Thursday 29 September 2011

My Big Mouth: Jeremy Clarkson, the BBC and Salford's MediaCityUK


Outraged Mancunians are hitting back after BBC presenter, Jeremy Clarkson, slammed Salford when talking about the BBC’s MediaCityUK.

Clarkson, 51, said Salford, in Greater Manchester, is a ‘small suburb with little to offer beyond a Starbucks and a canal with ducks’.

He added: “Every year we’d end up making a Christmas special from the Dog and Duck or the nearest Arndale Centre.”

He also said he would rather quit his job than move up to the BBC’s new venture in Salford.
BBC legend and It’s A Knockout presenter, Stuart Hall, 81, has come to Salford’s defence with a characteristically eccentric response, calling Clarkson ‘deluded’.

He said: “Does he imagine that at the advance of effete southerners we retreat to our outside lavatories with ripped-up copies of the News of the Screws?
“Manchester is a seat of knowledge, a breeding ground for brains.”

Once again, the so-called north/ south divide is highlighted and designer Peter Saville and comedian Victoria Wood have defended Salford and Manchester.

Wood said she did not really follow Clarkson’s career and that all she knows about him is that he wears a denim jacket.

Mr Saville, who was a designer for Factory Records, said: “Manchester is a great place for it to be.”

I think Salford can look after itself though. Northerners know the sorts of things Southerners think about them and vice versa. It is the way it has always been.

The Today Programme’s Evan Davis wrote an arguably patronising article following Clarkson’s comments, saying: “I have been up there for the first time this week."

The heading to his article on the BBC website said the ‘BBC should give Salford a try’. I’m not sure how Salfordians will take that. They probably feel like they are coping fine as they are.

Cllr Bernard Lea, who will be Salford’s mayor in 2012-2013, said: “Having lived in Surrey during my teenage years, I can appreciate the image seen by Southern Softies. The reality is quite different.”

He added: “If I were to use two words to describe his (Clarkson's) utterances they would be PITY and PRAT.

“A PITY he chose to make an uninformed comment, and he has made himself look a right PRAT.”

I am from Cheshire but I have spent plenty of time in Salford and I don’t even feel slightly offended about comments like Clarkson’s.

Salford is a city on the up and everyone who lives and works there should be proud of this.

Salford, in my opinion, is not the most beautiful place in the world and yes, beauty is in the eye of the beholder, however, that is a reason MediaCityUK will be a brilliant thing for the city.

In fact, the plans have already created hype in the area; there is more hope and people want to come to live and work in the city because they see it as something which will become better and better in coming years.

The argument that there is more working talent in London and that the BBC might not produce the same quality of TV as it does there is a valid one and it is not hard to see why the young and gifted would want to leave the provinces to test themselves in the country’s melting pot.

However, people seem to be missing the point about this new venture. They are wondering, ‘What can Salford do for the BBC?’ but the question should be, ‘What can the BBC do for Salford?’

The BBC says that it is paid for by the whole of the UK and it needs to reflect the depth and breadth of our culture.

It added that BBC North will help meet the commitment to get as close to their audiences as possible.

I doubt many Northerners were not surprised when they heard the BBC would be moving several of its departments to Salford but surely most people will support something that will help to improve an area which still requires a leg-up.

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