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This is a very detailed and summarize study note about "Broadcast and print media in the UK"
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The media landscape in Britain
a) Broadcast media – television The broadcasting media are divided into two sectors. The ‘public sector’ is the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) financed by the licence fee (payable by anyone who owns a television set). The ‘independent sector’ consists of privately owned commercial stations or channels, which are funded by advertising revenue and subscriptions. Since 2003, the Office of Communications (Ofcom) has replaced the roles and duties of former regulators in both public and independent sectors and is the single regulator for the broadcast media. But although the BBC is subject to Ofcom regulation → Both sectors cover radio and television.
b) Broadcast media - radio
It's a radio soap opera set in the fictional English village of Ambridge. It aims to provide essential drama from the heart of the country. Ambridge is a twenty-first century village, with all the pressures of modern rural life. You'll become involved in the characters' personal and business struggles, their love affairs and all sorts of village activities from saving the local shop to the annual fete. There are plenty of lighter moments too.
As of late 2019, there are still topless models featured in the Sunday Sport, Midweek Sport, and Weekend Sport editions, although these publications feature softcore pornography throughout the publication (except on the sports pages), rather than just on the third page. The feature caused heated debate throughout its history, as critics feared it was demeaning to women and easily accessible to children. There were unsuccessful attempts to create legislation to abolish the feature, most notably by Labour MP Clare Short.
The cause of the disaster was long disputed. It was not until 27 years later that the jury of a commission of inquiry declared that the 96 Sheffield victims had been "unlawfully killed." The tragedy was triggered by serious mistakes by the police and not - as claimed for years by the authorities - by the bystanders' misconduct. Even the government under then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher helped to keep facts and internal reports from becoming public. But the relatives of the 96 victims did not let up and fought for justice until the case was reopened. In 2012, the commission came to the conclusion that the fans were not to blame. All the lies with which the Sun headlined - they were finally identified as lies. An apology from the newspaper promptly followed, but Liverpool is a proud city. Under the headline "The truth," the Sun, the UK's largest-circulation newspaper, printed a report four days after the Hillsborough disaster in which it announced that fans had obstructed the police. In an attempt to outdo itself in sensationalism, it claimed that fans had obstructed rescue work, used violence against police and paramedics, and stolen from victims lying defenseless on the ground. Some drunkards even urinated on victims, and rescue workers were prevented by force from rescuing injured people. As it later turned out, the article was nothing but a bunch of disgusting lies. It was not until 2011 that the Hillsborough disaster files were made available to an independent commission of inquiry, following a petition with 139,000 signatures demanding just that. The commission concluded that it was not the fans but the law enforcement officers who were to blame for the disaster. Too many people had been allowed into the stands. At the same time, the side stands were only half full. The Sun's claims have no basis: negligence and sloppiness on the part of the police caused the disaster. In order to cover up the blame for the events, more than a hundred witness statements were falsified by the police.
by the papers themselves and self-regulation has obvious weaknesses. If organisations are willing to break the law, then this should automatically exclude them from any type of regulatory duty/privilege. There should be new specific laws which regulate the print media in a much stricter fashion. At the very least, the government should implement the recommendations of their own official inquiry.