In November 2006,
Intelligent Giving published an article about
Children in Need, which attracted wide attention across the British media. The article, titled "Four Things Wrong with Pudsey", described donations to
Children in Need as a "lazy and inefficient way of giving" and pointed out that, as a grant-giving charity,
Children in Need would use donations to pay two sets of administration costs. It also described the quality of some of its public reporting as "shambolic". In 2007, it was reported that presenter
Terry Wogan had been receiving an annual honorarium since 1980 (amounting to £9,065 in 2005). This made him the only celebrity paid for his participation in
Children in Need. According to Wogan's account, he would "quite happily do it for nothing" and had "never asked for a fee". The BBC stated that the amount, which was paid from BBC resources rather than from the
Children in Need charity fund, had "never been negotiated", having instead increased in line with inflation. Two days before the 2007 event, Wogan waived his fee. There has been concern about the type of groups receiving funding from
Children in Need. Writing in
The Spectator, Ross Clark noted that funding goes towards controversial groups such as Women in Prison, which campaigns against jailing female criminals. Another charity highlighted was the Children's Legal Centre, which provided funding for
Shabina Begum to sue her school as she wanted to wear the
jilbāb. Clark pondered whether donors seeing cancer victims on screen would appreciate "that a slice of their donation would be going into the pockets of
Cherie Blair to help a teenage girl sue her school over her refusal to wear a
school uniform". A former BBC governor said that
Jimmy Savile was kept away from
Children in Need. Sir Roger Jones who was also chairman of the charity said he had suspicions about Savile a decade before the news of Savile's
sexual abuse scandal came to public light in 2012. His comments came on the day an inquiry began into whether the BBC's child protection and whistle-blowing policies were acceptable. During November 2024,
Rosie Millard stepped down as Chair of BBC
Children in Need after protesting over grants awarded to an LGBT youth charity whose former chief had been involved in a child abuse scandal. == See also ==