Thanks - never thought of that! most of the time not having a TV is a blessing - in this case . . . .
The last time I moved house there was a period of about ten days or a fortnight or so when I was still getting all the new stuff sorted and I was without a telly - and I loved it. To this day I watch very little; there's so much garbage, and so many better things to do with your time.
I like to keep up with the news, the odd comedy show, any animal programmes, documentaries, and sport, especially cricket. None of that is garbage; and indeed they serves to “inform, educate and entertain,” as the sainted John Reith had it. TV surely provides the most effective way to achieve those things.
Comedies - certain ones at any rate -, animal programmes and documentaries I'm in full agreement with. Neither news nor sport interest me in the slightest so I don't bother with those.
Whether TV provides the most effective way to achieve Reith's noble ambition is highly arguable. In these days of slashed budgets, I'd say there's less chance of that than ever before. I was having a discussion not ever so long ago about the almost total absence from today's screens of things like Kenneth Clark's
Civilization or Jacob Bronowski's
Ascent of Man. It's important not to don the rose-tinted spectacles, I realise; such programmes were exceptional landmarks in their own time and of course they were surrounded by a load of crap of their own day. But I don't see anything even remotely of the same scope, scale and ambition being made nowadays - the same old excuse is always trotted out that there isn't enough money. The BBC can't keep going all the channels that it currently operates - BBC Three is due for the chop, and not too many weeks ago Bruce Forsyth was saying that along with the aforementioned channel he'd get rid of BBC Four as well (one of the channels I like best and watch most). I don't buy into the argument that in the era of hundreds of channels as well as umpteen other non-TV sources of entertainment audiences have changed and there'd be no audience for such things today.
If Lord Reith were around today and shown tonight's TV schedule, or perhaps better still given a Sky remote and shown how to channel-hop, I think we can all guess what his reaction would be.