Quick! Force them to watch dads army and eat pork pies!
Jimmy321123 on
Kids are not watching terrestrial tv and not watching Blue Peter and Eastenders like we did when I was little.
DrCrazyFishMan1 on
What he means is British broadcasters have totally failed to create culture for British children.
No kids are going to watch Rosie and Jim or The Clangers in 2024. Broadcasters need to develop new cultural icons for kids
trmetroidmaniac on
Not incorrect, but then so is everyone. No such thing as British culture exists presently.
socratic-meth on
> Last year only 55 per cent watched broadcast TV every week, down from 81 per cent in 2018, with the majority of their viewing time spent on primetime shows rather than children’s programmes. Audiences in recent weeks for Blue Peter on CBBC and iPlayer have fallen below 50,000.
This article makes it seem like the primary distribution mechanism of British culture to children is television. That seems pretty depressing.
chit-chat-chill on
A symptom of the internet and realistically probably one of the better ones. Just recognition (put my hippy hat on) that we are humans on earth not British people in Britain.
Before people watched and consumed only what they had access to. Nothing has changed but access to media has grown and their is more to pick from.
To sum up: Mrs Brown’s boys is shit and people would rather scroll insta stories. Woe
Freedom of choice
ThouShallConform on
British culture is essentially a Christian culture.
This idea we have no culture is ridiculous tbh and another example of how western media has taught young people to essentially de value themselves and their societies.
The bbc are part of the reason children and young people feel this way.
811545b2-4ff7-4041 on
A ‘culture’ relies on a zeitgeist. We’ve lost a lot of that with the rise in streaming television. Kid’s won’t all watch the same shows, won’t have a collective cultural memory of stuff like Blue Peter, He Man or Bob the Builder.
Stuff has got to be hyper successful and commercialised to do this – e.g. Bluey
_lerp on
What culture? Hooliganism, binge drinking and racism?
CaptMelonfish on
Bbc ends programming for kids on their regular channels.
Also bbc: no culture since loss of kids programming on regular channels!
A_Ticklish_Midget on
In the words of Sleaford Mods:
“What culture? Fuck culture”
MrSierra125 on
I wonder why? Ask any right wingers and their view of British culture is totally toxic and cringe and outdated and tainted with racism.
Same people also think it’s woke to point out actual interesting parts of British culture and also they think things like science is fake which instantly puts a huge part of British culture out of bounds for them.
One of the reasons the British empire thrived was due to scientific advances such as vaccination and mathematics and exploring the world. Yet the anti woke brigade cry about vaccines and want to defund education and believe the earth is flat.
Eulaylia on
British Culture isn’t just tv, pubs and music.
British culture is helping those in need, standing up for injustices, protesting for what you think is right.
Doing things, even those you don’t want to. Because it’s your civic duty to do so.
To be British is to stand up for and advocate for what you believe would make the country a better place.
It’s doing the hard things, not for personal glory. We do it for the good of our communities that we live in and our country.
I don’t think it’s just children, I believe a lot of people have forgotten what it means to be British.
xwsrx on
Absolute nonsense from the BBC again!
So many Tories and RefUK voters howling about the erosion of British culture.
Each one of them will have produced such a vast opus of contributions to British culture no child in the land could avoid being bathed in culture.
(Despite the fact, whenever any of them are asked, they can’t name a single contribution of theirs – I’m certain they’re not such abject leaching hypocrites they haven’t contributed a thing)
friends_with_salad_ on
Back in ye olde 80s and early 90s there were only four channels, only two of which had regular programming for kids, so more money went to producing top drawer content.
Then we got cable with its own dedicated channels for kids, and now there are numerous streaming services, so the talent who would have been spread over two channels, has been diluted down over time.
Blue Peter also used to bore me to tears. It was always so… dorky.
amazingusername100 on
How are the BBC defining British culture? Kids might not be watching TV but are out camping and earning badges with the Scouts or Brownies, that feels quite British.
GhostRiders on
Can somebody please tell me what excalty is “British Culture”….
Shmikken on
“Children aren’t into the same shit their parents were at their age” , well bugger me, never saw that coming.
Astriania on
Expect the usual collection of comments that say there’s no such thing as British culture, that we are uniquely just a blank slate for other cultures (which definitely do exist and should be celebrated) to enrich.
No-Actuator-6245 on
What new cultural thing have been created in the last 20 years specifically in the UK? We don’t have anything and you have to go back a lot further to find cultural achievements to be proud of.
20 Comments
Quick! Force them to watch dads army and eat pork pies!
Kids are not watching terrestrial tv and not watching Blue Peter and Eastenders like we did when I was little.
What he means is British broadcasters have totally failed to create culture for British children.
No kids are going to watch Rosie and Jim or The Clangers in 2024. Broadcasters need to develop new cultural icons for kids
Not incorrect, but then so is everyone. No such thing as British culture exists presently.
> Last year only 55 per cent watched broadcast TV every week, down from 81 per cent in 2018, with the majority of their viewing time spent on primetime shows rather than children’s programmes. Audiences in recent weeks for Blue Peter on CBBC and iPlayer have fallen below 50,000.
This article makes it seem like the primary distribution mechanism of British culture to children is television. That seems pretty depressing.
A symptom of the internet and realistically probably one of the better ones. Just recognition (put my hippy hat on) that we are humans on earth not British people in Britain.
Before people watched and consumed only what they had access to. Nothing has changed but access to media has grown and their is more to pick from.
To sum up: Mrs Brown’s boys is shit and people would rather scroll insta stories. Woe
Freedom of choice
British culture is essentially a Christian culture.
This idea we have no culture is ridiculous tbh and another example of how western media has taught young people to essentially de value themselves and their societies.
The bbc are part of the reason children and young people feel this way.
A ‘culture’ relies on a zeitgeist. We’ve lost a lot of that with the rise in streaming television. Kid’s won’t all watch the same shows, won’t have a collective cultural memory of stuff like Blue Peter, He Man or Bob the Builder.
Stuff has got to be hyper successful and commercialised to do this – e.g. Bluey
What culture? Hooliganism, binge drinking and racism?
Bbc ends programming for kids on their regular channels.
Also bbc: no culture since loss of kids programming on regular channels!
In the words of Sleaford Mods:
“What culture? Fuck culture”
I wonder why? Ask any right wingers and their view of British culture is totally toxic and cringe and outdated and tainted with racism.
Same people also think it’s woke to point out actual interesting parts of British culture and also they think things like science is fake which instantly puts a huge part of British culture out of bounds for them.
One of the reasons the British empire thrived was due to scientific advances such as vaccination and mathematics and exploring the world. Yet the anti woke brigade cry about vaccines and want to defund education and believe the earth is flat.
British Culture isn’t just tv, pubs and music.
British culture is helping those in need, standing up for injustices, protesting for what you think is right.
Doing things, even those you don’t want to. Because it’s your civic duty to do so.
To be British is to stand up for and advocate for what you believe would make the country a better place.
It’s doing the hard things, not for personal glory. We do it for the good of our communities that we live in and our country.
I don’t think it’s just children, I believe a lot of people have forgotten what it means to be British.
Absolute nonsense from the BBC again!
So many Tories and RefUK voters howling about the erosion of British culture.
Each one of them will have produced such a vast opus of contributions to British culture no child in the land could avoid being bathed in culture.
(Despite the fact, whenever any of them are asked, they can’t name a single contribution of theirs – I’m certain they’re not such abject leaching hypocrites they haven’t contributed a thing)
Back in ye olde 80s and early 90s there were only four channels, only two of which had regular programming for kids, so more money went to producing top drawer content.
Then we got cable with its own dedicated channels for kids, and now there are numerous streaming services, so the talent who would have been spread over two channels, has been diluted down over time.
Blue Peter also used to bore me to tears. It was always so… dorky.
How are the BBC defining British culture? Kids might not be watching TV but are out camping and earning badges with the Scouts or Brownies, that feels quite British.
Can somebody please tell me what excalty is “British Culture”….
“Children aren’t into the same shit their parents were at their age” , well bugger me, never saw that coming.
Expect the usual collection of comments that say there’s no such thing as British culture, that we are uniquely just a blank slate for other cultures (which definitely do exist and should be celebrated) to enrich.
What new cultural thing have been created in the last 20 years specifically in the UK? We don’t have anything and you have to go back a lot further to find cultural achievements to be proud of.