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1st November 2016
05:51pm GMT

Attenborough, who was once BBC2's controller, told The Radio Times that having someone who refused to tow the line was actually beneficial to the broadcaster.
He said: "I regret letting Clarkson go, because it's very good to have a voice that's anti-establishment, or so profoundly anti-establishment."
Clarkson's infamous fracas with colleague Oisin Tymon left the Irishman requiring hospital treatment; pretty anti-establishment stuff indeed.
Attenborough had no such regret about the departure of The Great British Bake Off, however, saying in his wide-ranging RT interview that the Beeb was right not to get into a bidding war over the hit show.
Bake Off is moving to Channel 4 in a deal thought to be around £75m. The BBC reportedly offered around £15m per year to keep it, but Love Productions wanted more.
The BBC wouldn't budge, though, a decision the veteran naturalist deemed to be the right one.
"Oh, absolutely right!" he said. "To say to them, 'If you want another million, go ahead. We've got plenty more ideas where that came from'."

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