 Jobs In Digital Transformation

BBC To Axe 1,000 Jobs In Digital Transformation

by Joseph Anthony
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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 โ€œbuild a digital-first public service media organisationโ€, the BBC said it would โ€œchange in step with the modern world, giving audiences the content they wantโ€ฆ 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 childrenโ€™s channel CBBC, BBC Four and Radio 4 Extra will stop traditional broadcasting, while โ€œa 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 โ€œa fresh, new, global digital media organisation which has never been seen before.
โ€œWe 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.
โ€œThe 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 UKโ€™s divisive Brexit referendum in 2016 of political bias, and pushing a โ€œwokeโ€, 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 โ€œcultural 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, childrenโ€™s output, drama and music.
But opponents, including rival commercial broadcasters, have long complained the guaranteed funding model, which criminalises non-payers, is unfair.

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