Too much information

JohnM20 replied on 11/04/2021 11:45

Posted on 11/04/2021 11:45

Does anyone else get frustrated by the amount of information superimposed on TV screens especially during important events. The BBC is the worst offender I think.

During the many Covid briefings from Downing Street there have been at least three different strap-lines, one at the top telling us that the picture is' Live from Downing Street' (but not, of course, if you have recorded it)Towards the bottom of the screen is 'BBC News' frequently telling us that Boris or others will be leading the briefing that is already on and that we are trying to watch and then a second ticker-tape line at the bottom of the screen of 'Breaking News' some of which we have just heard Boris etc telling us and some completely irrelevant to the matter in hand. These two lower lines in particular block out a good proportion of the screen, often making important information shown at the bottom of the graphs completely invisible. The lower part of a person's head is also frequently obliterated.

The same thing happened yesterday during the 41 gun salute for Prince Philip. Many of the guns couldn't actually be seen for the same reason as above, particularly Cardiff Castle. Why broadcast something that can't be seen. I may as well listen to the radio.

Do the producers of these programmes never actually look at what they are broadcasting or do the copy writers just believe in their own self importance and believe that their wordage is more important than the picture that they are covering up?

SteveL replied on 12/04/2021 09:26

Posted on 12/04/2021 08:39 by JohnM20

Talk about a thread being highjacked ! Of the 84 posts as a result of my OP only 1 actually answered my comments and another, after re-reading, believed it was just a general complaint about the BBC. No it wasn't.

At no point in my OP did I make any comment about the amount of coverage or the fact that the very same broadcast was on at least three  BBC channels simultaneously even though I was  disappointed by this. It was not the purpose of the post. It was about straplines and banners obliterating the screen and covering important information or images, for those that haven't bothered to read it.

I know threads can drift away from the OP, I've been guilty myself, but it appeared that people just wanted to complain about the coverage and my OP was a vehicle for them to immediately jump on to. It makes me wonder if it is ever worth asking a straightforward question on here. 

Posted on 12/04/2021 09:26

I certainly addressed your point, before admittedly drifting, as did several others. So I think your count of one a little inaccurate. However, to think that such a topic would not drift is totally unrealistic.

Metheven replied on 12/04/2021 09:39

Posted on 12/04/2021 09:39

Does anyone else get frustrated by the amount of information superimposed on TV screens especially during important events.

No

brue replied on 12/04/2021 09:57

Posted on 12/04/2021 09:57

I admitted, I didn't read the question properly, probably due to coming in via latest activity and so only looking at the latest comments. 

But I did say had you watched ITV on Saturday the coverage was good and Cardiff Castle wasn't obscured by banners. Yes information superimposed on screens can detract from the actual programme and you can contact the BBC with your ideas about improvements.

replied on 12/04/2021 10:15

Posted on 12/04/2021 09:39 by Metheven

Does anyone else get frustrated by the amount of information superimposed on TV screens especially during important events.

No

Posted on 12/04/2021 10:15

The user and all related content has been deleted

SteveL replied on 12/04/2021 10:32

Posted on 12/04/2021 10:32

I quite like the one that scrolls across the very bottom with the latest updates. It’s the ones they stack above that I find rather pointless, often a huge one saying breaking news, not really contributing a lot. I assume the producers of the programme don't actually have them on there screens, otherwise they would realise they are often covering important content.

moulesy replied on 12/04/2021 12:29

Posted on 12/04/2021 12:29

"the the persons who it was about would have been aware of what was to haapen"

And you know that how? Surely "they" are not on your email contacts list? (Or maybe "they" are one of your dog walking "contacts") laughing

KjellNN replied on 12/04/2021 15:41

Posted on 12/04/2021 10:32 by SteveL

I quite like the one that scrolls across the very bottom with the latest updates. It’s the ones they stack above that I find rather pointless, often a huge one saying breaking news, not really contributing a lot. I assume the producers of the programme don't actually have them on there screens, otherwise they would realise they are often covering important content.

Posted on 12/04/2021 15:41

I don't mind the latest news one along the bottom, but agree with Steve that the ones above are annoying and often obscure far too much of the screen.

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