Forget all the dodgy opinion polls, petitions and the ceaseless whining of Hacked Off. We have now got to the heart of the matter and there is more than a decent chance that Leveson could, against all the odds, turn out well for both the press and the public, says Raymond Snoddy.
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You don’t have to be an accountancy wonk to find pleasure, surprise and a touch of salaciousness hidden among the pages of the latest annual survey of agencies’ financial performance. For there, laid out in all their glory – and some gore – are the financial secrets of a host of agencies…
Right at the heart of the matter is a piece of almost medieval theology. This, the dogmatic judge insists, is not statutory regulation, nor could it reasonably or fairly be described as statutory regulation. The judge is wrong. It could and it is – but it has to be made clear in what way.
The Leveson report is just what the BBC needs right now. The Corporation is likely to be only tangentially involved and the attention of the press and the political classes will be engaged for weeks. Under this cover changes can be made and the BBC can prepare for longer term battles.
Preliminary skirmishes are hotting up in the battle for the future of press regulation as Lord Justice Leveson prepares to publish his long-awaited report – and the increasingly bitter salvoes are starting to get very ugly.
As newspapers relish in the great embarrassments of the BBC there are still important points to consider before Lord Justice Leveson sends his report to the printers, particuarly when it comes to regulation, writes Raymond Snoddy.
When the Savile/Newsnight story first broke, Raymond Snoddy feared for the Director General’s future and asked: “Could it be that the BBC will finally get, rather sooner than expected, what many people thought it should have had all along – its first woman director-general?” Today he sees no reason to change that view.
Starcom MediaVest’s head of thought leadership, Steve Smith, outlines the opportunities presented by Smart TVs.
Raymond Snoddy explores the growing complexity around broadcast and programme rights.
Greg Grimmer: LinkedIn has always been discussed in quite derogatory terms by the agency world.
