
BBC boss supports ‘reform' to funding of broadcaster
The Government is set to launch the review of the BBC's Charter, looking at how it should be funded, after committing to increasing the licence fee in line with inflation each year until 2027.
In April, there was a rise from £169.50 to £174.50 in the household charge, after years in which the licence fee was first frozen and then increased at a slower rate than the BBC expected, leaving the corporation increasingly cash-strapped amid rising inflation.
At the Media and Telecoms 2025 and Beyond Conference, from Enders Analysis and Deloitte, in London on Tuesday, Mr Davie said: 'I want to justify the value that we have. I want that protected.
'I think there is reform (needed) in terms of potential (changes to the) licence fee, how progressive it is, and you'll debate the enforcement question.'
He added that he does 'not want the same system' in the future, but said: 'I do want universal funding, and I want a proper investigation of begrudging, grinding cuts that we've seen over the last 10 years, which has just not helped.'
Mr Davie also told the event, at Convene Sancroft in the St Paul's area, that he is concerned about the people who 'don't care' about the BBC and are 'disengaged', rather than people who criticise the corporation.
He said he wants to 'celebrate the fact that people care', as the BBC features heavily on 'front pages' in the UK.
Mr Davie also indicated he was positive about the use of artificial intelligence (AI), before saying the BBC has 'very big ambition around the media supply chain' including the 'need for muscular partnerships with the big American technology companies'.
Later, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy told the event she is 'determined to find a way forward that works for the creative industry and creators' and technology companies after Sir Elton John and Sir Paul McCartney criticised the Government's AI plans.
She added that 'there are no easy solutions, but this Government is determined to work with you to find a solution with transparency and trust as its foundation'.
'We are a Labour Government, and the principle that people must be paid for their work is foundational,' the MP for Wigan added.
'And you have our word that if it doesn't work for the creative industries, it will not work for us. People are at the heart of this industry.'
She also promised that the BBC Charter review will be launched 'later this year to support a BBC that is empowered to continue to deliver a vital public service funded in a sustainable way'.
Ms Nandy said: 'Later this month, we'll publish a creative industries sector plan to turbo-charge the growth of creative industries right across the UK, to support film and TV clusters from Birmingham to Belfast, to tap into the huge potential of the growth that exists across our country.'
In another session at the same conference, Kevin Lygo, managing director of ITV's media and entertainment division, spoke about the need for 'prominence' for the UK's national broadcasters amid their increased competition with streaming companies.
He said: 'I think you have to go back to first principles, because all this discussion is based on the programme itself being worth watching. So I think that's the key for major broadcasters is to never lose sight of making them.'
Mr Lygo also appeared to confirm that the hit ITV drama Mr Bates Vs The Post Office, which shone a greater spotlight on the Horizon IT scandal, is starting to become a commercial success, following multiple actors, including Toby Jones, saying that they took a pay cut to be on the show.
Mr Lygo said it is 'harder and harder to find the budgets', and admitted that at first, it was difficult to explain a series 'about a computer hitch in the British Post Office' to foreign buyers.
'The UK is in this wonderful position when a show really works in the UK, everybody across the world knows about it and wants a piece of it,' he said.
'So, yes, I'm sure, I don't know exactly (the profit) by the production company, but I'm sure they've got their investment back.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


North Wales Chronicle
33 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Clarkson's Farm series 4 finale unmasks Farmer's Dog issues
The popular reality TV series follows former Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson and his crew as they navigate new challenges and projects at Diddly Squat Farm. The last two episodes of series four, which will be uploaded to Prime Video on June 6, will show Clarkson's preparations for the pub's opening as he receives help from his co-star Kaleb Cooper. Series 4 of Clarkson's Farm. Who do we like most? Endgame? Or Richard Ham? In episode seven, titled Hurrying, Clarkson, 65, realises that the August bank holiday weekend, which is when he is due to open the pub, is a week earlier than he thought. In the next episode, titled Landlording, last-minute problems are spotted and sorted as Clarkson and Cooper hang up the pub's sign, signalling that the establishment is open for business. Photos from the series show Clarkson hanging foliage in the pub with another image showing a long queue of customers outside the venue. The pub, formerly known as The Windmill, is located in Asthall, near Burford in Oxfordshire, and was reopened by Clarkson on August 23 2024. Clarkson sells his own Hawkstone lager in the venue and wanted to have all of the produce sold there grown or reared by British farmers. In a post to the pub's website, he said that ingredients like quinine in tonic water cannot be grown in Britain but emphasised that they are 'doing all we possibly can to support British farming'. Recommended reading: The new series has seen Clarkson dealing with a range of livestock – from a big new bull and a very little pig, to high-tech goats. The programme, which first aired in 2021, brings to light problems which British farmers face and the costs of running a farm. Clarkson has become a vocal supporter of farmers and attended a protest in London against the Government's move to introduce inheritance tax on farmland in November 2024.


BBC News
36 minutes ago
- BBC News
Interior Design Masters winner on what spurred him on to victory
Interior Design Masters winner and Stockport teacher John Cooper has said reminding himself of the advice he gave his students got him through the most challenging parts of the competition. The design and technology teacher was named the winner of the BBC1 show's sixth series last week following his Mediterranean-inspired transformation of a cottage in Portmeirion, Wales. Speaking to BBC Radio Manchester, Cooper said he had to "take his own advice" during the most challenging parts of the experience, particularly the four times he was up for elimination or "on the couch". He said: "Each time it would have been so easy to put my hands up and think, I can't do this anymore." Cooper added: "In the back of my head I was thinking about the students and what I tell the students - don't give up, persevere, and all that sort of stuff."I thought, what is the best example I can be here?"He said he had to "keep quiet and go back to my normal life" after filming wrapped in September. Students at the school started tuning in in April when she show started to air. Cooper said: "I would get a grilling when I'd go in, like 'you've been on the sofa again' or 'tell us who the winner is'."I've been on half term, so I don't know how they're going to react when I see them." He said the show's host, comedian Alan Carr, helped him get through the tough times. "He's so, so funny 100% of the time," Cooper said. "When he rocks up and you're stressing… he comes along and he makes you smile and he makes you happy."After 19 years of teaching, Cooper said he would finish up at the end of the school year to pursue a full-time career in interior design."That's been the dream for all this time and it's actually becoming a reality now," he said. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.


The Herald Scotland
43 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Renaming USNS Harvey Milk exposes Hegseth's insecurity
In a statement, a spokesman for the Department of Defense said: "Secretary Hegseth is committed to ensuring that the names attached to all DOD installations and assets are reflective of the commander in chief's priorities, our nation's history, and the warrior ethos." Hegseth's plan to scrub Harvey Milk's name from a ship is peak insecurity The "warrior ethos," Secretary Hegseth? Are you an insecure 12-year-old? Nothing says indomitable warrior quite like, "I'm afraid of this boat's name." Opinion: Musk calls Trump's bill an 'abomination.' I hate it when our two weird dads fight. A true warrior would be familiar with American history and would know that Milk served as a U.S. Navy operations officer on rescue submarines during the Korean War, then went on to become the first openly gay man elected to public office in California. He was serving on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors when he and the city's mayor were assassinated in 1978. Milk served in the Korean War and earned his place in history A true warrior would recognize that U.S. service members throughout history have proudly served, fought and died for the rights of all Americans to speak and live freely. A true warrior would be appalled to read the statement Milk's nephew Stuart Milk, who chairs the Harvey Milk Foundation, had to release in response to Hegseth's pathetic renaming plan, saying of the slain activist: "His legacy has stood as a proud and bright light for the men and women who serve in our nation's military - including those who have served on the USNS Harvey Milk - and a reminder that no barriers of race, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, religion, or physical infirmity will restrain their human spirit." Hegseth apparently sees US Navy ship names as 'woke' The New York Times reported that there are other ships named after civil rights leaders that might be renamed under Hegseth's feeble leadership. The names include Thurgood Marshall, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Harriet Tubman and Cesar Chavez. Make no mistake that behind these decisions is an administration limply fighting back against any incursion on the power of straight, White men, wholly unaware that people with real power don't need to exert their will on others. Announcing that you're stripping the name of a gay rights activist from a Navy ship at the start of Pride Month is, of course, a transparent provocation. To insecure, whiny, entitled men who spend their days listening to other insecure, whiny, entitled men, it's a show of strength. It's something they can smirk about as they exchange awkward high fives. Opinion: Joe Biden's decency will always outshine Donald Trump's cruelty Hegseth and others in the Trump administration don't know true strength But that's not strength. It's not a "warrior ethos." Heck, it's not even an ethos. It's just a bunch of unconfident losers trying to push others down to make themselves feel tall. If Harvey Milk's name is scrubbed from a Navy ship, it won't alter his legacy. His name, decades upon decades from now, will still echo in the pages of history, the hearts of students of civil rights and the mind of any soldier with a true warrior ethos. Pete Hegseth's name, on the other hand, will prompt only one response: "Who's that? Never heard of him." Follow USA TODAY columnist Rex Huppke on Bluesky at @ and on Facebook at