As BBC goes Nationwide, it could learn from Michael Barratt – David Behrens

You have to be of a certain age to remember Michael Barratt fronting Nationwide on BBC1. It was his avuncular yet blunt Yorkshire presence that held together the daily technical shambles of trying to talk to a dozen regional presenters at the same time.
Tim Davie, new Director General of the BBCTim Davie, new Director General of the BBC
Tim Davie, new Director General of the BBC

It was The One Show of its day, except that it didn’t condescend. Viewers were still assumed to be at least as intelligent as the people in the studio.

However, the programme was founded on the conceit that the BBC maintained the nation’s premiere local news network, which it did not. ITV had more regions and spent more money on each of them.

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Yorkshire was a case in point. In Barratt’s home city of Leeds, the commercial channel had a full-scale network production centre while the BBC staff had to make do with a studio in an old church, furnished with hand-me-down technical gear from London.

Mr Nationwide, Michael Barratt's autobiographyMr Nationwide, Michael Barratt's autobiography
Mr Nationwide, Michael Barratt's autobiography

Today the services are more evenly matched – but that’s because ITV’s local output has been scaled back, not because the BBC has upped its own. Within the Corporation, the regions have always been a backwater.

So what are we to make of its sudden determination to “better reflect” the life of the country outside the capital? Its new director-general, Tim Davie, promises that Newsnight and other programmes will be transmitted from across the country and that the North will have its own soap opera, rather like the ones ITV has been running with not a little success for the last 60 years. It will be, says Mr Davie, the Corporation’s biggest transformation in decades.