1980: Is the BBC WORTH the LICENCE FEE? | Man Alive | Making of... | BBC Archive
"To pay £34 for a channel I don't look at is quite expensive." The price of a colour TV licence has risen to a record nine pence a day - almost as much as a newspaper. And yet, they say, it's not enough. The British Broadcasting Corporation faces the worst crisis in its history. While ITV is making handsome profits, the BBC is cutting back programmes, making do with old equipment, losing and laying-off staff. And next year it will get worse. In a special report, Man Alive's Jeremy James examines some facts about television advertising, commercial efficiency, BBC bureaucracy, and public attitudes to the box. He asks if other ways should be found of paying for the BBC, or whether it is just up to Auntie to improve her housekeeping and content herself - and the viewer - with a much reduced service. Is the BBC really as hard up as it claims, or is it just crying wolf? How does the corporation compare with its commercial rival ITV, and with other public service broadcasters in Europe? Nick Ross hosts a studio discussion between Alasdair Milne - the managing director of BBC television, William Brown - the Chairman of Independent Television Companies Association, Vincent Hanna - Chairman of the National Union of Journalists, Michael Grade - Director of Programmes at LWT, Tony Hearn - General Secretary of the Association of Broadcast Staff, Conservative MP Julian Critchley, and Labour MP Barry Sheerman. Producer: John Percival Editor: Tim Slessor Clip taken from Man Alive, originally broadcast on BBC Two, 14 May, 1980. You have now entered the BBC Archive, a time machine that will transport you back to the golden age of TV to educate, entertain and enlighten you with classic clips from the BBC vaults. Make sure you subscribe so that you never miss a single stop on our amazing journey through the BBC Archive - https://www.youtube.com/c/BBCArchive?... You can also dive into plenty more BBC Archive on our website - https://www.bbc.co.uk/archive

Blair & Brown: The New Labour Revolution (Episode 1)

1979: Can Triumph Survive? | Man Alive | BBC Archive

1970: The Serious Business of Shopping | Tuesday Documentary: The Retail Game | BBC Archive

Smell My Cheese You Mother! - I'm Alan Partridge - BBC

What do tech pioneers think about the AI revolution? - The Engineers, BBC World Service

1974: Is Tourism Destroying Cornwall? | Man Alive | Voice of the People | BBC Archive

Journalist Robert MacNeil on John F. Kennedy's assassination - TelevisionAcademy.com/Interviews

S13 E17: Trump’s Reflecting Pool, Redistricting & Soaps: 6/28/26: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver

Becoming Il Duce: Mussolini's Fascist revolution | FULL DOCUMENTARY | EPISODE 1

When Fame Protects a Predator: The Jimmy Savile Story the BBC Missed

Is the AfD a threat to Germany? Mehdi Hasan & Maximilian Krah | Head to Head

The Black Sox Scandal – A Chicago Stories Documentary

British Leyland Cars | British Car Manufacturing | TV Eye | 1980

When The Country Stood Still: Inside The Queen's Final Moments

1969: How do You Live on the AVERAGE WAGE? | Man Alive | Voice of the People | BBC Archive

Sarah Paine — The war for India (Lecture & interview)

How Harvey Weinstein Tried to Silence Accusers (full documentary) | FRONTLINE

Italia 90: The Rise Of Hooligans | Documentary | S1 E1

Maggie Haberman & Jonathan Swan - On “Regime Change” & Inside The Trump Presidency | The Daily Show

