I think that if one good thing can come of this, is it doesn't help once in a while to be reminded of how the English are often perceived abroad. As a nation we have a certain aloofness, a superiority attitude (e.g. "The Best League in the World") and one of the legacies of Empire is a lingering resentment in many areas of the globe.
David Bond at the BBC: "Before today's World Cup vote, Sepp Blatter reminded FIFA executive comm members about "certain media" and "recent media coverage.""Forget all that "Woodward and Bernstein" bullshit, dragging up old allegations against FIFA and then broadcasting them two days before the vote was not an exercise in investigative journalism, it was the BBC letting us down.Everyone knows Blatter is a c***, and that Warner is a bigger c*** and overtly corrupt, but why on earth choose to shout it from the rooftops as the bid team was going to head out to Zurich?
Quote from: dave.woodhall on November 30, 2010, 12:34:01 AMGood on the BBC for not bowing to pressure and to their reporters for doing the job they entered their profession for. So, just because there was pressure on the BBC (not to derail a bid to bring the World Cup to England and thus deny hundreds of thousands of football fans and licence fee payers possibly the only chance of they'll ever get to witness it live), they were right not to bow to it? There is always pressure on people and organisations not to do bad things, so should they just do them anyway, rather than 'bow' to it?If anyone is inspired to become a reporter by the prospect of exposing FIFA as corrupt, I've got something even more inspirational for them regarding the toilet habits of bears and the possibility of the Pope being a Catholic.
Good on the BBC for not bowing to pressure and to their reporters for doing the job they entered their profession for.
Australia got one vote and like England went out in the first round, i feel sorry for those that have invested three years of their lives in the attempt to bring what is now a tarnished competition to their homeland. I really don't give a rats about it i'm over the England team and the year on year crap they serve up, i'm sick of overbloated egoes and paypackets of prem players and their agents. If it wasn't for my inbred love of Aston Villa i could quite happily totally ignore the sport, it has become a corrupt beheamoth that swallows everything that's good. It is totally self serving and is there to make sure those in power stay in power.Fck the England team, Fck FIFA, UP THE vILLA.
Quote from: Percy on December 01, 2010, 04:08:37 PMQuote from: dave.woodhall on November 30, 2010, 12:34:01 AMGood on the BBC for not bowing to pressure and to their reporters for doing the job they entered their profession for. So, just because there was pressure on the BBC (not to derail a bid to bring the World Cup to England and thus deny hundreds of thousands of football fans and licence fee payers possibly the only chance of they'll ever get to witness it live), they were right not to bow to it? There is always pressure on people and organisations not to do bad things, so should they just do them anyway, rather than 'bow' to it?If anyone is inspired to become a reporter by the prospect of exposing FIFA as corrupt, I've got something even more inspirational for them regarding the toilet habits of bears and the possibility of the Pope being a Catholic.They had a story and ran it. That isn't bad, it's their job.
True, but they had the option of waiting a couple of weeks to air it.Like the tabloid media who print exposes on England players in the run up to a world cup, then complain when said player has a poor tournament.Yes, they are only doing their job, but its obvious they are putting their job before their countries sporting achievements.
Quote from: mr woo on December 02, 2010, 09:20:33 PMTrue, but they had the option of waiting a couple of weeks to air it.Like the tabloid media who print exposes on England players in the run up to a world cup, then complain when said player has a poor tournament.Yes, they are only doing their job, but its obvious they are putting their job before their countries sporting achievements.There wouldn't be much point showing the programme afterwards. This week it's news, next week it's history. That's one of the drawbacks of a free press.