Countryfile : Free advertising for Adam!

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

flanajb

Established Member
UKW Supporter
Joined
11 Mar 2009
Messages
1,321
Reaction score
11
My Wife watches this program and I get really annoyed with the Farmer called Adam as he has grown a successful business off the back of this programme and he has basically received free advertising and most likely been paid for his time.

Apparently, you have to pay to go to his visitor centre

This is licence payers money that is funding his business. I don't agree with that
 
yeh like subsidies aren't our money also.
My landlord gets over £250000 a year for not growing stuff.....
 
You cant blame the chap, he's only doing what any of us would do and cash in on his popularity, didn't hugh fearnly whitingstall do a similar thing...
 
Good Luck to him, nice work if you can get it.

No skills has hit the nail on the head, £5 million investigation into a dead criminal. Bumper payouts for senior management, Eastenders, Landgirls, Royal baby coverage the list goes on and on. Adam is very near the bottom of that list.

Speaking of the royal baby, did anyone see this weeks private eye cover. Big letters WOMAN HAS BABY small letters at the bottom Inside: Some other stuff
 
Get real - he's a Tenant Farmer who works part time as a presenter on Countryfile.

Good luck to him - people don't have to go to his farm - why should it be free?

Rod
 
That's most unfair.

If Countryfile has been going since 1988 then Adam's dad, Joe Henson MBE was farming long before that & set up the Cotswold Farm Park in 1971.

We used to take the kids on a picnic there when they were little & we all thoroughly enjoyed it.

IIRC, although you paid an entry fee it was much cheaper than nearly all the other local attactions. Just looked at the prices & they have gone up somewhat : Adult £8.50, Child £7.50

Website - http://cotswoldfarmpark.co.uk/visit-us/
 
Adam Henson is firstly, a working farmer, secondly, an enthusiast for rare breeds of farm animals, and thirdly a Countryside presenter. I suspect the BBC chose his farm for a number of reasons; it's a mixed farm, which is now unusual, he has a great variety of breeds, which adds interest, and his farm is fairly familiar with television production since his father Joe has been involved in publicising the Rare Breeds Trust and it's work for many years.

I don't have a great deal of liking for Countryfile, as it's the typical BBC sanitised and politically correct view of country matters. It's more like a persentation of how rich townies can use the countryside as a playground than a serious review of current countryside affairs. However, Henson is a redeeming factor among the preening luvvies and sanctimonious townie presenters; at least he's a working farmer with a real enthusiasm for portraying agriculture not just on his own farm, but more widely round the country. He's by far the best of a rather poor bunch.
 
flanajb":39u8vigx said:
My Wife watches this program and I get really annoyed with the Farmer called Adam as he has grown a successful business off the back of this programme and he has basically received free advertising and most likely been paid for his time.

Apparently, you have to pay to go to his visitor centre

This is licence payers money that is funding his business. I don't agree with that

No better/worse/different to Animal Park (Longleat), Zoo Keepers (Paignton), Monkey Life (Monkey World), Animal Rescue (Battersea)...

BugBear
 
Mr_P":2a4tfjq6 said:
Speaking of the royal baby, did anyone see this weeks private eye cover. Big letters WOMAN HAS BABY small letters at the bottom Inside: Some other stuff
:lol: :lol: :lol:
 
There's a small campsite attached to his farm. The GF and I stayed a few days last year. Did some lovely walks in the area, and looked at his rare breeds over the fence. Very nice.
 
I didn't realise, until reading this thread, that Adam was Joe Henson's son. Never met Adam, but I was privileged to work on some of the programmes that featured his dad, way back in the early 1980s.

Mr. Henson senior I remember as a quiet, patient and charming man. TV production of that sort is invariably a lot of hanging around waiting for other people to do their stuff, and thus stressful and tedious - frustrating if you're waiting around, and stressful if it's you holding everything up! Joe Henson was one of those contributors that made the job enjoyable, not just for the content, but the people one worked alongside.

If Adam's a chip off the old block, I hope he does very well.

If you want to go after BBC commercial tie-ups, start with Radio One. It's always had a reputation for big money splashing around (from the music business). I doubt that's changed. And those 'privileged' to live close enough to Worthy Farm, but outside the Area of Patronage, still have sleep interrupted by throbbing bass, crops damaged by convoys of hippies, clagged-up roads, "petty" crime such as house break-ins, and lots more 'benefits'.

Last year (2012) the BBC sent around 300 people (274 technicians plus artists). I wonder how much they pay the Eavis empire for that, never mind the fees to the artists. Yet, if they didn't plug it so extensively (every station, for months before the event), I wonder if it would be a sell-out every year.

In that context, Adam Henson's farm is nothing. And I have no doubt which one is better for the environment, too.

E.
 
bugbear":3bryqtmj said:
Eric The Viking":3bryqtmj said:
... crops damaged by convoys of hippies...

Surely hippies are at one with nature (man) and wouldn't so such a thing.

:lol:

BugBear

Sadly, the modern Islington part-time hippie is not always as clued up about countryside matters as might have been the case in the good old days.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top