As Iain Dale was kind enough to show me around Doughty St TV a few weeks ago it would have been churlish of me not to accept his invitation to be interviewed on his show. However, as colleagues suggested to me in advance, the idea of a BBC executive submitting to the Doughty St experience brings to mind phrases like "Christians, Lions and Ritual Sacrifice". A view reinforced by some of the advance comments on his blog when he asked for questions ("Father Tim said...Ggrrrrrrr, I fecking hate the BBC. I must destroy them. Gnash. Gnash.")
Iain was, of course, thoroughly professional, courteous, quietly probing and an all round decent bloke.
His colleague Tim Montgomerie was less impressed with my answer to his emailed question about Robin Atiken's criticisms of the BBC. Actually, he's right, my response was inadequate. I was ready, if needs be, to talk about the circularity of the "unconscious bias" allegation (where any defence is dismissed with "see, you dont recognise it, guilty as charged"!) or with the question of drawing general conclusions from singular examples, the specifics of some of Robin's other allegations or, indeed, my own view about some of the deficiencies in the BBC's journalism and what they amount to. However, I was unaware we had never interviewed Robin about his views on air and, being now outside the UK commissioning circle, unaware of any reasons why. (None I can think of beyond whether the accusations are sufficiently interesting to those not already convinced of the BBC's bias..)
Reaction on Iain's blog was perceptive ("Richard Sambrook - he's got awfully old and bald and fat....") True, I'm 50, beyond "thinning" and an outrageous 34" waist. But it went on to suggest I must be unemployable which I'm happy to say I'm not (3 or 4 job offers a year on average, but none as interesting as what I currently do.)
Anyway, I enjoyed it. I think the Doughty St model, regardless of your or their politics, is really interesting and the way the content is sliced, diced and distributed across blogs and sites gives it a halo beyond its immediate viewership. It's genuinely innovative and points the way for a much wider range of views and voices, unregulated and diverse. Must be a good thing. However, you do need a generous benefactor - no money to be made yet - and their staffing is commendably lean, but perhaps a little too much so. I was left sitting in the green room for ten minutes after we should have been on air, unknown to Iain who assumed I had stood them up.
And personally, whatever anyone makes of the interview, I believe it's right that institutions like the BBC drop their defensiveness a little and go and talk with their critics. We need to do more of it.