In the BBC WDYTYA magazine there is a questions and answers page.
Someone asks why they don't have the section at the end where a genealogist takled about how the research was done as they used to.
They said that the section at the end was very specialist and "just appealed to genealogist, which only makes a small proportion of our audience".
I would have thought that one of the BBC's jobs was to inform and educate. It seems fundamental to the story how the information was discovered.
I love the stories I unearth from my research, but the process of the detective work is also really interesting.
Someone asks why they don't have the section at the end where a genealogist takled about how the research was done as they used to.
They said that the section at the end was very specialist and "just appealed to genealogist, which only makes a small proportion of our audience".
I would have thought that one of the BBC's jobs was to inform and educate. It seems fundamental to the story how the information was discovered.
I love the stories I unearth from my research, but the process of the detective work is also really interesting.
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