BBC Director General Floats Concerning Vision Of Future Where 'People Don't Care' About Nation's Oldest Public Broadcaster
The BBC makes the UK front pages almost every day but Director General Tim Davie isn't so worried about that.
Instead, he floated a more worrying vision of the future this morning where 'people don't care' about the nation's public broadcaster.
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'We should not take people caring for granted,' he said. 'Institutions are in big trouble if they assume engagement and there is any degree of talk [around them not caring]. We are absolutely the classic patriarchal broadcast organization. The worry is a mainstream weaponization where people don't care [about the BBC].'
Davie said he is fine with the BBC making headlines, which he described as 'one of the joys of our free press… let' celebrate the fact people care.'
'Neighbors talk to me about what's going on and who's going to host Match of the Day, and lots more' added Davie. 'But it's the 10 people on the other side of the room who don't care that I'm worrying about.'
Davie also issued a plea for a new BBC funding mechanism to 'protect national IP' and end an era of 'begrudging, grinding cuts.'
As charter renewal in 2027 and the possible end of the license fee draws ever close, Davie told the conference today that 'if we drift the way we are now we will be in a crisis' and so quick decisions are required.
He was speaking at the Deloitte and Enders Media & Telecoms 2025 and Beyond Conference after Sky boss Dana Strong and before Netflix EMEA chief Larry Tanz and UK Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy.
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Anvee Bhutani — Reporting Intern at The Wall Street Journal
Anvee Bhutani is a reporting intern and part of the summer 2025 newsroom intern class at The Wall Street Journal's London bureau. Anvee has reported across four continents, from the aftermath of the Moroccan earthquake and Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon to the U.S.-Mexico border and the Muslim minority in India. At the University of Oxford, her investigation into sexual misconduct by professors who remained in their posts sparked national media coverage and led to university policy reforms. Most recently, she has been a contributing reporter with the New York Times, covering the government crackdown on higher education. Anvee previously worked with the BBC, the Telegraph and Channel 4. She also has interned at CNN and MSNBC, where she was part of the Emmy-nominated 2024 election night coverage. Her bylines have appeared in the Guardian, Teen Vogue and more. A graduate of Columbia Journalism School with honors and the University of Oxford, Anvee was editor in chief of her university paper and served as student body president. She speaks Hindi and Spanish fluently, with working knowledge of French and Arabic.