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Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by chris955
(Post 9749801)
Well looking at the figures more and more are returning, there seems no doubt about that. We have to remember that people return home for a great many different reasons. I would imagine that the higher cost of living is having an affect also as you say house prices. We are able to buy a very nice place in the UK now with the equity we have in our Australian house. Maybe people's priorities are changing ?
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Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by sheene
(Post 9749614)
Go on then - name another Broadcasting company with the same quality of output, including drama, current affairs, documentary, comedy etc.
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Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by Triumph3
(Post 9750036)
"Company". You make it sound as if they get their money as all other media companies do. If it wasn't for the unfair TV tax and if they had to act as a proper company, they'd sink without a trace.
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Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by Dicko
(Post 9749177)
And I had to laugh at the final point from Jono Coleman:
"If you're broke, where would you rather be? Sitting in a park in the rain in London, or in a park in Sydney looking at the ocean?" I'm out of work right now and would rather be in the UK - So much more to do with museums, world class media, evening classes that don't break the bank, walks in the country & by the sea etc etc....and of course, supportive friends and family! Australia is a great country to be in if you moved here a few years ago, managed to afford a house and have a secure job. But more sunny days don't compensate for the reduced quality of life you'll have when you're on a low income here |
Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by Chortlepuss
(Post 9750704)
How many broke people sit in a park in Sydney looking at the ocean? I guess those with a brown bag in hand!
I'm out of work right now and would rather be in the UK - So much more to do with museums, world class media, evening classes that don't break the bank, walks in the country & by the sea etc etc....and of course, supportive friends and family! Australia is a great country to be in if you moved here a few years ago, managed to afford a house and have a secure job. But more sunny days don't compensate for the reduced quality of life you'll have when you're on a low income here I believe that everywhere has a reduced standard of living these days, because of inflation, but that this is worse in countries that have very expensive real estate like Australia, so quality of life will be reduced because so much money gets spent on servicing vast mortgages at relatively high rates. Those that got on the property ladder a few decades ago should have an easier time because when they had to borrow to buy their first few homes real estate did not cost so much.:frown: |
Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by Turban Explorer
(Post 9749425)
He's got a good physique for Qld. :p I believe there is such a thing as the male 'gunt'?
doesnt have the same ring to it |
Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by sheene
(Post 9749614)
Go on then - name another Broadcasting company with the same quality of output, including drama, current affairs, documentary, comedy etc.
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Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by Amazulu
(Post 9751070)
What are you blathering on about? I said that the BBC news can be biased - nothing else. What has this got to do with all the other stuff that they do? Every news agency on the planet is biased to some degree, some more than others. If they were not, we would be living in a world similar to that Ricky Gervais movie.
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Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by sheene
(Post 9751207)
Nice try, but no Cigar.
Your post was irrelevant to what I wrote. Click ignore. |
Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by Amazulu
(Post 9751302)
What language are you talking? Bollocks?
Your post was irrelevant to what I wrote. Click ignore. |
Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by Turban Explorer
(Post 9751353)
How come I can't get on your ignore list AZ?
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Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by chris955
(Post 9749801)
Well looking at the figures more and more are returning, there seems no doubt about that. We have to remember that people return home for a great many different reasons. I would imagine that the higher cost of living is having an affect also as you say house prices. We are able to buy a very nice place in the UK now with the equity we have in our Australian house. Maybe people's priorities are changing ?
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Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by Triumph3
(Post 9750036)
"Company". You make it sound as if they get their money as all other media companies do. If it wasn't for the unfair TV tax and if they had to act as a proper company, they'd sink without a trace.
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Re: BBC Article
Originally Posted by sheene
(Post 9751665)
Their profits continue to rise through the worldwide sales of it's premier programs and if you ask many expats, they say one of the things they miss about the UK is the TV. I never complained about the levy whilst in the UK because from my perspective, the amount of enjoyment from watching and listening to the BBC far outweighed the cost. The BBC is a huge employer in the UK, a fantastic training ground for new talent in all aspects of broadcasting, a great advert for British expertise and one of the few things we still do exceptionally well. The repercussions if it 'sank' would far outweigh the cheers from a few whingers.
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Re: BBC Article
That is the problem we have here, the bar is set so low there is virtually nothing to aim for and it must be said they hit the standard every time.
Originally Posted by Turban Explorer
(Post 9751674)
Indeed. The BBC also raises the game of ITV, Channel 4 and the other channels as they have to compete. I'd certainly pay a couple of hundred bucks a year for watchable television here.
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