Quizzes & Puzzles67 mins ago
TV Licence - fair or not?
27 Answers
Am I right in thinking that my TV licence fee all goes to the BBC?
Don't get me wrong I watch BBC but after thinking about it - I watch more ITV overall.
The BBC don't show adverts (except for their own progs...obviously ) & to be honest the ad breaks on itv come in handy for wee breaks/kettle on etc.
Do you think the licence should be dropped & the BBC should start financing through adverts?
Don't get me wrong I watch BBC but after thinking about it - I watch more ITV overall.
The BBC don't show adverts (except for their own progs...obviously ) & to be honest the ad breaks on itv come in handy for wee breaks/kettle on etc.
Do you think the licence should be dropped & the BBC should start financing through adverts?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Spikey88. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There is a finite amount of advertising revenue to go round - and if the BBC took a share too it would be very thinly spread.
And I don't want my programme content dictated to buy advertisers and sponsors. Being licence funded means the BBC does not have to worry about offending potential sponsors and can be more unbiased.
Don't forget the political parties are all funded by multi - millionaires who have their fingers in lots of pies - and businesses that provide the advertising revenue.
We need independent channels.
And I don't want my programme content dictated to buy advertisers and sponsors. Being licence funded means the BBC does not have to worry about offending potential sponsors and can be more unbiased.
Don't forget the political parties are all funded by multi - millionaires who have their fingers in lots of pies - and businesses that provide the advertising revenue.
We need independent channels.
TV license ......
BBC need to take their heads out of their a$$es and actually put something worth watching on !!!
great....
eastenders (how i wish it would end),
weakest link (seriously does anybody watch that anymore?)
Dancing on lavatory seats ,
strictly b*****s etc etc etc ,
yep brilliant tv. zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
i now no longer pay my tv license, the BBC can eat a d1ck.
my reason for not doing so-
almighty god speaks to me and gives me messages / orders.....
but only through the TV as he doesnt have a physical presence.
BBC need to take their heads out of their a$$es and actually put something worth watching on !!!
great....
eastenders (how i wish it would end),
weakest link (seriously does anybody watch that anymore?)
Dancing on lavatory seats ,
strictly b*****s etc etc etc ,
yep brilliant tv. zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
i now no longer pay my tv license, the BBC can eat a d1ck.
my reason for not doing so-
almighty god speaks to me and gives me messages / orders.....
but only through the TV as he doesnt have a physical presence.
Corby has a valid thought there. However, it's about choice and our right to exercise choice. With the license laws, we actually are compelled to participate whether we wish to engage with any part of the Beeb or not. Personally, I rather like the way the yanks operate their PBS, through sponsorships and annual member drives. However, through the few things I've seen this past year on the BBC, I've had numerous rhetorical arguments about whether the Beeb may somehow be receiving benefit in kind through 'product-placements' as is clearl exhibited in some shows... crum...they've been rather unforthcoming over several issues recently and been caught out...I wonder whether there might be more to come....
The fee of �135 is not fair on students. I think there should be a discount. My son currently in uni digs is missing the tv, but on his budget he cannot afford it just yet. And when he does the licence runs for a year, he his hoping to be back home by July, so he would have paid for some months for nothing!
If you subscibe to satellite/cable barring a couple of channels (mainly sky 1) its a load of old tosh and repeats anyway.
Nothing like watching a film on ITV and it was continued after the news lol although they probably dont do it any more.
Would BBC every bring you anything as crass as Big Brother?
Nothing like watching a film on ITV and it was continued after the news lol although they probably dont do it any more.
Would BBC every bring you anything as crass as Big Brother?
>BBC need to take their heads out of their a$$es and actually put something worth watching on !!!
Yes its all rubbish isn't it.
Coast, Who do you think you are, Restoration, Anything with David Attenborough, Dr Who, the Michael Palin series, How we built Britain, drama, comedy, the list is endless.
Anyone who does not think the BBC is a bastion for quality TV, or cant find anything to watch on BBC, is a moron.
Yes its all rubbish isn't it.
Coast, Who do you think you are, Restoration, Anything with David Attenborough, Dr Who, the Michael Palin series, How we built Britain, drama, comedy, the list is endless.
Anyone who does not think the BBC is a bastion for quality TV, or cant find anything to watch on BBC, is a moron.
We have a number of organizations in the UK that are the envy of the world (National Trust etc), and the BBC is one of them.
Look at comedy, how many good comedy shows have ITV produced ? At a push, you can count them on the fingers of one hand.
Admittedly Channel 4 have turned out quite a few in the last few years (Father Ted being a prime example).
But BBC's list of classic comedy is huge.
You have the Goons and Hancock of the 1950s, then Steptoe and son, Alf Garnett, Monty Python, Fawlty Towers, Dads Army, Blackadder, Fry and Laurie, Vicar of Dibley, Absolutely Fabulous, Fast Show, Little Britain, Alan Partridge, The Office, Are you being served, Only Fools and Horses, and on and on.
The BBC are one the great British institutions.
Look at comedy, how many good comedy shows have ITV produced ? At a push, you can count them on the fingers of one hand.
Admittedly Channel 4 have turned out quite a few in the last few years (Father Ted being a prime example).
But BBC's list of classic comedy is huge.
You have the Goons and Hancock of the 1950s, then Steptoe and son, Alf Garnett, Monty Python, Fawlty Towers, Dads Army, Blackadder, Fry and Laurie, Vicar of Dibley, Absolutely Fabulous, Fast Show, Little Britain, Alan Partridge, The Office, Are you being served, Only Fools and Horses, and on and on.
The BBC are one the great British institutions.