
BBC losing trust with slow response to crises, Ofcom chief warns
Dame Melanie Dawes, chief executive of Ofcom, said there is a risk that public confidence in the BBC is starting to decline two weeks after it was forced to apologise for broadcasting a Glastonbury performance by the punk rock duo Bob Vylan in which its frontman led the crowd in chants of 'death, death to the IDF'.
Dawes said it was 'very frustrating' that the BBC has scored 'some own goals' in its recent output. 'It does start to erode public trust,' she told the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg.
'Above all what frustrates me is that when these things go wrong, it can take a long time for the BBC to see that something's happened when everybody else [could] within a matter of hours. It needs to get a grip quicker, get these reports and investigations concluded sooner, otherwise there is a real risk of a loss of confidence in the BBC, which is a shame.'
In March, Lord Grade of Yarmouth, the Ofcom chair, wrote to the BBC to warn that the regulator may intervene if it is not satisfied with its internal investigation into the circumstances surrounding the documentary Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone after it emerged that its 14-year-old narrator was the son of a Hamas official.
A BBC spokesman said the findings of the review, which is being conducted by Peter Johnston, the corporation's director of editorial complaints and reviews, will be published as soon as possible. 'It is vital that this work is done as quickly as possible, but it must also be thorough and follow a proper process,' they added.
The findings are expected to be released next week, within days of a separate review into the behaviour of MasterChef's Gregg Wallace.
• Gregg Wallace's autism means he can't wear underwear, say friends
An inquiry into the presenter's behaviour on the programme is expected to be published by Banijay UK, the production company behind the show, this month.
Lewis Silkin, a law firm, has been examining the allegations about Wallace — the most serious of which he has denied — for seven months.
After the Glastonbury debacle, the BBC said it will no longer broadcast live sets that are deemed 'high risk'.
Last week The Times revealed that Lorna Clarke, the BBC director of music, is understood to have stepped back from her day-to-day duties while the broadcaster explores the circumstances surrounding Bob Vylan's set.
Days after it was broadcast, the corporation said that it 'deeply regretted' its decision. 'We want to apologise to our viewers and listeners and in particular the Jewish community,' a spokesman said at the time. 'We are also unequivocal that there can be no place for antisemitism at, or on, the BBC.'
On Tuesday, Tim Davie, the BBC director-general, will face questions from reporters as the broadcaster publishes its annual report.
Dawes was interviewed on Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg before an appearance by Ian Russell, whose daughter Molly took her own life in 2017 after viewing distressing material on social media.
Dawes said the government may have to consider further legislation to protect children from chatbots powered by artificial intelligence, after criticism of loopholes in the Online Safety Act 2023.
• Is your teenager's secret best friend a chatbot?
'There are some forms of new AI which are going to be covered, but there are some that may not,' Dawes said. 'As the internet keeps changing, as new forms of AI come in very rapidly, there may need to be some changes to the legislation to cover that.'

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BBC News
28 minutes ago
- BBC News
BBC Studios marks a year of record revenues and creative success
• BBC Commercial delivers record revenues of £2.2bn in 2024/25 • Strategic investments paying off; growth from previous year investments includes 20% increase in BritBox International revenues in first full year of ownership • Retains position as the UK's most awarded studio, with seven Emmy awards, an Oscar for Conclave, and more than 150 awards won in the year • Global hit Bluey boosts consumer products revenues BBC Commercial, a global media company which is part of the BBC Group, today released its annual results as part of the BBC's Annual Report and Accounts, marking a year where the company delivered record revenue and industry-awarded creative success. The company, which makes and distributes some of the world's most sought-after content as well as creating and nurturing iconic brands, achieved record revenues of £2.2bn (2023/24: £1.9bn) and EBITDA of £228m (2023/24: £199m) in a challenging market, driven by a diversified portfolio; strong performance for BritBox International; and its consumer products division, especially global hit Bluey. BBC Studios, the main commercial arm of the BBC Commercial group, recorded its fourth consecutive year of profit in excess of £200m, expressed as EBITDA, of £225m (2023/24: £202m), an increase of 11% year on year, despite organic investment in media & streaming, including and UKTV, which both saw audience growth. The profits generated by BBC Studios go back to the BBC to support its mission in the UK. Tom Fussell, CEO of BBC Commercial said: 'BBC Commercial has delivered a strong set of results, which show that our strategy is working and the investments made in previous years, together with a diversified portfolio, are delivering a trajectory of sustainable growth, despite ongoing global macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainty. Together with the continuing recognition for the craft and creativity of our content studio and the demand for our content around the world, BBC Commercial is well placed to support a robust creative and entertainment industry and cement its role as a global ambassador for the best of UK content.' Over the last few years, the company has made a series of strategic investments in its routes to market, including taking full ownership of global streamer BritBox International and enhancements to digital services for UKTV. Investment in digital platforms was key in delivering a 43% growth in revenues for the media and streaming division. BritBox International's revenues were up 20% year-on-year, with popular UK titles such as Ludwig and Blue Lights drawing in North American audiences. BBC Studios' multi-channel network, UKTV, also recorded a strong performance. Its direct-to-consumer service U grew views by a third in 2024, whilst UKTV saw total viewer hours to its VOD content across its free and pay platforms grow by 56 million hours year-on-year. Drama content performed particularly well with The Marlow Murder Club becoming the network's highest rating show of 2024, watched by 2.6 million viewers. The new and BBC app have established themselves as the key digital platforms for international audiences who want trusted, impartial BBC news. saw a 15% uplift in global visitors over the year whilst registrations have grown by 78% year-on-year, demonstrating the international reputation of the BBC brand. BBC Studios' world-class creativity continued to power its success with the business winning over 150 awards. Content highlights from the most-awarded UK production company included feature film Conclave, made by wholly owned House Productions, which won four BAFTAs and an Academy Award, wholly owned Clerkenwell Films' Baby Reindeer which won six Emmys, a 20th anniversary for Strictly Come Dancing in the UK as the popularity of the international brand, Dancing with the Stars, continues. Factual title The Americas, narrated by Tom Hanks and made for NBC, became the most-watched nature documentary on US linear television for more than fifteen years, whilst in the UK, BBC Studios helped mark the 80th anniversary of D-Day with a raft of memorable programming, including the RTS Programme Award-winning D-Day 80: Tribute to the Fallen. The business has expanded and consolidated its international production portfolio, now making programmes in ten territories worldwide. The performance of BBC Studios' brands and licensing business was led by global hit Bluey, as the children's title was named the most-streamed programme in the US in 2024, the Bluey's World immersive experience opened in Brisbane, Australia, and a much-anticipated feature film was announced in partnership with Disney+, set to arrive in cinemas in 2027. These results mean that BBC Commercial remains on track to meet its five-year returns commitment of £1.5bn by 2026/27 (a 30% increase on the previous five-year period), having already delivered £1,028m during the first three years. Pay Gap Report BBC Studios also today publishes its Pay Gap Report, showing improvements in eight of the 10 pay gaps (both median and mean) on its 2024 performance. The report also shows that over 96% of the business' female employees are in a career band with a median pay gap of less than 5%, and that 21% are in a career band with a median pay gap in favour of women. The company's median gender pay gap for 2024/25 was 10.7% (2023/24: 11.5%) and a mean gender pay gap of 11.3% (2023/24: 13.4%). BBC Studios continues to be amongst the most transparent media companies when it comes to voluntary reporting on protected characteristics, and the business intends to continue to expand its approach to transparency in future years. BBC Studios CEO Tom Fussell said: 'The data in today's Pay Gap Report is encouraging, although we continue to strive to improve representation across all levels across - and all characteristics in – the business. We are taking proactive steps to address our representation through initiatives such as BBC Extend and are also working to improve our disclosure rates in order to achieve a more inclusive and representative workforce.' -Ends- For more information, please contact: About BBC Studios BBC Studios is the main commercial arm of BBC Commercial Ltd and generated revenues of £2.1 billion in the last year and profits of over £200 million for a fourth consecutive year. Able to take an idea seamlessly from thought to screen and beyond, the business is built on two operating areas: the content studio, which produces, invests and distributes TV and audio globally and media & streaming, with BBC branded channels, services including UKTV, and BritBox International and joint ventures in the UK and internationally. The business made almost 3,300 hours of award-winning British programmes last year for a wide range of UK and global broadcasters and platforms. Its content is internationally recognised across a broad range of genres and specialisms, and includes world-famous brands like Strictly Come Dancing/Dancing with the Stars, the Planet series, Bluey and Doctor Who. BBC Studios | Website | Press Office | X | LinkedIn | Instagram |


BBC News
29 minutes ago
- BBC News
John Torode sacked as MasterChef presenter
John Torode has been sacked as MasterChef presenter after it emerged that an allegation against him of using racist language was Monday, the TV chef said he had "no recollection" of the incident, adding: "I do not believe that it happened."But on Tuesday, it emerged he had been plunges the BBC cooking show into a deeper crisis, after more than 40 separate allegations against Torode's co-host Gregg Wallace were also upheld as part of an inquiry into his conduct. The controversy over MasterChef started last year, when BBC News first revealed claims of inappropriate sexual language against was sacked last week as dozens more people came forward to BBC News with allegations against him. He has always denied the claims.


Telegraph
29 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Was Ingmar Bergman really a Nazi?
During his lifetime, and beyond, the film director Ingmar Bergman was widely believed to be a genius. Yet even geniuses have their flaws, and Bergman came festooned with his: allegations (put into the public domain by himself, before he thought better of it) that he raped a former partner of his; an embarrassing arrest for tax evasion and, most notoriously of all, the suggestion that he spent his youth as a fully paid-up Nazi supporter who bitterly mourned the death of Hitler. The last and most damaging story recently re-entered the public domain courtesy of the actor Stellan Skarsgård. While Skarsgård was attending the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in the Czech Republic, where he was promoting Joachim Trier's acclaimed new film Sentimental Value, in which he plays a Bergman-esque director named Gustav Borg, he was asked about his own relationship with Bergman. (He had acted for him in the Eighties in a stage production of Strindberg's A Dream Play.) Skarsgård did not mince his words. 'Bergman was manipulative. He was a Nazi during the war and the only person I know who cried when Hitler died. We kept excusing him, but I have a feeling he had a very weird outlook on other people. [He thought] some people were not worthy. You felt it, when he was manipulating others. He wasn't nice.' Skarsgård acknowledged that Bergman was still capable of greatness as an artist, if not a human being. 'My complicated relationship with Bergman has to do with him not being a very nice guy,' he explained. 'He was a nice director, but you can still denounce a person as an a--hole. Caravaggio was probably an a--hole as well, but he did great paintings.' Skarsgård wasn't commenting on any fresh revelations, yet the actor's remarks have nevertheless caused something of a furore – not least because Bergman, who died in 2007, is widely regarded as one of the most significant and important film directors who ever lived. From his breakthrough in the 1950s with the films Smiles of a Summer Night and, especially, the seminal The Seventh Seal to such classics of cinema as Cries and Whispers, Fanny and Alexander, and Persona, Bergman became synonymous with challenging, always boundary-pushing cinema that appealed to audiences and his peers alike. Martin Scorsese said that 'it's impossible to overestimate the effect that Bergman's films had on people' and Stanley Kubrick wrote privately to the film-maker: 'Your vision of life has moved me deeply, much more deeply than I have ever been moved by any films. I believe you are the greatest film-maker at work today.' Woody Allen went further, however, not only by calling Bergman 'probably the greatest film artist, all things considered, since the invention of the motion picture camera', but by making several pictures, including Interiors and Another Woman, that were overt homages to the director. His 1982 film A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy was a loose remake of Smiles of a Summer Night. Such was Allen's admiration for Bergman that, when he even glowingly reviewed his memoir for the New York Times in 1988, he did not even consider the revelation worth mentioning. 'The picture one gets,' he wrote, 'is of a highly emotional soul, not easily adaptable to life in this cold, cruel world.' However, his idol's party line was to admit to a youthful flirtation with fascism, something that was long since abandoned by the time that he became one of the world's best-respected film-makers. Bergman first saw Hitler when he was 16, on a school exchange trip to Germany in 1934, when he was taken along by his Hitler Youth-supporting host, Hannes, to the Weimar Republic. The impressed youth later described the dictator as 'unbelievably charismatic… he electrified the crowd.' Hannes's father, a clergyman, was sufficiently impressed by the Führer not only to festoon his house with images of him, but to give Bergman a picture of his idol as a gift on his 17th birthday, 'so that you will always have the man before your eyes'. When his young guest, anxious to fit in, asked at what point during the rally he should shout 'Heil Hitler', the pastor replied: 'That's considered more than mere courtesy, my dear Ingmar.' By Bergman's own admission, he was a 'pro-German fanatic' by the time that he returned home to Sweden, seduced and impressed by Hitler and all things National Socialist. Unfortunately, he found himself in simpatico company. His father Erik, who later inspired the film Fanny and Alexander, was an unrepentantly Right-wing figure who believed that Hitler was the answer to the world's problems. As Bergman told the writer Maria-Pia Boëthius in 1999 – she was questioning the truth behind Sweden's much-vaunted neutrality in the Second World War – 'The Nazism I had seen seemed fun and youthful. The big threat were the Bolsheviks, who were hated.' Although the director himself did not participate in any overt anti-Semitic actions, his brother Dag joined some friends to attack the house of a local Jewish man, covering the walls with swastika symbols. (Dag would later become a respected diplomat.) Bergman himself soon saw the consequences of his association in a small but chilling fashion. When he visited Germany, he befriended a local girl named Renata, and began a correspondence, only for this to come to an end when Renata and her family simply vanished one day. They were, of course, Jewish. Although Bergman spent some mandatory time in military service in Sweden, he did not fight in the war. If he had done so, it is likely that his loyalty would have been to Germany. Unlike Dag, however, he was never a member of the Swedish National Socialist Party, which his brother was responsible for founding and operating. Still, as he wrote in his 1987 memoir The Magic Lantern, 'for many years, I was on Hitler's side, delighted by his success and saddened by his defeats.' Yet the eventual awakening that he faced came shortly after the end of the war and the subsequent collapse of Hitler's regime. 'When the doors to the concentration camps were thrown open, at first I did not want to believe my eyes,' he would say. 'When the truth came out it was a hideous shock for me. In a brutal and violent way I was suddenly ripped of my innocence.' Those who have attempted to excuse Bergman's youthful folly have argued that, although Bergman did not fully repudiate Hitler and Nazism until 1946, when he came to an understanding of what he had been impressed by, it was a seismic shock to him that changed the course of his life and career. As he told his friend and producer Jörn Donner: 'My feelings were overwhelming and I felt great bitterness towards my father and my brother and the schoolteachers and everyone else who'd led me into it. But it was impossible to get rid of the guilt and the self-contempt.' Thereafter, many of his films and stage productions dealt explicitly with the evil caused by the Nazi regime, whether it's his English-language picture, 1977's The Serpent's Egg, which is set in 1932 Berlin, or his decision to stage Peter Weiss's The Investigation, about the Auschwitz trials, in Stockholm in 1966. Several of his most acclaimed pictures also looked, more obliquely, at themes of guilt and lack of communication brought on by conflict, including 1963's The Silence, which follows the journey of two sisters and was inspired by Bergman spending time in post-war Germany. Or 1968's Shame, in which a marriage, and an unnamed country, are both torn apart by civil war. It would be reading too much into these films to see them as a straightforward apologia for his earlier beliefs – which in any case were not common knowledge until the publication of his memoir – but there can be little doubt that they weighed upon him. It would also be a mistake to take Bergman's comments at face value. As Jane Magnusson, who made the documentary Bergman: A Year in the Life, said in 2019: 'The fact that he had sympathies with Hitler… he wanted to talk about them. And nobody else did. He was pretty much alone in Sweden when he came out in the 1980s and said, 'I went to Germany, I was in Weimar during the parade and I yelled 'Heil Hitler!' And I loved it.' 'It's horrible that he didn't reject Hitler before 1946. It is very late. That's a problem. But I don't think Bergman thought Hitler was a good idea because he hated Jews. Sweden was very afraid of Russia at that time and I think he just thought that it was better than what's going on with them.' It is also likely that Bergman never fully repudiated his youthful Right-wing views. The director Roy Andersson, who studied at the Swedish Film Institute Film School in the late Sixties, remarked that '[Bergman] was a so-called inspector of the film school that I attended, and each term we were called and we had to go to his office and he gave some advice, or even some threats, and he said, 'If you don't stop making Left-wing movies… If you continue with that you will never have the possibility to make features. I will influence the board to stop you'. Bergman often described the most traumatic event of his lifetime as being his 1976 arrest on income tax evasion charges. These were eventually dropped, but caused him to leave Sweden for Munich. From there, he continued his career, albeit to diminishing artistic returns. It would not be until he returned to Sweden in 1982 for Fanny and Alexander – an epic often considered Bergman's crowning achievement – that he would make another truly acclaimed film.