REGISTER of MEMBERS' FINANCIAL INTERESTS Updates
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Commissioning Brief No.: 20217 BBC Radio 2'S Golden Hour Talent
RADIO COMMISSIONING FRAMEWORK Commissioning Brief Commissioning Brief No.: 20217 BBC Radio 2’s Golden Hour Talent: Tony Blackburn From November/December 2020 BBC Radio Popular Music Network - CONFIDENTIAL CONTENTS SECTION A: EDITORIAL OPPORTUNITY ...................................................................................... 3 1. The Opportunity ........................................................................................................................ 4 2. Editorial Strategy ...................................................................................................................... 4 3. Editorial Objectives .................................................................................................................. 5 4. Music Policy .............................................................................................................................. 5 5. Key Deliverables ....................................................................................................................... 5 6. Success Measures ................................................................................................................... 5 7. Social Media / Digital / Extra deliverables ............................................................................ 5 8. Risk Management .................................................................................................................... 6 9. Additional Information / Requirements ................................................................................. -
Communications Market Report
Communications Market Report Research Document Publication date: 19 August 2010 Introduction This is Ofcom’s seventh annual Communications Market report. Its objective is to act as a reference source covering the UK communications sectors, aimed at industry, policy makers, analysts and consumers. The report also provides context for the work that Ofcom conducts in furthering the interests of consumers and citizens in the markets we regulate. The report contains data and analysis on broadcast television and radio, broadband and fixed/mobile telephony. It also offers insights into how people are using the internet and converged devices to access audio-visual and audio content. Take-up of several digital devices and services passed new thresholds in 2009/10. Over seven in ten people (71%) now have access to a broadband connection at home; over nine in ten (92%) have digital television installed on their main set in the home. And more than a quarter (26%) of mobile users now have a smartphone, offering consumers access to much more than just voice telephony. Growing levels of device take-up are reflected in the new ways in which people relate to communications services and media content. Broadcast television viewing and radio listening have remained comparatively stable year on year. But people are also using the internet to access audio and audio-visual content. Nearly four in ten people claim to watch television services online, while 14% listen to radio over the web. Moreover, a fifth (23%) of mobile handset owners now use it to access data-related services such as the internet. This is just a snapshot of the findings emerging from this year’s report. -
Public Service Broadcasting Now and in the Future - Audience Attitudes
Public Service Broadcasting Now and in the Future - Audience Attitudes A report plus research appendix by Human Capital June 2008 Public service broadcasting now and in the future– audience attitudes: A report by Human Capital, June 2008 Contents 1 Key messages from the report ...................................................................... 3 2 Executive summary ....................................................................................... 5 3 Introduction .................................................................................................. 19 4 Attitudes to public service broadcasting...................................................... 23 5 Delivery of public service broadcasting ....................................................... 36 6 Attitudes to plurality ..................................................................................... 43 7 Attitudes to sources of funding .................................................................... 58 8 Concluding points ........................................................................................ 67 Appendix 1: Deliberative sample............................................................................ 68 Appendix 2: Deliberative workshop discussion guide ............................................ 69 Appendix 3: Deliberative workshop stimulus.......................................................... 98 Appendix 4: Quantitative survey questionnaire.................................................... 107 Appendix 5: Quantitative survey showcards -
August 2021 • Issue 4 PROSPERO
The newspaper for retired BBC Pension Scheme members • August 2021 • Issue 4 PROSPERO THE QUEEN PENSION IN COLOUR SCHEME PAGE 7 | BACK AT THE BBC RICHARD SHARP, THE NEW BBC CHAIRMAN Richard Sharp was appointed Chairman of the BBC in February, replacing Sir David Clementi when he stepped down. s Chairman of the Board for the next four Richard has had a 40-year career in finance working years, Richard is responsible for upholding with a number of financial institutions. Most notably Aand protecting the independence of the BBC. he worked at JP Morgan and was for 23 years a He is responsible for ensuring that the BBC fulfils partner at Goldman Sachs. Subsequently Richard its mission to inform, educate and entertain and served for two terms on the Bank of England’s promotes its public purposes. The Chairman ensures Financial Policy Committee, charged with protecting that the Board’s decision-making is in the public the UK’s financial stability. Richard has served on the interest, informed by the best interests of the boards of public and private companies in the UK, audience and with appropriate regard to the impact Germany, Denmark and the United States. Wire DCMS/PA of decisions on the wider media market in the UK. Throughout his career Richard has supported and The fees for non-executive directors of the BBC Board The Board, under the Chairman, also must ensure held governance roles in a number of non-profit are set by the Secretary of State for Culture, Media that the BBC maintains the highest standards of organisations including, amongst others, the Royal and Sport. -
Building Public Value: Renewing the BBC for a Digital World
DP1153 BPV Frontcover.qxd 6/25/04 2:52 PM Page 1 Building public value Renewing the BBC for a digital world CONTENTS Chairman’s prologue 3 Overview and summary 5 PART I: The BBC’s purpose, role and vision 1 Why the BBC matters 25 2 Changing media in a changing society 48 3 Building public value in the future 60 4 Demonstrating public value 83 5 The breadth of BBC services 89 6 Renewing the BBC 98 7 Paying for BBC services 112 PART II: Governing the BBC 123 Conclusion 135 1 2 Chairman’s prologue The BBC does not have a monopoly on wisdom about its own future. This is a contribution to the debate over Charter renewal, not the last word. I look to a vigorous and informed public debate to produce the consensus about the future size, shape and mission of the BBC. This document is itself a consensus, arrived at after a vigorous debate inside the BBC, and represents the considered views of Governors and management. Part II – our proposals on governance – is, of course, entirely the responsibility of the Governors. At the heart of Building public value is a vision of a BBC that maintains the ideals of its founders, but a BBC renewed to deliver those ideals in a digital world. That world contains the potential for limitless individual consumer choice. But it also contains the possibility of broadcasting reduced to just another commodity, with profitability the sole measure of worth. A renewed BBC, placing the public interest before all else, will counterbalance that market-driven drift towards programme-making as a commodity. -
February 2017 Back at the Bbc 03
The newspaper for BBC pensioners The fascination of Alexandra Palace Page 8 Feb 2017 • Issue 1 Encounters The Big Radio with HMS Interview Cymru’s 40th Implacable - Evan Davis Page 3 Page 6 Page 9 NEWS • MEMORIES • CLASSIFIEDS • YOUR LETTERS • OBITUARIES • SUDOKU 02 PENSIONS Benefits update Autumn Statement State Pension Top-Up Philip Hammond, Chancellor of the Exchequer, delivered his Autumn Statement to the House Time is running out for those wanting to take advantage of the government’s State of Commons on 23 November 2016. This was the final Autumn Statement because starting Pension Top-Up. The scheme runs until 5 April 2017 and is available to those who are from this year, the UK will have a Budget statement in the Autumn and then a smaller Spring entitled to a UK State Pension and reached State Pension Age before 6 April 2016. statement will replace the traditional March budget from 2018. This means that the Budget The scheme invites eligible pensioners to pay a one-off lump sum in return for an statement due in March 2017 will be the last Spring Budget. Highlights from the last Autumn increase in their pension of between £1 and £25 per week. statement included: For example, an extra £1 of pension a week (£52 a year) for life will cost a 65-year-old • The Personal Allowance will increase from the current £11,000 to £11,500 for the £890, while an extra £5 a week (£260 a year) will cost £4,450. To get the maximum 2017/18 tax year. -
Jimmy Grant & the Saturday Club
The newspaper for retired BBC Pension Scheme members • October 2017 • Issue 5 PROSPERO JIMMY GRANT & THE SATURDAY CLUB PAGE 8 PENSION SCHEME | PENSIONS FRIENDSHIPS AND FRAUD: THE 2017 BBC VOLUNTEER VISITOR CONFERENCE A thoroughly enjoyable BBC Volunteer Visitor Conference closed in Cardiff on 8 August, with the 100 visitors who attended generally agreeing that it was one of the best yet. drawing up either of these important legal documents. Interestingly, she said that people these days also need to consider their digital assets in a Will – so, for example, if you have an Amazon account or a Netflix subscription what happens to those on your death? Hear hear The next presentation was by Clare Kewney, an audiologist working with UK Hearing Care, who spoke about the importance of getting your hearing tested. ‘Hearing loss is an important contributor to social isolation because our hearing is our link to the world,’ she said. ‘From a safety point of view, too, hearing loss sometimes means that people can’t hear higher frequency sounds like fire alarms.’ Clare thinks that we should all have our hearing tested regularly, just like we have regular check-ups on our teeth or eyes. heryl Miles, the Volunteer Visitor Scheme The Act also changes the means test that is used to On average people take 10 years before taking action on co-ordinator and organiser of the conference, decide how much a person should pay towards their hearing loss – so it’s important that when they do go for Csays she was delighted to have recruited new care costs. -
Remembering Michael Bond Page 7
The newspaper for retired BBC Pension Scheme members • December 2017 • Issue 6 PROSPERO REMEMBERING MICHAEL BOND PAGE 7 PENSION SCHEME | PENSIONS PENSIONERS’ LIAISON MEETING 2018 This year’s PLM at the Council Chamber, Broadcasting House, was attended by over 60 BBC pensioners, who heard from two trustees and members from the Pension Executive who oversee the management of the BBC Pension Scheme (the Scheme). t was an engaging and interactive meeting where The floor was then opened up to questions, and the updates were provided in relation to the Scheme’s BBC pensioners asked an array of questions covering Ifunding, investments and service to members and everything from investments and data security, to PIE provided an open forum for pensioners, where pertinent (pension increase exchange) and obituaries in Prospero. and relevant questions were addressed to the speakers. One pensioner questioned the Scheme’s investment in The session was introduced by Bill Matthews, chair of companies that ‘avoid UK tax’ (the single largest the Trustees, who gave an introduction and looked at corporate investment being Amazon, for example), the highlights from the Scheme year – which included while another asked whether the Scheme was the completion of the 2016 actuarial valuation. contributing to the decline of the high streets by raising rents for retailers. Phil from the investments team ‘The annual valuation is a huge effort that we carry out answered: ‘We’re not here to be moral arbiters, we’re on a three-yearly basis, where we assess how much the here to get the best returns. These companies all obey Scheme is worth and how much it needs to pay out to the laws that are applicable to them.’ members. -
BBC-Year-Book-1986.Pdf
'A Annua www.americanradiohistory.com www.americanradiohistory.com BBC Handbook 1986 Incorporating the Annual Report and Accounts 1984-85 British Broadcasting Corporation www.americanradiohistory.com i Published by the British Broadcasting Corporation 35 Marylebone High Street, London W 1 M 4AA ISBN 0 563 20448 6 First published 1985 © BBC 1985 Printed in England by Jolly & Barber Ltd, Rugby www.americanradiohistory.com Contents Engineering 76 Part One: Transmission 77 & Television production 78 Annual Report Radio production 80 1984 Research and development 80 Accounts -5 Recruitment 82 Training 82 Personnel 84 Appointments, recruitment, training 84 Foreword Mr Stuart Young (Chairman) v Consultancy 86 Board of Governors viii Occupational health 86 Employee relations 86 Board of Management ix Legal matters 87 Division 87 Introductory 1 Central Services Programmes 5 Commercial activities 89 Television 5 Publications 89 Radio 14 BBC Enterprises Ltd 90 The News Year 23 BBC Co- productions 96 Broadcasting from Parliament 27 Direct Broadcasting by Satellite 97 Religious broadcasting 30 National Broadcasting Councils 99 Educational broadcasting 33 Scotland 99 Programme production in the Regions 44 Wales 108 Bristol 44 Northern Ireland 115 Pebble Mill 48 Manchester 50 Audit Report for the BBC 121 The English TV Regions 51 Balance Sheet and Accounts - Home Services BBC Data 54 and BBC Enterprises Ltd 122 Balance Sheet and Accounts - The BBC and its audiences 56 Open University 138 Broadcasting research 57 Public reaction 60 Public meetings 64 -
BBC Annual Report 2008–09
House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee BBC Annual Report 2008–09 Fifth Report of Session 2009–10 Report, together with formal minutes, oral and written evidence Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed 24 March 2010 HC 515 Incorporating HC 945-i, Session 2008–09 Published on 30 March 2010 by authority of the House of Commons London: The Stationery Office Limited £13.50 The Culture, Media and Sport Committee The Culture, Media and Sport Committee is appointed by the House of Commons to examine the expenditure, administration, and policy of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport and its associated public bodies. Current membership Mr John Whittingdale MP (Conservative, Maldon and East Chelmsford) (Chairman) Mr Peter Ainsworth MP (Conservative, East Surrey) Janet Anderson MP (Labour, Rossendale and Darwen) Mr Philip Davies MP (Conservative, Shipley) Paul Farrelly MP (Labour, Newcastle-under-Lyme) Mr Mike Hall MP (Labour, Weaver Vale) Alan Keen MP (Labour, Feltham and Heston) Rosemary McKenna MP (Labour, Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East) Adam Price MP (Plaid Cymru, Carmarthen East and Dinefwr) Mr Adrian Sanders MP (Liberal Democrat, Torbay) Mr Tom Watson MP (Labour, West Bromwich East) Powers The committee is one of the departmental select committees, the powers of which are set out in House of Commons Standing Orders, principally in SO No 152. These are available on the Internet via www.parliament.uk. Publications The Reports and evidence of the Committee are published by The Stationery Office by Order of the House. All publications of the Committee (including press notices) are on the Internet at www.parliament.uk/cmscom. -
November 2018
November 2018 Why daytime rocks VENUE: BUSINESS DESIGN CENTRE, LONDON N1 0QH RTS.org.uk/careersfair2019 #RTScareers Journal of The Royal Television Society November 2018 l Volume 55/10 From the CEO We have enjoyed A very different event, but just as Also in this issue, two book reviews abundant and vibrant insightful was our latest screening, by eminent people about eminent activity this autumn Tiny Shoulders: Rethinking Barbie, held at people – Lucy Lumsden on Jon Plow- across our regional the Curzon Cinema in Soho. A mas- man and Jon Thoday on Michael Ovitz. Centres, especially the sive thank you to Entertainment One Graeme Thompson’s interview with North East, as well as for arranging this. the director of BBC Two’s stunning in London. One of the Director Andrea Nevins secured series The Mighty Redcar turns the spot- highlights was a packed early-evening privileged access to the Barbie inner light on the North East. The region is, event that tackled the complex ques- sanctum at Mattel’s headquarters in of course, the location for MTV’s real- tion of how to successfully measure Los Angeles for her compelling film. ity sensation Geordie Shore. So I am audiences in the multi-device era. Following the screening, Andrea thrilled that we have a report from an “Who is watching: The challenge and Barbie design chief Kim Culmore RTS North East and the Border event of digital measurement” heard from joined us for a revealing question and dedicated to the show. platform owners, advertisers and answer session. I am very grateful to Last, but not least, Lisa Campbell Barb. -
BBC Beyond the Broadcast Outreach and the BBC’S Public Purposes
BBC Beyond the Broadcast Outreach and the BBC’s Public Purposes The BBC’s fundamental purpose as a public service broadcaster is to provide value to its many different audiences. Primarily this is delivered by creating and broadcasting multi-platform services of the highest possible quality and range. In addition, the BBC continues to explore and develop ways to engage audiences actively and extend its relationship with people from communities across the diversity of the UK. The Charter sets out six Public Purposes for the BBC that underpin everything we do. They are: • Sustaining citizenship and civil society • Promoting education and learning • Stimulating creativity and cultural excellence • Representing the UK, its nations, regions and communities • Bringing the UK to the world and the world to the UK • Supporting emerging communications In the pages that follow we illustrate some of the ways in which BBC outreach work plays a crucial role in delivering these Public Purposes, supporting and reinforcing BBC activity beyond the broadcast. Sustaining citizenship and Citizenship civil society You can trust the BBC to provide high quality news, current affairs and factual programming that keeps you informed and supports debate about important issues and political developments in an engaging way. You can look to the BBC for help using and understanding different kinds of media. The BBC has a global reputation for providing independent journalism of the highest quality across a growing range of platforms that now include podcasts and SMS Text Alert, as well as the more traditional outlets. We aim to engage a wide variety of people in news and current affairs and to stimulate conversation and debate.