Tag Archives: BBC

Corporate social responsibility reports are usually back-slapping exercises, but the BBC is different

I cannot say I spend a great deal of my time reading corporate social responsibility reports, but one by the BBC recently dropped into my inbox and I thought I would take a look.

As with all these things, it contains a whole load of patting on the back, but my attention spiked around page 35 in the charity chapter, which highlights the role the BBC plays in supporting the voluntary sector across the UK and the world, both through its own charities and the work it does to support hundreds of others.

What’s interesting is that both Children in Need and Sport Relief have raised more than ever before in spite of the economic climate, with the former achieving £39m and Sport Relief £40m.

On the volunteering side of things, just under 700 staff members have worked with external charity partners through the BBC’s staff volunteering scheme Connect & Create. It works with 10 national charity partners and six local project partners in the north of England. But with 400 members of staff “working” at Glastonbury this year the true figure could be much higher.

One of the Connect & Create projects that really took my fancy was a relationship with Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, in which 15 BBC staff produced podcasts with young patients.

The BBC volunteers spent three days working at the hospital with the youngsters who recorded their experiences of different illnesses.  The podcasts were then uploaded to the hospital’s Children first for health website, where other children who had been newly diagnosed could download and listen to them.  

The BBC volunteers gained new skills and audience insights while Great Ormond Street received a valuable new communications tool for its patients. The project was also nominated for the best community programming prize at the Sony Radio Academy Awards 2010.
 
There are real opportunities for charities to take advantage and work with the BBC.

Ten organisations, including Whizz-Kidz, Age UK, Groundwork and Samaritans have been named as official Connect & Create national partners, but I know from my experience of working both inside and outside the BBC that there is great potential to develop relationships and links with the media giant.  Have you had BBC staff volunteering in your organisation or worked on a TV/radio project? It would be good to hear your stories.
 

 

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TV coverage is never guaranteed until the moment it’s broadcast

I have been working on a media campaign for a charity recently and a high profile TV programme was on board to cover the story. Or so I thought.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m not naive, and having spent 12 years working at the BBC as a producer I know that coverage isn’t guaranteed. But somehow this slipped my mind.

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New documentary shows the power of flim to highlight social issues

?I am passionate about the role film can play in bringing tough social issues to a wider audience.

I have been privileged to meet some of Britain’s finest filmmakers, including the multi-award winning Ken Loach and Andrea Arnold. What I find remarkable is their real insight into the issues they cover and their passion to give a voice to stories that often go unrepresented in mainstream media.

So I want to champion an award-winning documentary filmed by a first-time director that is having ad hoc screenings around the country and tackles the kind of issues many charity employees are familiar with. ? ?Shed Your Tears and Walk Away is a deeply personal documentary by filmmaker Jez Lewis. A special screening, in association with the charity Drugsline, takes place in London shortly.

The old mill town of Hebden Bridge in West Yorkshire has a reputation as a bohemian idyll, a thriving tourist destination and a haven for an artistic community.

Lewis grew up there, and was forced to question this image of the place when he found himself returning there frequently to attend funerals of childhood friends who had developed drink and drug problems or committed suicide.? ?The documentary starts with Lewis’ personal quest for understanding as he asks why people of his generation are killing themselves.

The film then moves into a year-long drama of human tragedy and redemption as the central character, Cass, comes to terms with his own mortality and attempts to lift himself out of his cycle of self-destruction.  

The documentary provides a snapshot of some of the real social and economic problems affecting our society. As I watched a screening of the film I was transported into a world that I personally had never encountered. It was easy to forget that there was a camera there, such was the ability of the director to get the people he was filming to open up in such an honest way.

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