Thursday, April 16, 2026

Katz flap

Ian Katz and incoming C4 CEO Priya Dogra have had about four weeks to look each other in the eye around Horseferry Road, and, well, Ian Katz is leaving in September. 

Priya marked her start in job with a joint drinks for women in the creative industries and  the launch of A Woman Of Substance at No 11 Downing Street, assuming the royal 'we' for commissioning the show - a decision taken a year before her arrival. 

Ian Katz' departure announcement names almost every programme he's commissioned over nine years, and a statement that he'll be commissioing right up to his last day... 

Apart, presumably, from having the odd chat with Matt Brittin. 

Welcome Matt

A month to go til the formal appearance of new Director General Matt Brittin walking into Broadcasting House, where, even before yesterday's job cut announcement, only 34% of staff had confidence in the Corporation's Executive leadership team. 

Some may remember the headlines from 2022/23 when Rhodri Talfan Davies so adroitly steered BBC Local Radio into the shedding ring, and picked a remaining few to deliver dash-cam footage and detailed investigations like "A red kite took my mother-in-law's sausage roll" to BBC News Online. It was Rhodri who announced the cuts target yesterday - timed so you can spend your summer holidays worrying whether you'll be in the shedding ring in September. Rhodri also announced a recruitment freeze, a ban on travel when a virtual meeting will do, and an eagle eye on consultancy spend. 

The last jobs under the wire for the recruitment freeze include a Senior Journalist, Growth, BBC Local ("You will work on growth projects to increase the reach and impact of BBC Local’s digital output by using levers and strategies to improve discoverability of our content for target audience groups.") and a £60k pa HR Operations Lead. 

Virtual meetings will change Rhodri's life: left, his travel bookings for the last three months of 2025, when he was just running AI. 







On consultants, maybe Matt should show the door to Boston Consulting and Price Waterhouse Cooper, as the BBC merges Technology and Product, having only split them up four years ago.  And remind me of the results of Change Associates involvement in improving BBC Culture ?

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Dead posh

If Radio 5Live was really 'Radio Bloke', Track Radio is set to be 'Radio Posh Bloke'. It's a weekday 7am to 7pm DAB Radio stream coming to London from 4th May.  The money is coming from Zac and Ben Goldsmith, and Balthazar Fabricius, founder of Fitzdares Bookmakers and on the board of The Walpole Committee, a non-for-profit outfit promoting British luxury goods. 

The presenter line-up includes always-natty Mark Pougatch at Drive, Vassos Alexander & Charlotte Daly on Breakfast, Sanny Rudravajhala from 10 til 1, and Sonja McLaughlan on Afternoons. John Inverdale is an adviser, the main fixer is Ian McIntosh, driver of the old Totally Football group of podcasts (now sold to The Athletic).  They will play records, but there's no sign yet of a music policy; perhaps that's why Jonathan Arendt of Jazz FM fame has come on board. 

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Up and down

All Perspectives (but more of some than others) will be pleased with a March monthly reach of 4.2m (their sole product is GB News). It's up from 3.6m in February, and looks to be their highest figure since this method of reporting started a year ago. 

BBC tv reached 48.4m in March 2026, compared with 49.9m in March last year. 

Less Shah

Minutes of the BBC Board's Editorial Standards and Guidelines Committee, from January mark two big changes.  The BBC's Director General, editor-in-chief, Tim Davie didn't attend. Nor did the BBC Chairman, Samir Shah. 

Dr Shah took the decision to chair this Committee from May 2024, as independent director Sir Nick Serota moved on; in less than a year, it was the starting point for a row that eventually unseated the DG and the Director of News, as the good doctor dithered. 

So now it's farewell ESGC, hello ESC, chaired by senior independent director Caroline Thomson.  The senior BBC executive at the last meeting was Rhodri Talfan Davies, who must be hoping that, by now, Matt Brittin has been convinced to anoint him as Deputy Director General, with only the mechanics to be worked out... 

Monday, April 13, 2026

Less is more

Here's one cultural change I'd like from new BBC Director General Matt Brittin. Ease off on the marketing-by-numbers.  Nearly every BBC1 junction features one 'branding' piece, one generic iPlayer 'awareness' piece and an old fashioned 'trail'.  The messaging is mixed; we proudly make programmes around the UK; we're very grateful to those of you who pay the licence fee; we are the 'home' of .... (fill in as necessary). Government information films might be less repetitive.  Add to this, trails masquerading as news on the 6.00pm bulletin, and The One Show, often 75% trails, at least half for BBC product. 

The emerging truth is that viewers are finding their own way to good content through the recommendations of family, friends and work colleagues, in the way we used to discuss books to read and films to see. The first episode of "Small Prophets", over the first seven days in mid-February, reached 4.4m viewers; it has added 2.2m viewers over the following three weeks.  "The Other Bennet Sister" started off at 4.7m over its first seven days.  I'll predict it'll add 2m over three weeks. 

Friday, April 10, 2026

Tall boy

Incoming BBC Director General Matt Brittin was spotted in the Temple of Doom main newsroom on the lower ground floor of Broadcasting House. 

I say 'spotted'; his 1.9m height was surrounded at its base by a rolling maul of News' 'Senior Leaders'....

Thursday, April 9, 2026

All change

Students of how transformation happens at the BBC will have already discovered from declared expenses that COO Leigh Tavaziva, Chief Product Officer Storm Fagan and Peter O'Kane, now departed Chief Technology Officer, travelled to Seattle and Los Angeles business class in March last year. 

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Deduction

The 1978 version of "Death On The Nile", with Peter Ustinov as Poirot, was out again on BBC2 this weekend (and thus for another month on iPlayer).  It would interesting to know it's cumulative BBC audience over 16 appearances. 

 


Sunday, April 5, 2026

Ear ear

Radio futurologist James Cridland has just updated his very useful post about how to listen to BBC Radio abroad - network stations and local.  Live, not catch-up, available from a webpage that seems to have taken nine months to construct. 



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