For example, my local newspaper published a number of articles about a "successful" trader who was offering training programmes. Last month he was sentenced to three years in prison for fraud.
There are numerous examples of this and even "reality" TV shows promoting these people as successful or rich, it is about time the media are held to account.
That is the main piece of news as far as I can see. (Maybe it's not news for those who have followed the British media more closely than me.) The BBC does have some internal standards, but is increasingly unable to follow them because of budget cuts by the government, leading to lack of internal quality control.
Over the next 2 years it's coming down another 10% (or more) [1]
[0] https://www.in2013dollars.com/uk/inflation/2010?amount=145.5...
[1] https://www.gov.uk/government/news/tv-licence-fee-frozen-for...
However the number of subscribers has not remained static, also unreflected is the free subscription for over 75s which the government did fund but no longer go, nor the withdrawal of money from the government for things like World Service and Monitoring
Total license fee + grant funding in 2010 was £3.95b or £5.39b in today's money. It's down to about £3.9b today, so that's a realterms cut of 28%