(09-08-2013 21:05 )babelover48 Wrote: I'd rather they were disbanded if the tories lost the next election!!
Yet was it possible that OFCOM was the ITC re-branded as the government felt the ITC was too weak to operate?
I suspect Ofcom and the ITC are two very different beasts, even if some of the staff worked in both. The ITC lacked independence, was small, secretive, and ruled with a rod of iron. If it said something was banned, it was banned, never mind detailed rules. Benny Hill was dropped by Thames because of a hint that the content no longer matched the sprit of the times - regardless of complaints. But if they approved something it stayed approved, newspaper campaign or not.
By claiming to be impartial and objective Ofcom paradoxically made it easier to get material banned. "No genital detail" can mean whatever they want to mean - inner labia, outer labia, thigh even - and if someone complains Ofcom say but it is all based on public consultation and published rules.
The other thing was that the ITC could issue blanket bans in advance as well as demanding to see a show before broadcast. Ofcom refuse to say in advance if a show breaks the rules, encouraging broadcasters to play safe.
A small tightly knit group of regulators, with no time for pissing about and proper jobs to get back to were replaced with an unwieldy committee of placemen and a small army of civil servants with nothing else to do. 2 years to evaluate a complaint and decide a fine for encouraging religious based killing? Nipple sucking allowed in ads for encrypted channels (TVX, on right now) but not in a free show? And what about the Confused.com advert where Brian the robot disturbs a couple having a blowjob in a country lane. I suspect the ITCs lack of transparency and accountability would have allowed them to cut right through dual standards and make their feelings well known. Did they pander to public opinion by harassing shows no one complained about? Course not. I doubt they would have given 10,000 complaints a year house room, and only bothered with 10 real, serious complaints a month.
I don't know about the ITC, but Ofcom and the Content Committee are not even remotely representative of ordinary people, as intended by Parliament, and also lack experience if the sort of program that will attract complaints, namely drama. Ex senior civil servants, management consultants, university lecturers, journalists, animation experts, radio editors, documentary makers, telecom experts, business administrators (at broadcasters), in what way are these people specially experienced to pronounce judgement on tricky offence issues in a child abuse scene in Eastenders, or sexual content during an important plot point in Game of Thrones? Or graphic but relevant violence in a docudrama about a serial killer? Any one see Apocolypse Now recently on ITV? A real life ox gets slaughtered for real and the cut open carcass can be seen while it lies dying. But that parallels the horror of war.
How does "leading editorial and business process change across the organisation as well as being responsible for performance measurement and evaluation" qualify someone to decide what is appropriate for broadcast, to pick just one example.
Different beasts, each with downsides, but different. Must go now, got an early flight. Any urgent questions to SB in my absence.