So it was that the increasingly wayward Mail on Sunday put the story, such as it was, on its front page today, thundering “TOP TORY LAUNCHES TV RIVAL TO ‘WOKE, WET’ BBC … Murdoch also plans news channel in wake of Rule Britannia [sic] debacle”. That Gibb is the most likely source for the story - and probably the “TV Source” mentioned within it - is confirmed by his being undeservedly described as a “Top Tory”.
As the saying goes, “Where MacGregor sits, that is the head of the table”. Robbie Gibb is a proper pound shop MacGregor. The MoS tells readers “Sir Robbie Gibb - who was a senior BBC executive before becoming Theresa May’s director of communications at No 10 - is spearheading a drive to raise funds for GB News”. Tell us, Robs, just how brilliantly you performed in spinning for Treeza? Maybe not, eh? So what’s the GB News deal?
“Last night a source close to GB News [R Gibb (no relation)] said: ‘The channel will be a truly impartial source of news, unlike the woke, wet BBC. It will deliver the facts, not opinion dressed up as news. Everyone who works for GB News will have total commitment to quality journalism, to factual reporting and to impartiality.’” Ri-i-i-ight.
Robbie Gibb
Robbie Gibb’s BBC legacy is programmes like the Daily and Sunday Politics, where Andrew Neil could use the BBC’s name as cover for pushing climate change denialism, where Neil could tag-team with political editor Laura Kuenssberg to have a junior shadow minister resign live on air in order to give the Tories an advantage at PMQs, and where Ms Kuenssberg effectively took dictation from Matthew Elliott on Vote Leave’s lawbreaking.
A legacy where the discovery of data manipulation by the likes of Cambridge Analytica could be shouted down by mercenary hack Isabel Oakeshott. A legacy that has enabled a succession of bad faith actors to burnish their non-existent credentials by being invited to provide more of that faux balance, say the unsayable, be a little different, a little “edgy”.
And having set BBC News and Current Affairs on the downward slope, there is Robbie Gibb waiting to be given licence to return and finish it off. Which his pals in the right-wing press will conveniently blame on, er, the Beeb itself. Nice work if you can get it.
https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/zelostreet6
"Top" or "bottom" tory.....it makes no difference.
ReplyDeleteThey'd kick a blind beggar to death and steal his rags.
And the only difference between them and Bliarites is the latter would instruct Alastair Campbell to explain why it was "necessary".
If 'woke' is 'wet', then surely it's weak and ineffective and no threat to anyone or anything. On the other hand, 'woke Marxists' are a threat to democracy, which implies strength, which is it? My guess is neither.
ReplyDelete"DAILY HEIL LAUNCHES MORE FAR RIGHT PROPAGANDA FOR RACIST GAMMON PARANOIDS".
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the Blowhard Broadcasting Corporation.
ReplyDeleteUp next Gammon time.
Re: Grim Northerner's comment - obligatory Umberto Eco piece...
ReplyDeletehttps://www.nybooks.com/articles/1995/06/22/ur-fascism/
" The followers must feel humiliated by the ostentatious wealth and force of their enemies. When I was a boy I was taught to think of Englishmen as the five-meal people. They ate more frequently than the poor but sober Italians. Jews are rich and help each other through a secret web of mutual assistance. However, the followers must be convinced that they can overwhelm the enemies. Thus, by a continuous shifting of rhetorical focus, the enemies are at the same time too strong and too weak. Fascist governments are condemned to lose wars because they are constitutionally incapable of objectively evaluating the force of the enemy."
Eco's take on qanon would have been an interesting read.
DeleteNote to Conservatives - if your ideology can only gain popularity by throwing billions into propaganda networks, then perhaps your ideology has a problem.
ReplyDeleteReminds me of a thing I read in ye olden days on marketing and it mentioned that there's a sort of rule that the more useless a product is, the more is spent on marketing to sell it. Hence TV infomercials for iffy fitness machines, glamorous ads for £100 face cream, paying celebrities a fortune to wear your latest made-by-poor-kids tat.
Same applies to current Conservatism. There's no actual solutions or optimism, its basically all reactive hatred of the other and worship of the monied classes mixed in with regurgitated 1950s flag-waving drivel.
I wonder whether they'll be cautiously neutral at first, our whether they'll be all-out Wootton/Grimes/Harwood from the start. Either way, I predict a slide towards the Farage/Hopkins/Yaxley-Lennon/Fransen end of the spectrum before long. Where we are likely to find Laurence Fox on this spectrum once he's finished his transition to greatness is anybody's guess, but he'll be a regular, I'm sure.
ReplyDelete