
Originally posted by jofice:For once I'm happy Ireland has rights to the BBC
Originally posted by ric:[..]
no not a chance - the festival site is the size of a large town with many stages and performance areas scattered all over it, with each one creating it's own noise and the whole thing is surrounded by a superfence that runs for miles around it meaning that at the closest you can get without a ticket you would still be over a mile from the main stage. you cant even really hear the sound coming from the main stage from any point inside the festival other than right in front of it.
as has been said - the best way to watch it will be on tv!
Originally posted by LikeASong:Headliners' sets are broadast in their enterity, and if I'm not mistaken, on BBC1. That means that people outside the UK can't watch it online (territorial restrictions) - unless you "fake" your location, and make the BBC detector think that you're living in, let's say, Manchester. That's what I will do
Originally posted by MacStripey:[..]
that's what I wanted to know, thanks for the info![]()
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Originally posted by TheRefugee:Both Blur and Bruce had the majority of their set broadcast on BBC, but not the whole set.