Sky
have come along and pounced on the healthy chicken, and dragging it back to
their den with their teeth firmly gripping hold of the neck, just like a fox
might. They are stealing the entire healthy crop that every other channel has.
Another example of it happening this year is Glee.
Channel
Four took the chance and aired the first two series. No-one knew whether or not
it would transfer well to a British audience. Channel Four hand-reared this
little foreign chick, until it became a hit, with a large fan base of people
who listen to the terrible music. Then, just when it was at its healthiest, Sky
came leaping in with their multi-millions, and ran off with the high-pitched
chicken shrieking out a Britney hit.
That
is what Sky does; they let other channels take the risk with a new show, and
then when it becomes popular, they take it and add to their collection of hits.
The sneaky bastards.
Now,
I have no real issue with Sky taking Glee. In fact, they have done me a favour.
My girlfriend watched it in the days when Channel 4 had it, but due to us not
having Sky, and me never being likely to have it, she can no longer watch it,
meaning I am saved from having to listen to crap actors sing crap songs with
crap voices. However, I DO have an issue with them spearheading Formula 1 away
from the BBC.
I
have never really had a passion for a sport before, but I do have an enormous
desire to wake up at 5:30am on a Sunday morning to sit in bed for four hours to
watch the race, as well as all the coverage before and after the race. It is an
experience which, in the two years the BBC has had it, has made it a real personable
show. It is a show which you feel a part of. It is an experience which is
better than actually being at the race. At the race, you can't go and listen to
every race driver talk profoundly in a friendly manner about their emotions at
winning a race.
The
F1 Forum, which always followed the race on the Red Button, gave this us, the
audience; the chance to see a sportsman express human emotion up close, which
was something to have not been done before. The BBC also go and interview
people at the races, such as mechanics who has take a break from rushing to get
the car ready for the race, to talk to nosey film crew. The presenting team go and
mingle with the public, especially at the British Grand Prix, and then you also
get interviews with celebrities such as Sir Paul McCartney and Rowan Atkinson.
And
now, because of Sky (although not entirely their fault; we can also blame the
Government for not raising the TV License, meaning the BBC had no extra money
to afford both BBC 4 and the F1. I mean, why could they not sacrifice BBC 3
instead?), that coverage has been sacrificed. The BBC still have coverage, but
it is very limited. From 2012, they will only be showing half of the races
live, with the others being limited to just two hours of highlights. And Sky? They're creating a whole channel,
because they have money to piss away on everything.
Sky
has also stolen a considerable amount of the BBC presenting team. So, not only
have Sky stolen another program which a channel has worked hard on to make a
success, but they have also stolen their talent. Why? Because they're greedy,
but they're also lazy. Essentially, they take the credit for the hard work done
by other people.
In
case you were not aware, News Corporation own part of Sky, with their bid to
take complete control being blocked earlier this year after the News of the
World scandal.
Not
a great year for the Murdoch's overall. But then, hey, feel no sympathy for
them. I mean, they APPARENTLY never read emails to them which informed them of
the illegal methods that their journalists used to get stories. If that's true,
they're incompetent idiots. If it's false, then they're bastard liars who will
go to any mean who protect their sun-warped faces. Neither option is great, but
I think we can all agree that the latter is probably the true option.
P.S. Think
about it: Are Sky going to produce clips such as these?
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