Quizzes & Puzzles11 mins ago
TV Licensing
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Would you subscribe to the BBC? After hearing a very interesting debate on the radio the other day, I was wondering how many people would, if the license fee was abolished and the BBC had to rely on subscription fees, actually subscibe to the BBC? The price would remain the same ( �120 or �10 a month ) but would you pay for it if you had the choice?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Certainly would. I'd pay even more if they were to take ITV and ITV2 off the air. To call them TV stations is a travesty of the English language. The programme planners have as much imagination as a stuffed duck-billed platypus. Cilla's been there since the dawn of time and if I see one more contrived video of someone having an "accident" I'll scream.
No I would not pay it. The only thing I ever watch on BBC is Eastenders and that's rubbish these days too. I also pay �10 a month for my share of Sky TV at home, to pay an additional �10 just for the privilege of the BBC channels when there hundreds of other channels to choose from is a bit of a no-brainer. I wish they would change it to subscription only though.......
I certainly would subscribe so long as it remained ad free. The number and length of ad breaks on the commercial channels has noticably increased and will soon be at the level they are in the US, with an hour long programme having 6-8 ad breaks, including one right after the opening credits and right before the closing credits! I think the license fee is worth every penny and would gladly pay for ad-free programming to continue.
I would, but it will be interesting if the idea comes to fruition. TV has evolved into a particulalry difficult set of circumstances - the BBC is bound by its public service remit, and its responsibility to its licnese payers, ITV is bound by its obligations to its advetisers. Thus, both skate an increasingly think line between obligation and entertainment - compounded by increasing choice, and the inevitable take of the market share by 'lowest common denominator' TV outlets. The BBC would be obliged to provide what people really do want to watch, but beware of what you wish for - we may see a sharp downward turn in the quality of output, and a reduction in more cultural output which could not be sustained by a majority subscription approach. The answer? I'm really happy I just get to observe and coment, and not have to put my career on the line by getting it wrong.