Many years ago when a student on vac work, picking sprouts on a local farm, next to an A road, an ITV crew arrived asking for info on snow blocked roads. After some thought we sent them off to a rail bridge over a deep sunk narrow lane, that often fills with drifted snow. That night, ITV news reported "roads to Thanet blocked" along with pictures of the snow filled bridge. That gives an idea of how news coverage works. Not long before, at school, we examined the same story in every newspaper published that day, to see how the same event spurs different language, and how different types of reader might respond. News has always required a little thought, especially if it stirs up emotions, one of which is panic.
Businesses round here are having to put up with delayed / no delivery of goods. There are vast numbers of containers waiting to dock and deliver. Farm slaughter of animals has begun as the fresh meat processors who kill butcher and prepack are running slow, and unpicked veg is being ploughed in. There is a combined covid/brexit problem, which will probably end up with a quiet issuing of more temporary visas for E european workers, or more food imports; it's a govt. decision either way. Our Xmas dinner is already in the freezer.
The licence is for your TV - at least in theory. We used to have a radio licence, even if you only listened to radio Luxemburg. The govt wanted to keep tabs on who had comms!
The Beeb is already short of cash, which doesn't help, as it's trying to max on viewers, which as the Sun knows, requires "populist" journalism. I think the World Service (radio) arm of the Beeb is probably the best source of plain news. As a pensioner I grew up with the BBC, and compared with news channels in the USA (we have rellies there) it is still a paragon of virtue. But it's not as good as it was, and the technical stuff is often dumbed down compared to the early days of BBC2. Now paying again, as the free tv perk has gone, only because of some good stuff on BBC4. If that went, so would I, and go streaming only of other channels.
Businesses round here are having to put up with delayed / no delivery of goods. There are vast numbers of containers waiting to dock and deliver. Farm slaughter of animals has begun as the fresh meat processors who kill butcher and prepack are running slow, and unpicked veg is being ploughed in. There is a combined covid/brexit problem, which will probably end up with a quiet issuing of more temporary visas for E european workers, or more food imports; it's a govt. decision either way. Our Xmas dinner is already in the freezer.
The licence is for your TV - at least in theory. We used to have a radio licence, even if you only listened to radio Luxemburg. The govt wanted to keep tabs on who had comms!
The Beeb is already short of cash, which doesn't help, as it's trying to max on viewers, which as the Sun knows, requires "populist" journalism. I think the World Service (radio) arm of the Beeb is probably the best source of plain news. As a pensioner I grew up with the BBC, and compared with news channels in the USA (we have rellies there) it is still a paragon of virtue. But it's not as good as it was, and the technical stuff is often dumbed down compared to the early days of BBC2. Now paying again, as the free tv perk has gone, only because of some good stuff on BBC4. If that went, so would I, and go streaming only of other channels.