
Tim Davie insists he is fit to lead the BBC in the ‘right way' amid scandals
The broadcaster has faced significant scrutiny in recent months, including breaches of its own editorial accuracy guidelines, the controversial livestreaming of Bob Vylan's Glastonbury performance, and recent misconduct allegations involving Gregg Wallace, the former presenter of MasterChef.
The corporation's annual report showed that Mr Davie, who has been in the role since 2020, has had a 3.8 per cent pay rise with his salary going up £20,000 from £527,000 last year to £547,000.
Mr Davie was asked during the release of the corporation's 2024/2025 annual report on Tuesday whether he would resign.
He said: 'I simply think I'm in a place where I can work to improve dramatically the BBC and lead it in the right way.
'We will make mistakes, but I think as a leadership and myself, I've been very clear, and I think we have been decisive.
'There's enormous, massive noise and different opinions about what we should do, but I think we have been clear. We are making the right decisions. We're being transparent on what we do, and I think that's what counts. I would also say that under my tenure, I've set a very clear stall out in terms of impartiality.
'I think we're setting a global standard in terms of public service broadcasting and media.
'Under my leadership, and the team I've assembled, I think we feel very passionately about that.
' One of the things that I focus on, as a leader, is there has never been a more important time for public service broadcasting.
' Gaza has been the most challenging editorial issue I've had to deal with, but the importance of fair, balanced reporting, the need for high quality, homegrown programming in the face of massive pressure, I think, has never, ever been greater.
'I believe my leadership and the team I've assembled can really help the leadership thrive in that environment.'
This comes after a review conducted by Peter Johnston, the director of editorial complaints and reviews – which is independent of BBC News, and published on Monday, found its documentary, Gaza: Surviving a Warzone, breached BBC editorial guidelines on accuracy for failing to disclose details of the narrator's father.
The report did not find any other breaches of editorial guidelines, including breaches of impartiality and also found no evidence that 'outside interests' 'inappropriately impacted on the programme'.
Since the report was published, broadcasting regulator Ofcom announced it would investigate the documentary under its own broadcasting code, which states that factual programmes 'must not materially mislead the audience'.
Dr Samir Shah, BBC chair, added: 'I want to be absolutely clear that I and the board support Tim Davie's leadership fully.
'He has shown very confident and decisive leadership in a very, very challenging environment, right from the start
'The number of issues of vision from people behaving badly to News in some cases, when it's appropriate, decisively and shouldn't do it all, in other cases,
'We are the BBC, and we will do this properly. We do it fairly, we do it correctly, and we will then take action. That's where we are at the moment.
'Tim Davie and his team, and Tim in particular, has shown very strong leadership throughout all this period, and he has my full support.'
Dr Shah also said in the annual report: 'The BBC is a wonderful place to work. Our staff are dedicated, hard-working and treat each other with respect. However, there are pockets in the organisation where this is not the case.
'There are still places where powerful individuals – on and off-screen – can abuse that power to make life for their colleagues unbearable.'
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Times
23 minutes ago
- Times
Lessons from an olive oil sommelier
We've all heard of a sommelier, right? The highly trained nose responsible for selecting, pairing and serving wines in restaurants — all based on a deep knowledge of grape varieties, regions, vintages and tasting techniques. However, there's a new breed of sommelier in town, and this time they're not sipping on hearty malbec or assessing the mouthfeel of a chardonnay. Instead, they are all about the olive — olive oil that is. It's hard to know just how many olive oil sommeliers there are in the UK, but Sarah Vachon is one of them. Through her company Citizens of Soil, Vachon is on a mission to get us to rethink how we use the golden liquid. Founded in 2021 by Vachon and her husband, Michael, Citizens of Soil provides olive oil subscriptions (starting from £15 per month) through its Olive Oil Club — with oils responsibly sourced from across the Mediterranean. It has also grown into an olive oil brand stocked by Selfridges, Fortnum & Mason and Waitrose, among others, and used in some of London's top restaurants (although many Michelin-starred chefs apparently prefer to work with oil from mild olive oil varieties so as not to affect the flavour of their cooking). The temperature is suitably Mediterranean when I meet Vachon in the City of London office that Citizens of Soil calls home, for a crash course in all things olive oil. She lives and breathes the fruit — even wearing a discreet pendant engraved with an olive branch. It all started on a holiday to visit friends in rural Greece. There the couple fell in love with the complex flavours of the olive oil they encountered, and started to bring some of the oil back as gifts for their friends in the UK and US. Investigating just why this oil tasted better than the bottles on the supermarket shelves, the couple discovered an industry dominated by anonymised production. Citizens of Soil counters that by putting producers — and, principally, female producers — at the heart of the product. The farmers' names are included on each bottle, they are paid above the market rate and are encouraged to use regenerative farming practices. All this has led to Citizens of the Soil being rated a B-Corp (a company that meets high standards of social and environmental performance, accountability and transparency). The holiday also kick-started Vachon's journey to becoming a fully fledged olive oil expert. She started by gaining experience on the ground. 'I had been doing harvest and gone to mills and had already started doing work days with producers,' she explains over some cups of olive oil. 'I'd reach out to international olive oil judges and pay them to do a workshop just so I could learn.' Vachon formalised her training in tasting, assessing and sourcing the finest oils in the world through a year-long course at one of the principal training grounds for the olive oil sommelier, ESAO (the Escuela Superior del Aceite de Oliva) located in Valencia, Spain. This training allows her to guide and educate others in broadening their olive oil palates. Be prepared to learn the difference between the bold, peppery finish of a Tuscan batch and the green, grassy balance of lesser-known regions like Croatia and South Africa. There are over 1,000 varieties of olives, from the Tsounati of Greece to the Mission of California, each with its own nuances. 'They can each have different nutritional benefits and flavours and things that they can do,' Vachon explains. 'But also you can take those varieties and you can transplant them to different hillsides of the same area and they'll taste different. It's the same concept we have in wine, this element of terroir.' It turns out that anywhere that's good for growing grapes is also good for growing olives — with South America the next frontier. The first stage in getting to grips with these nuances is honing your senses. 'Smelling everything really trains you,' Vachon explains as we start the tasting process, 'because if you don't know what something smells like, you can't identify it.' Olive oil tasting uses special cups shaped like mini wine tumblers. These cups are made from dark coloured glass so the colour of the oil is obscured and cannot subconsciously affect the tasting. Blue and red are popular, but Citizens of Soil's next venture, the Olive Oil Clubhouse, uses black. Planted in the heart of Notting Hill from 17th to 28th July, the pop-up Clubhouse will immerse visitors in all things EVOO as the UK's first-ever olive oil bar. There will be olive oil tastings (complete with little black tasting cups), talks from nutritionists, soft serve vanilla ice cream or chocolate sorbet courtesy of cult ice cream brand Happy Endings topped with olive oil, and even complimentary golden-hour cocktails. All this plus a well-stocked olive oil shop. 'Colour is no indicator of quality in extra virgin olive oil,' Vachon says. The shape of the cup is also significant. Much like with wine tasting, this allows the oil to breathe. The tasting begins with us warming the oil with our body heat by cupping the glass with our hands — one on top and one on the bottom — and rotating the glass back and forth. 'This allows the compounds to activate to kick off the flavour and the aromas,' Vachon notes. Although a little heat is a good thing, too much heat is a no-no. 'If someone doesn't package it right or if they keep it in a clear bottle, or keep it near their stove … keeping it near a stove where it's getting heat all the time, even in a dark glass bottle, can ruin an amazing oil.' This is because too much heat accelerates the oxidation process, breaking down the oil's beneficial antioxidant compounds. Then, we smell. 'The wonderful thing about polyphenols, which are the antioxidant compounds that everyone's talking about, is that you can smell them and you can taste them,' Vachon explains. 'So what I tell people is, look for the smell of life. You need to smell plants.' We start our tasting session with one of Citizens of Soil's more delicate, Greek oils. It smells crisp and fresh, with herbaceous notes and, to Vachon's expert nose, red apples. 'There's all sorts of things you might smell, but it's the smell of life that you're looking for, because if that's gone away, that means that oil could have a defect or it's no longer fresh.' Next comes the actual tasting. Again, it's similar to wine tasting. Take a sip — no more than a teaspoon — and aerate the oil in your mouth, allowing it to coat the palate. Do this by sticking your tongue on the roof of your mouth and sucking in air as you splash the oil around your mouth. What you're looking for is an astringent feeling on the palate — maybe a bitterness, maybe a slight sharpness. The second oil we taste is an intense Spanish oil harvested in November 2024 by Marina Segura Gómez and her father, Manuel (who have been producing olive oil for Citizens of Soil since 2023), available in small batches from their groves in Andalusia. Alongside more tomatoey notes, it's distinctly sharper on the palate than the Greek oil. One of the markers of a quality olive oil is the acidity level. 'That has to be under 0.8 per cent,' Vachon says. 'We've never brought in anything over 0.4 per cent. Before I even work with a producer, I look at their labs, even from the previous years, because that lets me know the shape that the fruit was in before it went to the mill. How quickly did they get it in there? How clean was the mill? Was the fruit damaged?' In the case of Marina's oil, the acidity is always under 0.2 per cent. That's partly down to the productions methods used — she has a mobile mill, which means the oil can be produced as soon as the olives are harvested. The third aspect of the olive oil tasting is a pepperiness — 'it could be like a little tingle,' Vachon says. 'Sometimes it's a sharper pepper that'll actually make you cough.' That's quite apparent in the third oil we taste, a limited-edition Cerasuola olive oil from Syracuse in Italy. 'This year is a little bit punchier just because the climate was so stressful,' Vachon says, 'and when the olives get stressed, much like grapes, they put out more antioxidants and more of these polyphenols.' This in turn means a more peppery taste. While we mainly associate olive oil with drizzling on salads or frying food — both valid uses — there are also some more inventive approaches. The Spanish oil we taste pairs really well with acidic fruits like mango, or pineapple. Meanwhile, many of the female olive oil producers that Citizens of Soil work with enjoy olive oil on yoghurt with seeds and honey for breakfast — or even blended into matcha. Citizens of Soil has made a conscious effort to prioritise female-led production and support a new generation of farmers, actively working to partner with farms that are at least 50 per cent female-run. This includes producers Juan Olivares, an agronomist, and Carolina Domínguez, who works with endangered species, in Spain — two friends who have combined their olive groves. Younger women entering the field represent not only essential new labour in an often ageing field but also a cultural and environmental shift in how farming communities are shaped. This summer, Londoners can experience Sarah's expertise and Citizens of the Soil's products first hand at the Olive Oil Clubhouse, where they can sip on tomatinis served with pan con tomate drizzled in liquid gold, explore pairing olive oil with peaches, and eat on EVOO-infused pastries (the dates of events and offerings vary, check the website for full details and timings). Although this is only temporary, Vachon hopes that it might be the first step on the way to a more permanent iteration — perhaps featuring everything from visiting producers to wellness and skincare. Find the Olive Oil Clubhouse at 2 Blenheim Crescent, London W11, July 17-28


Daily Mirror
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
John Torode 'blindsided' by BBC sacking him from MasterChef in the most brutal way
Chef John Torode was reportedly axed from MasterChef yesterday after BBC boss Tim Davie said no star was bigger than the show - and it's now emerged how John found out Masterchef's John Torode was left in shock yesterday after he found out he had been unceremoniously dropped from the popular cooking series, having discovered his fate on the BBC website. The unexpected ousting followed comments from BBC boss Tim Davie, who stated that no presenter is bigger than the show itself, as reported by The Sun. The famed cook, aged 59, was reportedly devastated when the BBC and production company Banijay confirmed his sudden exit amid allegations of racist language, coming in the wake of the explosive Gregg Wallace scandal. An insider disclosed: "John had no idea. He was blindsided." In a remarkable turn of events, it emerged that the Aussie chef's representative was given a mere 11 minutes' heads-up before the news was made public, reports the Express. An source shared: "John's agent received a call 11 minutes before the statements went out and hadn't had a chance to call him. "He read about it on the BBC News website. Obviously he's heartbroken. "He feels he's been made a scapegoat off the back of the Gregg Wallace report." Despite the controversy, Torode took to Instagram with a resolute message: "Although I haven't heard from anyone at the BBC or Banijay - I am seeing and reading that I've been 'sacked' from MasterChef and I repeat that I have no recollection of what I'm accused of. "I have loved every minute working on MasterChef, but it's time to pass the cutlery to someone else." The shocking report into the conduct of MasterChef co-host Gregg Wallace, 60, validated an astonishing 45 out of 83 complaints dating from 2005 to 2024, culminating in his own spectacular downfall. As we disclosed yesterday, BBC executives had insisted at the weekend that Torode step down, alleging he was grappling with mental health problems. He declined to do so.


Sky News
an hour ago
- Sky News
HMRC 'doesn't know' how many billionaires pay tax in the UK
HM Revenue and Customs does not know how many billionaires pay tax in the UK, according to a new report by MPs. The Public Accounts Committee says this is despite the fact only a small number of people have this status - and the significant sums of money involved. HMRC has been told it "can and must" do more to understand how much the very wealthiest in society contribute to the public purse, as "there is a lot of money being left on the table". 6:36 Artificial intelligence and The Sunday Times Rich List were identified as two ways of getting a clearer picture. The taxman is facing calls to reveal how it plans to increase contributions from billionaires both domestically and offshore, amid a squeeze in the public finances. MPs added: "There is much public interest in the amount of tax the wealthy pay. People need to know everyone pays their fair share." The report pointed to the US, where the Internal Revenue Service links its data to the Forbes 400 list of rich Americans. PAC member Lloyd Hatton added: "This report is not concerned with political debate around the redistribution of wealth. "Our committee's role is to help HMRC do its job properly, ensuring wealthy people pay the correct tax. "While HMRC does deserve some great credit for securing billions more in the tax take from the wealthiest in recent years, there is still a very long way to go before we can reach a true accounting of what is owed." 1:16 Mr Hatton added that the committee was "disappointed" that HMRC could not offer any insights into the tax arrangements of billionaires from its own data - as "any single one of these individuals' contributions could make a significant difference to the overall picture". At present, about 1,000 people within HMRC are focused on the tax affairs of the UK's wealthiest, but funding has been secured to increase this headcount by 400 - with a view to "increasing prosecutions of those who evade tax". A spokesperson added: "The government is determined to make sure everyone pays the tax they owe. "Extra resources were announced in the recent spending review which allows us to significantly step up our work on closing the tax gap among the wealthiest."