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Economic Development

Q&A: BBC Birmingham boss Joe Godwin gets real on funding

The former BBC Children's boss has had a baptism of fire in his new role heading up BBC Birmingham. Ahead of it starting to recruit for 100 HR jobs at The Mailbox, Mr Godwin spoke to head of business Graeme Brown about its future in the region and the Post’s demands for half of money raised in the Midlands to be spent here

Head of BBC Birmingham Joe Godwin at The Mailbox

Graeme Brown: How are you going to ensure more BBC activity in the Midlands?

Joe Godwin: There are different ways you can do it. It is complicated by the current situation - we have had a flat licence fee.

Having moved up to Salford with the children's division, where I moved and the whole department moved, that was five or six years ago when there was a different economic environment and a different time in terms of BBC resources.

But we have had a flat licence fee. I am being what I would call realistic but optimistic. I wouldn't have come here and given up a fantastic job with children's if I wasn't optimistic.

The reason I came to do this job is because I want this place to be fantastic but my approach has to be, partly because of the economics and partly because it is how big operations work, persuade, influence, build the buzz, which generates the confidence which I think will evolve activity.

GB: Birmingham is calling for a major increase in investment from the BBC. The BBC doesn't seem to agree – as the director of BBC Birmingham, where do you sit?

JG: Where I sit is trying to be realistic about it.

One of my biggest problems has been not getting the credit for what we do, which is a huge amount. There's the Archers, Asian Network, lots of stuff with Radio 2 and I know people get sniffy about daytime drama but actually BBC Birmingham has always been famous about daytime TV.