They used to send me forms too, when I had the cheaper licence for a black and white TV but they thought that I was pulling a fast one. I invited them to pop around and see my black and white TV for themselves. They didn't reply, but they also stopped sending me the form.Maia wrote: ↑Fri Nov 14, 2025 7:34 am The BBC have sent me yet another email demanding that I fill out a long online form declaring that I don't have a TV, don't watch this, that or the other on my laptop or phone, and have no plans to, otherwise I'll have to buy a licence or risk a £1000 fine. And they might send some people round to check, too.
I hope he doesn't, but unfortunately having seen the edited and unedited versions side by side, I think the programme editors at Panorama most likely set out to deliberately deceive their viewers (ie us) or else were so incompetent at editing and checking that the effect was the same. Probably the mistake was just at that level rather than the result of any grand conspiracy at management level, but having been alerted to what happened, apparently at least 6 months ago, the BBC board should have immediately responded by taking down the video and replacing it with a non-misleading version - either the full unedited 8 hour Trump speech or else a version that made clear that the two separate extracts were not one continuous whole. Instead they have allowed themselves to be in the wrong and Trump, for once, to be in the right. Apologies and senior resignations due, and were delivered, and in a sane world that would be the end of it. However, the morons at Panorama have handed Trump and his allies a major weapon and no doubt they'll make use it for all they are worth.
It bugs me a lot because (a) I really hate being lied to by one of the few media outlets I usually trust; (b) I am not a fan of Trump or his constant legal assaults on the free press and he will now use this business to intensify and justify those assaults; (c) if the BBC goes down then the world will be the poorer for it.