I definitely think you’re right, Nora. In fact, my post for tomorrow focuses on the prominence of documentary programming in primetime, which simply doesn’t exist on the US networks. The public service mandate has a lot to do with that, and part of the BBC’s founding ideology involved the idea of not playing down to audiences (as was assumed commercial TV did) but instead providing programming that pushed them up toward greater intellectual heights. There’s inevitably an elitist, patronizing and paternalistic element to that, so it’s not always a great thing in practice. But in the sense that it results in a wide variety of often challenging programming, it has many upsides, especially compared to commercial alternatives.
In one of these posts I hope to also get to the differing decency regulations in each system, explaining what’s behind all the swearing. 🙂
Chris
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