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- Sep 20, 2018
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I need a bigger picture. How does that make the UK separating from Europe look?The big picture is that tomorrow is a general election for the House of Commons, that polls are not to be trusted and anything is possible from Tories are getting a majority up to Corbyn might become prime minister.
If the Tories get an outright majority, then Johnson's plan is likely to go through. Any other result leads to a probable defeat of the exit deal and _______________ ?I guess I shall have to do my research outside of VVO. I was wondering what this election means for whether the UK leaves the EU.
Even if the pro-Brexit MPs will gain a huge majority tomorrow, not much is clear. It is only clear, that the UK leaves the EU, but not under which conditions and circumsstances. and how the relations between uk and EU will be. With a deal or without a deal, and this deal must be negotiated still, especially the important trade relations between uk and Eu. A lot of people fear that there is not time enough to come to a result within the transition period.. and the UK will fall back to the General agreementi of Tariffs and Trade of the WTO[/QUOTE]I guess I shall have to do my research outside of VVO. I was wondering what this election means for whether the UK leaves the EU.
This is, of course, the work of Russia.
Copyright claimed. :-(
Live events, like the news and sporting events? Nope. Lots of archival stuff? Not all of it.In general, BBC isn't stopping you or anyone else overseas watching their content because of licence fee issues but because another company -- HBO or whoever -- has the US distribution rights for whatever it is you want to watch.
I just looked up the numbers and even for a B&W license the fee is more than some existing popular streaming services. Or are that many people exempt from the fee?The justification for the licence fee is that it enables the BBC to concentrate on quality programming rather than chasing ratings, though frequently the Beeb seem to forget this and go head to head with ITV.
If the licence fee goes, the BBC would presumably become a subscription-only channel, and doubtless it would be a very good one, but that would render it inaccessible to the poorest members of the viewing public, which some people might consider a shame.
Live sports are most certainly covered by national distribution rights. There's big money involved -- British pub landlords have to pay a fortune to Sky Sports for a licence to show their live coverage of major Eritish premiership and international matches.Live events, like the news and sporting events? Nope. Lots of archival stuff? Not all of it.
No, but have you compared how much the BBC spends overall on original programming vs how much the content broadcast by some existing popular streaming services costs them?I just looked up the numbers and even for a B&W license the fee is more than some existing popular streaming services. Or are that many people exempt from the fee?
As I understand it, they and ITV both own part of britbox, which operates in both the UK and the US. All they would need to do is move anything into its library that is missing (except for where there is a licensing issue) and add their live streams. They could even raise the britbox price a bit if need be and drastically reduce their broadcast facilities.No, but have you compared how much the BBC spends overall on original programming vs how much the content broadcast by some existing popular streaming services costs them?
I just looked up the numbers and even for a B&W license the fee is more than some existing popular streaming services. Or are that many people exempt from the fee?
The TV licence pays for content across NINE national TV stations, as well as additional localised regional TV content and an internet-only station (BBC3).The TV lisense fee SOLELY goes to paying for BBC content, right?
No there isn't.There is such a thing as a licence fee for radio only
Yes you can.You can't even listen to a radio legally without a licence