Company History:
The British Broadcasting Corporation
Ltd. (BBC) is the largest public sector media company in the world.
Affectionately known as "Auntie" or simply "the Beeb," the BBC
celebrated its 75th anniversary in 1997. Its domestic services include
two national color television channels, five national radio networks,
regional television and radio services, and local radio stations
throughout England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Domestic
operations are financed largely through the sale of television licenses
to households with at least one television. Set at £91.50 ($138) in
1997, this annual fee for a color license generated 95 percent of the
BBC's revenues. Renowned as a public institution, the BBC's commercial
interests were a growing source of funding and debate in the 1990s. With
revenues of £350 million in 1996, BBC Worldwide was the corporation's
biggest commercial operation, embracing publishing, multimedia, and
international activities.
The BBC derives its authority from a
royal charter granting it the right to operate throughout the United
Kingdom. Renewed every 10 to 15 years, the current charter was enacted
in 1996 and is in effect through 2006. Because the charter is issued by
the British monarch and not by a political party, the BBC's independence
and impartiality are constitutionally guaranteed. The terms and
conditions under which the BBC operates its transmitters and technical
apparatus are embodied in a second document, the BBC License, issued by
the home secretary (the government minister responsible for
broadcasting). The license prohibits the corporation from carrying
advertising or allowing sponsorship of any kind. In theory the license
also allows the home secretary to veto broadcasts which are deemed
inappropriate, but this right has never been exercised. The BBC is
governed by a 12-person board of governors appointed by the monarch in
consultation with a council of senior politicians from the main
political parties in the United Kingdom and the British Commonwealth. It
is the responsibility of the board to safeguard the public interest by
ensuring that the BBC's output reflect the uncompromising standards
enshrined in its constitution. The governors in turn appoint a
director-general and other experienced industry executives to oversee
the day-to-day operations of the BBC. Governors and management are
jointly responsible for policy and general strategy decisions.
Founded in 1920s
The
history of this august institution parallels the history of
broadcasting itself. The British Broadcasting Company Limited, as it was
originally known, came into being on October 18, 1922. It represented a
collaboration between leading radio manufacturers--such as the Marconi
Company and the General Post Office (GPO)--that wanted to introduce a
national service in Britain while preventing any individual manufacturer
from gaining monopoly power. The new company had a share capital of
£100,000, shares being allotted only to "genuine British manufacturers
employing genuine British labor," and generated income in two ways. It
was entitled to half of the Post Office license fee of 10 shillings (75
cents) and would receive royalties on the sale of radio transceivers
made by member companies. The license was introduced on November 1,
1922. By December 31 of the same year, 35,744 licenses had been issued.
On
the evening of November 14, 1922, Arthur Burrows, the company's first
director of programs, read two news bulletins from Marconi House in
London. These were the first daily transmissions at the BBC. The
following day, radio stations opened in Manchester and Birmingham, and
by the end of the month, British radio enthusiasts could tune into five
hours of broadcasting daily. Despite the fact that the original
broadcasters had little experience in the field--or perhaps because of
it--the standards they established in both news service and children's
programming set the tone for decades to come. Their success was
partially due to the influence of John C. Reith who, at the age of 33,
became the company's first general manager.
Reith was a
Scottish war veteran with a background in engineering and a clear
vision of what public broadcasting could achieve if run by an idealistic
team. He determined company policy and dictated the program mix. In
Reith's first year at the helm, programming expanded to include outside
broadcasts of opera and theater, daily weather forecasts and live
commentaries of sporting events. To keep track of this range of
programs, the BBC published a guide called the Radio Times, that
included scheduling information, commentaries, and articles on the
development of the new medium. By the end of 1923, an experimental
broadcast had reached America, and a Radiola Paris transmission had been
relayed to listeners in the south of England. Meanwhile, the number of
U.K. stations operated by the BBC had increased to 10 while the number
of employees had risen from four in December 1922 to 177 in December of
the following year.
The number of stations grew over the next few
years, as did the power of broadcasting. During the general strike of
May 1926, publication of most newspapers was suspended for a week. Also
at this time, the BBC increased its daily news broadcasts to five,
becoming the sole medium of mass communication in many parts of the
country. Although government pressure prevented the BBC from
interviewing striking miners on the air, Reith campaigned successfully
to maintain the company's editorial independence with respect to
reporting on strike developments. The BBC's position was strengthened on
January 1, 1927, when the British Broadcasting Company became the
British Broadcasting Corporation, established under a new royal charter
guaranteeing that it was not "a creature of Parliament and connected
with political activity." The motto of the new company was "And nation
shall speak peace unto nation." Sir John Reith was appointed
director-general, a post he maintained until 1938. The postmaster
general (the chief executive of the Post Office) continued to collect
license fees from the public and place restrictions on permitted
broadcasting hours, but policy-making responsibility was transferred to a
five person board of governors, a tradition which continues to the
present day. During the depression years of 1930--31, 1,000 licenses per
day were issued, and by 1935 an estimated 95 percent of the population
were able to receive at least one BBC program in their homes. Complete
reception coverage was a guiding principle of the BBC, and indeed it was
perhaps among the poorest classes and in the most remote regions of the
country that the service was most appreciated. It was also during this
period that the first foreign-language broadcasts were made from Bush
House in London. An Arabic service was inaugurated in January 1938, to
be followed two months later by service in Portuguese and Spanish.
Inauguration of Television in the 1930s
Television
service had a more difficult birth. The BBC had been experimenting with
television broadcasts since 1932 and, in November 1936, was able to
launch the world's first high-definition black-and-white service under
the leadership of director of television Gerald Cock. During the first
three years, the prohibitive cost of television sets limited the number
of viewers to 20,000, but the range of programming was impressive and
foreshadowed the tremendous influence which television would exert in
the postwar years. Among the events covered by fledgling BBC Television
was the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth and a
performance of Macbeth with Laurence Olivier in the title role.
On September 1, 1939, however, television broadcasts ceased. The
television transmitter at Alexandra Palace in London was a perfect
aircraft direction finder, and, for national security reasons, the
service remained off the air for the duration of World War II. The BBC
reopened in June 1946, when 100,000 viewers in the greater London area
watched a broadcast of the victory parade celebrating the end of the
war, and reached a high point on June 2, 1953, with the historic
televising of Elizabeth II's coronation inside Westminster Abbey.
BBC
radio had a tremendous impact with its informative broadcasts during
the war years. Its influence was felt far beyond the borders of the
United Kingdom; it was in foreign-language broadcasts to the occupied
territories that the Overseas Service came into its own. The BBC
approach to news reporting was captured succinctly by R. T. Clark,
director of foreign news, who told his augmented news staff: "It's war
now ... tell the truth ... that's our job ... thanks very much and good
luck." Meanwhile, on the domestic front, home broadcasting stations were
restricted to a single wavelength named the Home Service, which
introduced innovative if still rather high-brow programming in a supreme
effort to boost the country's morale through the early war years. In
January 1940, a second program was introduced with the aim of lifting
the morale of British troops stationed overseas. Attractions such as
popular American variety stars quickly helped the Forces Program secure a
huge civilian audience in Britain. At the end of the war the Forces
Program was renamed the Light Program, becoming the BBC's first formal
admission that frivolity had a permanent place in the radio schedule.
Post-World War II Prosperity Brings End to BBC's Monopoly
By
1946 a combined radio and television license was being offered for £2
($2.90), and the Home and Light Programs had been supplemented with the
addition of a third program, designed to meet what was controversially
perceived as "the virtually insatiable demand for serious literature and
drama, for good music and intelligent discussion." Classical music fans
in particular benefited from the change. In 1947 the BBC was granted a
third royal charter and, in spite of fuel shortages which led to the
temporary suspension of all television service and some radio service,
continued to expand the geographical scope and variety of its
operations.
In 1950 the number of permanent employees
at the BBC topped 12,000, and new television studios were opened at Lime
Grove in London. In the same year, the Beveridge Committee on
Broadcasting published a lengthy report which upheld the BBC's right to
exercise a broadcasting monopoly. In 1951, however, the Labour
government of the austere postwar period was replaced by a Conservative
government which deplored nationalization and stressed the importance of
the free market in raising Britain's depressed standard of living. As
unemployment rates continued to fall and demand for consumer goods
soared, public debate focused on television as a legitimate medium for
advertising the exciting new products. The Television Act of 1954,
sponsored by the Conservative government, broke the BBC's television
monopoly. As a direct consequence of the Television Act, an Independent
Television Authority (ITA) was formed, and on September 22, 1955,
the first commercial broadcast went on the air. Although advertising
was now permitted on independent stations, it remained strictly
regulated, and most analyses of the first decade of independent
television focus on the many similarities between the ITA and the BBC,
rather than on their differences.
Technological Developments in 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s
Meanwhile,
television technology was also developing apace. In October 1955 the
first experimental color television transmissions began from Alexandra
Palace in London. By this point, approximately 95 percent of the
population could receive television at home. Program hours were
increased accordingly, from 38 hours per week in 1954 to 50 hours a week
in 1955. A new emphasis was placed on regional broadcasts and regional
offices were given greater programming autonomy. Outside broadcasts,
too, became more adventurous. In October 1959, for example, the popular
astronomy program Sky at Night included photographs taken by a
Russian spacecraft on the far side of the moon. These innovations were
achieved at a price, and, as concern about the financing of the BBC
mounted, the government took the unusual step in 1963 of abolishing the
excise duty on the television license and allowing the BBC to keep the
full £4 fee. One result of this improvement in finances was the
introduction in April 1964 of the second television channel, BBC2, which
was described by Director-General Hugh Greene as a "complement rather
than a competitor" to BBC1. Greene was a controversial figure, much
criticized by more conservative elements in the press for encouraging
irreverent satire and populist drama at a time when the BBC was supposed
to provide an alternative to the commercialism of the independent
channel. However, BBC2 quickly established itself as a forum for
minority and specialized programming in much the same way as the Third
Program had done for radio listeners 18 years previously. Initially
available in the London region only, transmission capability spread in a
few years to all corners of the United Kingdom.
In
July 1967, BBC2 followed the American lead, and became the first
European television station to offer regular color television service
using the PAL system. The success of the color venture led to the
introduction of a supplementary £5 license fee in 1968, with color
service being extended to BBC1 and the independent channel in November
1969. A parallel development was the spread of stereo VHF radio stations
throughout the United Kingdom. In keeping with the enhanced broadcast
capabilities of the VHF system, the BBC introduced a fourth radio
network in 1967 that was devoted to popular music and named it Radio 1.
The existing networks became Radios 2, 3, and 4, respectively. A fifth
radio network would open in August 1990.
Programming Controversies in 1970s and 1980s
By
the 1970s many critics felt that in its determination to maintain
audience viewing figures, the venerable Beeb was producing lowbrow,
rather than substantial, programs. Representatives of the corporation
pointed to a long list of award-winning shows in rebuttal of this
argument. Of graver concern to BBC executives was the company's
long-term financial health. In 1975 expenditure exceeded income for the
first time. A series of highly publicized budget cuts at the BBC in the
early 1980s highlighted the relative financial strength of the big
commercial networks, that were now producing such lavish period pieces
as Brideshead Revisited, once the BBC's exclusive preserve.
Commercial television was also beginning to take the initiative in new
kinds of programming. The introduction of breakfast time television on
the BBC in January 1983, for example, was a response to a similar
venture on the commercial network.
In the summer of
1985, an incident occurred which focused attention on the BBC's
accountability to the British government. At the center of the
controversy was a BBC documentary about Northern Ireland titled At the Edge of the Union
that featured an interview with the alleged chief of staff of the
Provisional IRA. Several days before the program was due to be screened,
the board of governors of the BBC bowed to pressure from Leon Brittan,
the home secretary, to withdraw the documentary on the grounds that it
offered a legitimate platform to terrorism. This decision led to a
disagreement with the corporation's director-general, Alasdair Milne,
who objected to what he viewed as unacceptable levels of censorship both
within and external to the BBC. Journalists at the Home Services and
the World Service staged a one-day strike in protest, and, when
colleagues at the rival commercial network walked out in sympathy, news
coverage in the United Kingdom was effectively suspended for the day.
The strike ended when the director-general announced that At the Edge of the Union would be broadcast at a future date with some minor explanatory additions. The offending interview would not be cut.
The
effect of this incident on morale within the BBC and on the
corporation's reputation worldwide was considerable. The timing of the
controversy was also unfortunate, since Leon Brittan had recently
appointed a committee under the chairmanship of professor Alan Peacock
to look into financing options for the BBC. The Peacock report was
published in July 1986. It firmly rejected the idea of introducing
advertising, a stance strongly supported in the press. On the other
hand, the criticisms in the report did inspire a new set of guidelines
for producers, giving them much greater flexibility in financing their
productions. The following year, the company's commercial activities
were expanded with the creation of BBC Subscription Television Limited
as a fully owned subsidiary of BBC Enterprises. BBCSTV, a provider of
late-night niche subscription services, was a timely response to
fundamental changes in the structure of the broadcasting industry. A
second BBC initiative was realized in April 1991 with the launch of BBC
World Service Television Limited in Europe. Designed as a self-funding
cable subscription service, World Service Television offered 18
ten-minute international news bulletins a day, in addition to highlights
from the domestic services produced by BBC1 and BBC2. In November 1991
World Service Television was extended to Asia, a market with an
estimated 170 million English speakers. This new venture was especially
popular in India, where early reports indicated that it was watched by
seven times as many people as CNN.
Whither the BBC?: The 1990s and Beyond
The
BBC entered the 1990s engaged in much soul-searching. Sixteen task
forces were appointed and spent a year looking at the entire scope of
BBC operations from the inside. Titled "Extending Choice--The BBC's Role
in the New Broadcasting Age," the resulting 88-page document released
in November 1992 highlighted the BBC's arguments for charter renewal. In
summarizing the document, Chairman Marmaduke Hussey identified three
factors that he believed were crucial to the corporation's future
success: efficiency, accountability, and, above all, a "robust spirit of
independence from political pressures and commercial interests." Only
if all three areas were addressed, he continued, could one of the most
highly regarded broadcasting companies in the world continue to fulfill
its historic commitment to public service.
That
December, Hussey and the board of governors hired John Birt to replace
Sir Michael Checkland as director-general. A former executive at ITV,
Birt got off to a very bad start at his new employer. To begin with,
Birt cut a secret deal with the board to work as a consultant, thereby
avoiding some £1,500 in annual taxes and billing some questionable
expenses (Armani suits, for example) to the BBC. Though totally legal,
the arrangement infuriated the broadcaster's rank-and-file, who
succeeded in demanding that he be made a regular staff member.
Birt's
policies did not go over well with staff, either. In an effort to bring
the corporation's notoriously high expenses into line, he inaugurated a
cost-cutting strategy dubbed "Producer Choice" in April 1993. This
reform reorganized the BBC's many in-house services into "business
units" subject to productivity review, then encouraged program producers
to use the most financially and creatively appropriate facilities and
services they could find, whether in-house or independent. Producer
Choice was intended to introduce competition to the production process,
but some critics both within and without the BBC charged that an
over-emphasis on financial accountability was stifling creativity and
lowering morale.
At the same time, the BBC struggled to
reconcile its traditional role as a publicly-funded broadcaster with
its nascent commercial activities. Anna Griffiths and Conor Dignam of
Britain's Marketing magazine summarized the dilemma succinctly:
"The catch-22 for the BBC is that it feels it is imperative to move into
new media markets, yet every expansion of its brand raises questions
about whether it should still be funded by the license fee." Limiting
itself to broadcast television and radio would doom the corporation to
marginalization as the proliferation of cable, satellite, and digital
channels sliced away at its audience. But by putting its venerable
moniker on everything from books to pay digital television stations, the
BBC invited criticism from license-payers, advertisers, and
competitors.
Auntie was holding her own in the
mid-1990s, maintaining an overall 44 percent share of the television
audience and 49.6 percent of radio as of 1996. The BBC retained a record
£520 million (US$878 million) in the fiscal year ended with June 1997.
It announced plans to invest £1 billion in digital television ventures
and another 500 million in its other services by 2002. Though debate
over the broadcaster's dual personalities continued to rage, in 1994 the
government elected to preserve the institution's fiscal and
organizational structure, and in 1996 approved a new six-year charter.
In his director-general's overview that year, Birt called the new
charter and the increased license fee it instituted "a vote of
confidence." Whether that confidence was well-placed remained to be seen
as the BBC made its way through the treacherous media market of the
late 20th century.
Principal Subsidiaries: BBC
Enterprises Limited; BBC World Service Television Limited; BBC
Subscription Television Limited; BBC Investments Limited; Opinion and
Broadcasting Research (OBR) Limited; Lionheart Television International
Incorporated (U.S.A.); BBC Telecordiale (SARL) (France); Redwood
Publishing Limited (77.5%); World Publications Limited (76%); Hartog
Hutton Publishing Limited; Video World Publishing Limited; Ealing
Studios Limited; BBC Enterprises (Investments) Limited.
Principal Divisions: BBC Broadcasting; BBC Production.
Source: International Directory of Company Histories, Vol. 21. St. James Press, 1998.
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