Difference between revisions of "Changing Channels"
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− | The most nonsensical row at the BBC was the row over Doctor Who. I took Doctor Who off for being too violent, and it was decided not to make the reason public at the beginning because we didn't want to start a whole violence debate, although it seemed to me a perfectly good reason to take a programme off that was going out at five o'clock on a Saturday evening with kids watching. Bill Cotton and I didn't bother to tell the Governors, and the tabloids got hold of it and there was 'GRADE AXES DOCTOR WHO' and all that stuff—millions crying in the streets, civil unrest, etc, etc. The Governors went absolutely potty about this completely fabricated nonsense. What that told me was that the Governors were taking their agenda from a hysterical circulation war in Fleet Street. The fact that Doctor Who was one of the least popular programmes in the whole of the BBC canon, nothing to with it, the fact that it was taken off because it was too violent, nothing to do with it. They just saw those big headlines in all the newspapers, and instinctively reacted. It was only an issue because they made it an issue. | + | The most nonsensical row at the BBC was the row over Doctor Who. {{1985 hiatus|I took Doctor Who off for being too violent}}, and it was decided not to make the reason public at the beginning because we didn't want to start a whole violence debate, although it seemed to me a perfectly good reason to take a programme off that was going out at five o'clock on a Saturday evening with kids watching. Bill Cotton and I didn't bother to tell the Governors, and the tabloids got hold of it and there was 'GRADE AXES DOCTOR WHO' and all that stuff—millions crying in the streets, civil unrest, etc, etc. The Governors went absolutely potty about this completely fabricated nonsense. What that told me was that the Governors were taking their agenda from a hysterical circulation war in Fleet Street. The fact that Doctor Who was one of the least popular programmes in the whole of the BBC canon, nothing to with it, the fact that it was taken off because it was too violent, nothing to do with it. They just saw those big headlines in all the newspapers, and instinctively reacted. It was only an issue because they made it an issue. |
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