Hi Chris,
I think you are dignifying the BBC editors! They really should know
better. Any questioning around climate scientists would have put them
right. The scientists are not exaggerating global warming or its
affects. Indeed, in the program they asked whether the UEA business
had made scientists more reticent. So the editors must realise that
scientists are liable to understate the dangers, not overstate them.
The program asked a simple question - about influence of AGW
(anthropogenic global warming) on the floods - and managed to give
credibility to the "don't know" answer, thus giving the oxygen of
publicity to climate sceptics. The program was a disgrace.
But the BBC is not alone. It seems that, as the effects of global
warming become more and more apparent, the media will more and more
downplay them. Wishful thinking has become editorial policy.
However, there is the occasional glimmer of reality breaking through,
from none other than the normally sceptic Daily Mail [1].
Cheers,
John
[1]
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1301713/The-crack-roof-world-Yes-global-warming-real--deeply-worrying.html
---
Chris Keene wrote:
[log in to unmask]" type="cite">
I suspect that the editors genuinely believe there is scientific
controversy, and thanks to the UEA email theft (I won't dignify it with
the term 'climategate' since it implies wrongdoing by UEA) they suspect
there is a conspiracy by scientists to exaggerate climate change to get
more money for research into it
Chris Keene
On 24/08/2010 10:05, Chris Shaw wrote:
[log in to unmask]" type="cite">Dear
all
I have been following the work of Medialens (one of the editors being
our very own David Cromwell) since the inception of that project. The
work of Medialens has shown repeatedly that the BBC is the voice of the
establishment on certain areas, such as economics, foreign policy, the
wonders of Western democracy etc etc. However, I think the BBC has also
tried to ensure that its coverage is accurate (I think a seperate thing
from bias). Thus I really struggle to make sense of why they insist on
airing the opinions of contrarians as science, when of course they are
simply value statements, grounded in particular attitudes to risk.
What issues are deemed by the BBC to be in need of impartiality is very
revealing of the BBC's relationship to power - for example dead British
soldiers are invariably described as heroes, with no perceived need to
balance this opinion.
Chris
On 24/08/2010 09:34, George Marshall wrote:
Dear Bob and all
I believe that it is entirely appropriate (and important) to call a
news
programme directly and complain about their coverage- all calls are
logged
and recognised (if not heeded) by editorial staff.
Here are the numbers for standard complaints, though i find that It is
usually much more effective to ask for the programme office and speak
to the
desk staff (or better still the editor involved with the problem piece)
directly rather than being fobbed off with someone in a call centre. I
have
done this myself many times and enjoy putting them on the spot and I
think a
good grilling from you, Bob, would teach them a lesson!
MEDIA COMPLAINTS
Channel Four and ITV News -0207 833 3000 and ask for liaison line
(recorded
messages checked hourly)
BBC TV and Radio Complaints Line-08700 100 222 (someone staffing the
line
24 hours day)
Channel Five Complaints Line-0845 7050505
And if you want to be more personal, you can usually ask for any
programme
news editor or a specific journalist through the switchboard.
BBC Radio Switchboard 0207 580 4468
ITN Switchboard 0207 833 3000
Channel Five Switchboard 0207 550 5555
BBC TV Switchboard 0208 743 8000
-----Original Message-----
From: Discussion list for the Crisis Forum
[mailto:[log in to unmask]]
On Behalf Of Bob Ward
Sent: 23 August 2010 19:44
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: 'Newsnight' losing the plot?
Andrew Montford has pointed out on his blog that he is due to appear on
'Newsnight' this evening about the link between the floods in Pakistan
and climate change. I had heard rumours that the Newsnight editor now
thinks all climate change coverage should include a 'sceptic' and this
seems to be confirmation. I've left the comment below on the
'Newsnight'
blog.
I see that Andrew Montford is bragging on his Bishop Hill blog that he
is an interviewee on this evening's programme about the link between
the
floods in Pakistan. His only contribution to the climate change debate
so far has been a controversial book about palaeoclimatology, so it is
not clear what his expertise on climate change and extreme weather is
meant to be. Or perhaps he will be representing Lord Lawson's group,
the
Global Warming Policy Foundation, which now regularly provides the
'balancing' voice of dissent every time a scientist is interviewed
about
climate change on 'Newsnight'. If so, this is presumably evidence of
the
commitment of 'Newsnight' to impartiality rather than accuracy? And can
I look forward to further instances of this balance by for instance,
including comments from a creationist every time there is a story about
evolution?
Bob Ward
Policy and Communications Director
Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment
London School of Economics and Political Science
Houghton Street
London WC2A 2AE
http://www.lse.ac.uk/grantham
Tel. +44 (0) 20 7106 1236
Mob. +44 (0) 7811 320346
Please access the attached hyperlink for an important electronic
communications disclaimer:
http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/planningAndCorporatePolicy/legalandComplian
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