The BBC is to lose 1,000 staff because of a £150m shortfall in its finances. This is apparently because over a million households now claim to not watch live TV. As time goes by and as more people become aware of ways to avid the licence tax the number will grow and grow. The irony is that the BBC has one of the most popular catch-up services: iPlayer. Hoist by its own petard?
So the first thing is to cut staff and merge some services. I feel sorry for the staff, but the BBC has its sticky fingers in too many costly pies; it needs slimming down. Next will be a drop in the quality of its output with little original drama and more cheap game shows and reality offerings.
We can also expect the BBC, and its lackeys in the BBC Trust, to lobby for a change in the Charter and the way the BBC is funded. One proposal to get round the live TV opt-out is for every household, regardless of whether a TV is there, to be charged an annual fee.
Nowhere do I find any suggestions from media types for the BBC to be more accountable to its funders, us licence fee payers. The Trust, supposedly our representatives and guardians, are too close to BBC management to allow that to happen.