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Topics Covered
- Public service broadcasting
- BBC
- Democracy
- State broadcasting
- Independence in reporting
- Freedom of speech
- Conspiracy theories
- Soft power
- International broadcasting
- Funding
- Vulnerability to politics
- Creative content
- The Great British Bake-Off
- FCC fairness doctrine
- Impartiality
Biography
Patrick Barwise is Emeritus Professor of Management and Marketing at London Business School. He joined LBS in 1976 after an early career at IBM and has published widely on management, marketing and media. He is also former Chairman of Which?, Europe’s largest consumer organization; Chairman of the Archive of Market and Social Research; an Honorary Fellow of The Marketing Society; a Patron of The Market Research Society; an experienced expert witness in international commercial, tax and competition cases; and an advisor to, and early investor in, several successful online business start-ups.
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Talk Citation
Barwise, P. (2022, July 7). The purpose of public service broadcasting in a democracy [Audio file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 23, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/IOPH3712.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Other Talks in the Playlist: Interviews with business leaders and scholars
Transcript
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0:00
Interviewer: Today, I'm speaking
to Professor Patrick Barwise,
Emeritus Professor of
Management and Marketing
at the London Business School,
about public service
broadcasting in a democracy.
Professor Barwise is the author,
together with Peter York,
of "The War Against the
BBC: How an Unprecedented
Unprecedented Combination
of Hostile Forces
is Destroying Britain's
greatest Cultural Institution
...And Why You Should Care".
It was published by
Penguin in November 2020.
Professor Barwise, public
service broadcasting
must navigate difficult
waters between
two rocks on which
it can flounder,
independence and funding.
To start with a basic question,
why should public service
broadcasting exist?
Prof. Barwise: When we talk
about public service broadcasting,
we really mean broadcasters,
national broadcasters,
which are licensed by their
governments with two requirements.
One is to be universally available
to the people in that country,
and the other is to cover a
broader range of programmes
than if they were simply
trying to maximise
their audiences by doing
only entertainment.
Those two requirements,
the inclusion of
public service content
as well as
entertainment content,
as well as being
universally available,
are a really important part
of most people's lives in
countries with strong public
service broadcasters,