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Author Topic: Future of Mixing It?  (Read 429 times)
rik_bass
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« on: 13:22:01, 20-02-2007 »

I recieved the following from Iain Chambers (on MI's production team), in response to an initial query that had seemingly been intercepted by Graham Dixon, Managing Editor of R3:

 
many thanks for your email.
there are no plans for a new experimental programme as far as we know....
it's possible that mark & robert may broadcast on resonance fm at some point, but i don't know for sure
sorry to not be of more help
 
all the best
iain

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roland_rock
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WWW
« Reply #1 on: 15:23:10, 20-02-2007 »

According to this Guardian Leader, in a few months time we will have forgotten about Mixing It and be blissfully happy, listening to the new R3 schedules:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/story/0,,2016958,00.html

 Angry
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MI_may it not r.i.p
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« Reply #2 on: 17:15:30, 23-02-2007 »

I can't believe how annoying the Guardian is these days. Like the BBC, it's a waste of money.
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pim_derks
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« Reply #3 on: 21:01:00, 23-02-2007 »

I can't believe how annoying the Guardian is these days. Like the BBC, it's a waste of money.
"Just as there is said to be no correct grammar or spelling, so there is no higher or lower culture: difference itself is the only recognized distinction. This is a view peddled by intellectuals eager to demonstrate to one another their broad-mindedly democratic sentiment. For example, the newspaper that is virtually the house journal of Britain's liberal intelligentsia, the Guardian (which would once honorably have demanded that, in the name of equity and common decency, the entire population should be given access to high culture), recently published an article about a meeting in New York of what it described in headlines as "some of America's biggest minds."

And who were America's biggest minds? Were they its Nobel prize-winning scientists, its physicists and molecular biologists? Were they America's best contemporary scholars or writers? Or perhaps its electronics entrepreneurs who have so transformed the world in the last half-century?

No, some of the biggest minds in America belonged, in the opinion of the Guardian, to rap singers such as Puff Daddy, who were meeting in New York (for "a summit," as the Guardian put it) to end the spate of senseless mutual killings of East and West Coast rap singers and improve the public image of rap as a genre. Pictures of the possessors of these gigantic minds accompanied the article, so that even if you did not already know that rap lyrics espouse a set of values that is in equal part brutal and stupid, you would know at once that these allegedly vast intellects belonged to people indistinguishable from street thugs.

The insincerity of this flattery is obvious to anyone with even a faint acquaintance with the grandeur of human achievement. It is inconceivable that the writer of the article, or the editor of the newspaper, both educated men, truly believed that Puff Daddy et al. possessed some of the biggest minds in America. But the fact that the debased culture of which rap music is a product receives such serious attention and praise deludes its listeners into supposing that nothing finer exists than what they already know and like. Such flattery is thus the death of aspiration, and lack of aspiration is, of course, one of the causes of passivity."


Theodore Dalrymple

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"People hate anything well made. It gives them a guilty conscience." John Betjeman
alvesisbest
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Posts: 26


« Reply #4 on: 09:53:30, 24-02-2007 »

I can't believe how annoying the Guardian is these days. Like the BBC, it's a waste of money.

I gave up with the Guardian ages ago - it's gone all sort of 'spongy', it is, as you say, a waste of money.
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