Jonathan Ross

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Jonathan Ross THE JONATHAN ROSS INTERVIEW Someone needs to tell Justin Bieber to f***ing calm down There’s barely a showbiz bum that hasn’t sat on his sofa – but Wossy still gets his hair cut at home, as RHIANNON EVANS discovers… is floppy barnet and instantly home – where he entertains everyone from recognisable soft Rs have graced Kate Moss to Nicole Scherzinger at his infamous TV screens for 27 years, and he Hallowe’en parties – and we’re captivated. even got an OBE for “services to This is the guy you want at your dream celeb broadcasting”, so there can’t be dinner party. Warning: this article contains Hmany people in this country who don’t know extreme (but rather lovely) name-dropping. who Jonathan Ross is. There’s also very few celebs who haven’t been on his many couches – he’s got You’ve got loads of celebrity mates – who drunk with Justin Timberlake, been in trouble would be your ideal Rally co-driver? for saying he’d “f*** Gwyneth Paltrow” and even It’d have to be someone you get on well with, joke played himself in that seminal movie Spice World. with and not get annoyed with. So, either David When we first meet Jonathan, 53, on London’s Walliams – I love spending time with him – or Jimmy Regent Street, he’s just completed a 406-mile drive Carr, who I get on very well with. Although, I think from Edinburgh as part of the Gumball Rally (a 3,000- his laugh would drive me mad after about a day. mile supercar trip from Miami to Ibiza) and a PR Who would you drive 3,000 miles to interview? confides to us that, despite his fame and ridiculously I’ve often flown 3,000 miles, but that’s a 40-hour star-studded phone book – he counts Russell Brand, drive. What’s happened in this scenario? Have all David Walliams and Ricky Gervais as mates – he’s an the planes gone down? “old school” gent compared to some of the younger Um, yeah… stars they regale us with horror stories about. Sylvester Stallone is always great, Barbra Streisand Two days later, we’re still on the rally – jetlagged I’m a huge fan of. Some of the younger stars who and overtired in Barcelona – while Jonathan is at I haven’t interviewed yet, like Scarlett Johansson… ■ No animals home, having returned for the birthday of his wife David Beckham’s always a great guest for me, so were harmed in Jane [Goldman, who he married in 1988]. He’s on the are Will Ferrell and Tom Hanks. And there’s lots of the production phone talking to us in the garden of his Hampstead UK stars I love, like Helen Mirren and Miranda Hart. of this photo 48 WWW.HEATWORLD.COM 28 June – 4 July 2014 WWW.HEATWORLD.COM 49 Have you ever been terrified THE of interviewing someone? The first time in my career that I interviewed Steve Martin – who INTERVIEW was like a God to me – was so nerve-wracking. I can’t even look back on that interview now because, even though he’s brilliantly funny in it, I just come across as a tongue-tied idiot. Has anyone ever farted on your sofa? Probably, but I’m not aware of it. I mean, I would have thought that, with the law of DOUBLE UP averages, someone has. I farted SPOOKY BASH ■ Taking part once before introducing Dannii ■ With Kate Moss and in a charity Minogue on the show. When you Nicole Scherzinger at tennis match with his Hallowe’en party last year Andy Murray fart in polite company, you can kind of ignore it and hope they think it’s someone else. But BECKS APPEAL when it’s just you and another ■ David’s always a brilliant person and they know they guest, smells good and is a didn’t do it… There was a look cool dad, according to JR in her eye. I hope she didn’t think I smell like that all the time. Queen came and said hello, Which celeb smells the best? I looked behind her and Ronnie Beckham smells great, but I think “SPENCER MATTHEWS Barker was making a gesture Dermot O’Leary might trump as if he was sucking a c**k. him. I tell you who had a really WAS A BIT OF A D**K” Your hair is almost as nice smell about them – Jade famous as you. Where HAIR WASH BASKET CASE Goody. She’d run a marathon do you get it cut? NICE WHEELS ■ the day before and she was I interviewed David Walliams, I was talking about his wife At home, by a very lovely young Well, that’s one way ■ Biebs shows ■ At this year’s to get Davina to sit on Jonathan his rushing around. She came for example, I wanted to make Lara [Stone], I did an accent woman called Lisa Hauck. She Gumball Rally your lap, Richard ball skills in and I remember giving her sure a) I covered the bases he and he was saying, “You know colours my wife’s hair and does a hug and she smelled great. wanted covered and b) it felt that’s not even how she speaks.” the kids’, too, and we found Is it ever awkward a bit fresh, so I went over to see So that was quite funny. it was slightly cheaper to get her we speak, I have two pugs sitting a remarkable phenomenon, but studio times. Sometimes, Alan interviewing your mates? him two days beforehand, and If you could dine out on just to come over to our house and on my lap and my French bulldog “I’VE DONE it is still quite hard to work out will get a brilliant guest because It’s interesting, but it’s never I spent the afternoon in his office. one of your gazillion celeb do us all in one go. We all have is nearby looking for squirrels. what they actually do. I would they’re only available Tuesday awkward. It can feel a little Has a friend ever told you stories, which would it be? it done around the kitchen table. We’ve got five cats, because we probably bear in mind that I don’t in the afternoon. Graham gets odd when you’re aware that off afterwards? I was doing a Royal Variety show There’s lots of going up and had two, then we got a boy cat JUST do as many shows per year as great guests – there are some the audience might know you No, I don’t think so. Normally, and, when you meet the Queen down the stairs and tin foil being and we let him get the other two I used to, so unless it was a very people that go on his show and know them, and you don’t want there’s sometimes a mock afterwards, they put everyone in put on people’s heads. The pregnant and they had a litter ABOUT quiet week, I might not want to don’t go on mine. Whether it’s it to seem like some sort of complaint. Like, when I a horseshoe shape. It was a really next morning, there’s always between them of 11 kittens – at go with the Kardashians. I’d because they don’t like me or chummy club. Last time interviewed Walliams and weird event, because the Two just piles of hair on the floor. one point, we had 14 cats. We’ve EVERYONE’’ maybe still go with Kanye. I do what, I’m not sure. Jude Law Ronnies had got together for You’ve managed to keep got a skunk – which is my son’s – find them very funny – I mean I’ve never had, also Judi Dench. it and I was a huge fan. As the your three children largely that I got from a friend of David Bound 2 was f***ing hilarious. But then we get loads of people, out of the public eye. Attenborough’s. We’ve also got was a very sweet person and It’s difficult to work out whether like whenever Robert Downey Jr CELEBRIBOUFFS Do you feel sorry for the two snakes, fish in the garden, I was very pleased she enjoyed they’re in on their own joke. is in London, he gives me a call Cos not all celebs have stylists… Beckham kids, who are and two or three feral cats that the success she had. I met some Is it hard picking your guests? and says, “Are you on air?” I’ve instantly recognisable? visit. And there’s a fox I put a bit of the Made In Chelsea bunch – Say if there’s a lot of American done just about everyone over No, I don’t, because Victoria and of food out for that I probably one or two I thought were d**ks. movie stars over, we try and the years, so I don’t really com David are cool people and such shouldn’t. Oh, and I also feed The one with the dark hair who avoid filling the show with them. feel jealous. ; WENN. S good parents. I met them out the birds. had just cheated on his girlfriend… If you’ve got some of the younger Finally, you’ve interviewed RE atu years ago with their kids and you What do you make of all Oh, Spencer Matthews? comedy stars on, you’ve got to Justin Bieber – what do E F couldn’t have met a more polite, these reality stars, like Yeah, he was a bit of a d**k, bear in mind that some of our make of what’s going on ; REX sweet-natured bunch of children.
Recommended publications
  • Fame Attack : the Inflation of Celebrity and Its Consequences
    Rojek, Chris. "The Icarus Complex." Fame Attack: The Inflation of Celebrity and Its Consequences. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2012. 142–160. Bloomsbury Collections. Web. 1 Oct. 2021. <http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781849661386.ch-009>. Downloaded from Bloomsbury Collections, www.bloomsburycollections.com, 1 October 2021, 16:03 UTC. Copyright © Chris Rojek 2012. You may share this work for non-commercial purposes only, provided you give attribution to the copyright holder and the publisher, and provide a link to the Creative Commons licence. 9 The Icarus Complex he myth of Icarus is the most powerful Ancient Greek parable of hubris. In a bid to escape exile in Crete, Icarus uses wings made from wax and feathers made by his father, the Athenian master craftsman Daedalus. But the sin of hubris causes him to pay no heed to his father’s warnings. He fl ies too close to the sun, so burning his wings, and falls into the Tsea and drowns. The parable is often used to highlight the perils of pride and the reckless, impulsive behaviour that it fosters. The frontier nature of celebrity culture perpetuates and enlarges narcissistic characteristics in stars and stargazers. Impulsive behaviour and recklessness are commonplace. They fi gure prominently in the entertainment pages and gossip columns of newspapers and magazines, prompting commentators to conjecture about the contagious effects of celebrity culture upon personal health and the social fabric. Do celebrities sometimes get too big for their boots and get involved in social and political issues that are beyond their competence? Can one posit an Icarus complex in some types of celebrity behaviour? This chapter addresses these questions by examining celanthropy and its discontents (notably Madonna’s controversial adoption of two Malawi children); celebrity health advice (Tom Cruise and Scientology); and celebrity pranks (the Sachsgate phone calls involving Russell Brand and Jonathan Ross).
    [Show full text]
  • Ofcom Content Sanctions Committee
    Ofcom Content Sanctions Committee Consideration of Channel TV Ltd (“Channel TV” or the “Licensee”), in sanction against respect of its service the Regional Channel 3 service (“Channel 3”) transmitted across the ITV Network on ITV1. For 1. Early finalising of the vote for the People’s Choice Award in the British Comedy Awards 2004, broadcast on 22 December 2004, Resulting in a breach of the ITC Programme Code 2002 (the “ITC Code”) in force from January 2002 until 24 July 2005 of: Rule 8.2(b) Use of Premium Rate Telephone Services in Programmes: “The licensee must retain control of and responsibility for the service arrangements and the premium line messages (including all matters relating to their content)” 2. Early finalising of the vote for the People’s Choice Award in the British Comedy Awards 2005, broadcast on 14 December 2005, Resulting in a breach of the Ofcom Broadcasting Code of: Rule 2.2: “Factual programmes or items or portrayals of factual matters must not materially mislead the audience” 3. Overriding the viewers’ vote for the People’s Choice Award and substituting a different winner in the British Comedy Awards 2005, broadcast on 14 December 2005 Resulting in a breach of the Code of: Rule 2.2: “Factual programmes or items or portrayals of factual matters must not materially mislead the audience” Decision To impose a financial penalty (payable to HM Paymaster General) of £80,000, which comprises £45,000 in respect of the early finalising of the vote in both programmes (“as live breaches”) and £35,000 in respect of overriding of viewers votes in the BCA 2005 (“the selection breach”).
    [Show full text]
  • Brits Choose Holiday Partners for Sun, Sand, And… a Laugh Submitted By: Pr-Sending-Enterprises Friday, 15 September 2006
    Brits choose holiday partners for sun, sand, and… a laugh Submitted by: pr-sending-enterprises Friday, 15 September 2006 British holidaymakers would pick fun over glamour when it comes to holiday companions according to research by Barclays Insurance (http://www.barclays.co.uk/insurance). Northern comedian Peter Kay has topped the list of celebrities Brits would most like to go on holiday with, relegating homegrown starlet Keira Knightley and Hollywood heart throb George Clooney to second and third places. Elsewhere in the list, Kylie Minogue and Angelina Jolie are the only other non-Brits in a top ten dominated by British personalities. Whilst good looks and the fun factor clearly play an important part when choosing Britain’s favourite holiday companion it seems that most people remain loyal to their local heroes – Scots favoured Sean Connery whilst the North of England was the most supportive of Peter Kay. Unsurprisingly, good-looking and successful members of the opposite sex made up the top ideal holiday companions for both male and female respondents with the exception of all-round favourite Peter Kay who appeared second in the lists for both sexes. However it appears that a large number of male holidaymakers would prefer to take a fellow fella with them on their travels with a total of four males featuring in their top ten whilst the only woman that females would consider holidaying with is Davina McCall. Across the age groups, Big Brother presenter Dermot O’Leary was the most popular companion amongst the under 30s but over 50s would prefer to share a sunlounger with Joanna Lumley.
    [Show full text]
  • X FACTOR JUDGE CHERYL COLE and KYLIE MINOGUE MOST POWERFUL CELEBRITIES in BRITAIN HIGHLIGHTS RESEARCH Submitted By: Eureka Communications Wednesday, 31 March 2010
    X FACTOR JUDGE CHERYL COLE AND KYLIE MINOGUE MOST POWERFUL CELEBRITIES IN BRITAIN HIGHLIGHTS RESEARCH Submitted by: Eureka Communications Wednesday, 31 March 2010 31st March 2010, London, UK – Pop star Kylie Minogue and X-Factor judge Cheryl Cole were named the most powerful celebrities in Britain today in Millward Brown’s latest celebrity and brand (Cebra) research . The research, which interviewed 2000 consumers about 100 celebrities and 100 brands, will be used by marketers to identify celebrity and brand partnerships with the greatest marketplace potential. The 10 most powerful UK celebrities were: 1)Kylie Minogue 2)Cheryl Cole 3)David Beckham 4)Ant & Dec 5)Joanna Lumley 6)Terry Wogan 7)Jamie Oliver 8)George Clooney 9)Sean Connery 10)Helen Mirren “Kylie is widely accepted as an adopted Brit. People know her, like her and she is surrounded by positive buzz,” says Mark Husak, Head of Millward Brown’s UK Media Practice. Cheryl’s mix of exciting, endearing and engaging traits seems to be a winning combination.” Cheryl Cole is 2nd in the ranking and has the highest positive Buzz score (80 percent positive) despite the negative media coverage that has surrounded her in the past. Cheryl is seen as very Playful, Sympathetic and Outgoing but least Reserved, Calm and Laid Back. She is well matched to Coca Cola and New Look. Kylie’s personality matches well with L’Oreal, Yahoo, Cadbury and Lucozade. Research highlights: •US star George Clooney (8th in the ranking) is the only other non-Brit to appear in the Top10. Like Kylie, he is well liked with no negative publicity.
    [Show full text]
  • Brand and the BBC – the Full Expletive-Riddled Truth
    Brand and the BBC – the full expletive-riddled truth blogs.lse.ac.uk/polis/2008/11/05/brand-and-the-bbc-the-full-expletive-riddled-truth/ 2008-11-5 Was it a storm in a tea-cup or a symbol of a wider malaise at the BBC? Well Polis has got the full, expletive-riddled story from a senior BBC figure. Caroline Thomson is the BBC’s Chief Operating Officer, second only in importance at the corporation to her namesake, Mark. In a speech to Polis she gave a lengthy and carolinethomson.jpg candid narrative of the whole Brand/Ross prank phone call saga. In it she makes a staunch defence of the BBC’s actions and calls on the corporation to continue taking risk. But she recognised in her speech, and the subsequent exchange we had, that it does raise a wider question: Is the BBC too keen to do too much instead of focusing on what it does best. Here is her speech which I think is well worth reading in full – it will also go up on the main Polis website. The BBC: The Challenge to Appeal to All Audiences Caroline Thomson, Chief Operating Officer, BBC POLIS Media Leadership Dialogues London School of Economics, Tuesday 4 November What a week – when I agreed to do this talk I thought I would focus on transforming the BBC – getting it to be a networked organisation, representing the whole of the UK with London as its hub, not its dominant force, with our plans for our new base in the Manchester region as the central theme.
    [Show full text]
  • The British Academy Television Awards Sponsored by Pioneer
    The British Academy Television Awards sponsored by Pioneer NOMINATIONS ANNOUNCED 11 APRIL 2007 ACTOR Programme Channel Jim Broadbent Longford Channel 4 Andy Serkis Longford Channel 4 Michael Sheen Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa! BBC4 John Simm Life On Mars BBC1 ACTRESS Programme Channel Anne-Marie Duff The Virgin Queen BBC1 Samantha Morton Longford Channel 4 Ruth Wilson Jane Eyre BBC1 Victoria Wood Housewife 49 ITV1 ENTERTAINMENT PERFORMANCE Programme Channel Ant & Dec Saturday Night Takeaway ITV1 Stephen Fry QI BBC2 Paul Merton Have I Got News For You BBC1 Jonathan Ross Friday Night With Jonathan Ross BBC1 COMEDY PERFORMANCE Programme Channel Dawn French The Vicar of Dibley BBC1 Ricky Gervais Extra’s BBC2 Stephen Merchant Extra’s BBC2 Liz Smith The Royle Family: Queen of Sheba BBC1 SINGLE DRAMA Housewife 49 Victoria Wood, Piers Wenger, Gavin Millar, David Threlfall ITV1/ITV Productions/10.12.06 Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa! Andy de Emmony, Ben Evans, Martyn Hesford BBC4/BBC Drama/13.03.06 Longford Peter Morgan, Tom Hooper, Helen Flint, Andy Harries C4/A Granada Production for C4 in assoc. with HBO/26.10.06 Road To Guantanamo Michael Winterbottom, Mat Whitecross C4/Revolution Films/09.03.06 DRAMA SERIES Life on Mars Production Team BBC1/Kudos Film & Television/09.01.06 Shameless Production Team C4/Company Pictures/01.01.06 Sugar Rush Production Team C4/Shine Productions/06.07.06 The Street Jimmy McGovern, Sita Williams, David Blair, Ken Horn BBC1/Granada Television Ltd/13.04.06 DRAMA SERIAL Low Winter Sun Greg Brenman, Adrian Shergold,
    [Show full text]
  • The Repellent Mr Ross
    THE REPELLENT MR ROSS NOWHERE IS THE TACIT ALLIANCE between vulgarity and legalised corruption in Britain better illustrated than in the career of Jonathan Ross, the radio and television presenter to whom the BBC has seen fit to transfer £18 million of tax- and licence-payers’ money for three years’ activity. The main advantage of such a vast salary, from the BBC’s point of view, or at least that of its directors, is to make its yearly payment to the Director-General, Mark Thompson, of £788,000 in 2007, seem comparatively modest. Let us recall just a couple of highlights of Mr Ross’s career so far. In 2006 he interviewed the leader of the Conservative Party, and possible next Prime Minister of this country, David Cameron (I shall reserve my estimate of Mr Cameron’s part in the proceedings for a little later). In the course of this interview, he asked Mr Cameron whether he had masturbated as a 12-year-old boy while thinking of Mrs Thatcher. His precise words were, ‘But did you or did you not have a wank thinking of Mrs Thatcher?’ This question came as the culmination of a series of questions as follows: Ross: Let me ask you a question which you may consider a little risqué. How old were you when Lady Thatcher, back then just plain Margaret Thatcher, was first elected? Cameron: Twelve, thirteen, something like that. Ross: That is a time in a boy’s life when you begin to look around for women who are attractive. Cameron: This is when I realise why politicians never come on the show.
    [Show full text]
  • Market Impact Assessment of the BBC's High Definition
    Market Impact Assessment of the BBC’s High Definition Television Proposals A report of market research conducted for Ofcom by Illuminas Publication date: 18 September 2007 Contents Section Page 1 Executive Summary 1 2 Background and Research Objectives 6 3 Research Methodology 8 4 Profile of current HDTV subscribers 12 5 HDTV and its impact on viewing behaviour 18 6 The Impact of HDTV on other TV-based activities 33 7 Perceptions and usage of the trial BBC HD channel 39 8 The proposed 9 hour BBC HD channel 47 9 The proposed overnight BBC HD channel 58 Section 1 Executive Summary Background, objectives and methodology BBC HD is currently in a trial stage and is being offered over both Virgin Media V+ and Sky HD. It has been decided to apply a Public Value Test (PVT) to the BBC’s proposal to make the trial BBC HD channel permanent. The central objective of this piece of research was to assess the possible impact of the BBC launching an HD channel. The research comprised the following elements: • 400 x 30 minute, in home CAPI interviews with subscribers to HDTV; and • 10 x diary-depth interviews with respondents from the quantitative stage. Adoption, understanding and experience of HDTV The backing of major brands, such as Sky, BBC and Virgin, as well as equipment manufacturers like Sony and Panasonic, appears to have reduced perceived risks of adoption and driven take-up of HD rapidly through the adoption curve. There are still misunderstandings about HDTV. Two fifths (41%) of HDTV subscribers think that HD quality pictures are available on all TV channels rather than just dedicated HD broadcast channels.
    [Show full text]
  • The BBC: Past, Present and Future Jonathan Nunns the British Broadcasting Corporation Is a Large, Publicly Owned U.K
    1 The BBC: Past, Present and Future Jonathan Nunns The British Broadcasting Corporation is a large, publicly owned U.K. broadcaster with a global reach. 2 The old and new BBC Broadcasting Houses in London. Old Broadcasting House New Broadcasting House ( now demolished ). ( originally the radio centre built 1932 ). Recently massively extended to put TV and Radio under one roof. BBC Salford-The new Northern Hub. Who pays for the BBC and how? 3 We all do. The BBC is funded by a universal licence fee-currently £145.50 per year. If you get TV live off air you are obliged to pay the fee. Currently, If you don’t pay and still watch TV, you could wind up in court. Does the BBC belong to the government? 4 No-it belongs to license fee payers and should be independent of whichever government is in power. It’s content is monitored by OFCOM the main UK Media regulator. How much income does the BBC get and 5 where from? Who Runs The BBC? 6 Tony Hall BBC Director General ( CEO ) Rona Fairhead Chair of the BBC Trust ( governing body- overseeing the BBC ) What has the BBC Ever Done for 7 Us? Such as……….. 8 9 Sport for all? 10 British Film Forever! The Life Scientific? 11 Art for arts sake? 12 Radio Ga Ga? 13 We could go on to include:- 14 Natural History Children’s Television Current Affairs History Drama Comedy Consumer Affairs Documentary and many, many more. So where did it all begin? 15 The Birth of Radio and Television Radio 1922 Television 1936 Who established the BBC and why? 16 John Reith was the first BBC Director General in 1922–introducing the new technology of radio to the UK.
    [Show full text]
  • MGEITF Prog Cover V2
    Contents Welcome 02 Sponsors 04 Festival Information 09 Festival Extras 10 Free Clinics 11 Social Events 12 Channel of the Year Awards 13 Orientation Guide 14 Festival Venues 15 Friday Sessions 16 Schedule at a Glance 24 Saturday Sessions 26 Sunday Sessions 36 Fast Track and The Network 42 Executive Committee 44 Advisory Committee 45 Festival Team 46 Welcome to Edinburgh 2009 Tim Hincks is Executive Chair of the MediaGuardian Elaine Bedell is Advisory Chair of the 2009 Our opening session will be a celebration – Edinburgh International Television Festival and MediaGuardian Edinburgh International Television or perhaps, more simply, a hoot. Ant & Dec will Chief Executive of Endemol UK. He heads the Festival and Director of Entertainment and host a special edition of TV’s Got Talent, as those Festival’s Executive Committee that meets five Comedy at ITV. She, along with the Advisory who work mostly behind the scenes in television times a year and is responsible for appointing the Committee, is directly responsible for this year’s demonstrate whether they actually have got Advisory Chair of each Festival and for overall line-up of more than 50 sessions. any talent. governance of the event. When I was asked to take on the Advisory Chair One of the most contentious debates is likely Three ingredients make up a great Edinburgh role last year, the world looked a different place – to follow on Friday, about pay in television. Senior TV Festival: a stellar MacTaggart Lecture, high the sun was shining, the banks were intact, and no executives will defend their pay packages and ‘James Murdoch’s profile and influential speakers, and thought- one had really heard of Robert Peston.
    [Show full text]
  • Radio – Preparing for the Future Phase 1: Developing a New Framework
    Radio – Preparing for the future Phase 1: Developing a new framework Appendix B: Results of audience research Research Study conducted by MORI on behalf of Ofcom Radio – Preparing for the future Contents Section B1 Executive summary B2 Background and objectives B3 The role of radio B4 Current trends in radio listening Radio listening Popular stations Frequency of listening Listening patterns Importance of radio services Developments in radio technology B5 Localness and local radio What is localness? Which media do people think of as local? What do people need / want to know about their local area? How ‘local’ does radio need to be? Reactions to community radio Key times for local coverage Location of news compilation Importance of radio coverage of local issues Satisfaction with services Improvements to local radio B6 Digital radio Awareness of digital radio and DAB Barriers to adoption Digital radio platforms DAB user's experiences The future of DAB B7 Nations and Regions – key differences Annexes Segmentation analysis Statistical reliability Definition of social grades Appendix B: Results of audience research B1 Executive Summary Key Questions Ofcom commissioned MORI to inform three key topic areas of Ofcom’s Radio Review. The key questions within each topic area are summarised below: • Current Trends - the role of radio in people’s lives; - to understand listening patterns, such as where radio users listen, what they listen to and when they listen; and - audience perceptions of current radio provision including satisfaction levels and possible improvements. • Localness - to understand the importance of localness to listeners – and how they define the concept; - the role of radio in the provision of localness versus other media; - audience satisfaction with current local radio services; and - thoughts on specific issues such as news compilation and location of local stations.
    [Show full text]
  • Full Mobile Signal Coverage at BBC Studioworks
    Full mobile signal coverage at BBC Studioworks JANUARY 5, 2020 FREQUENCY TELECOM 1 Full mobile coverage at BBC Studioworks at Television Centre Award-winning Cel-Fi Quatra provides great mobile coverage on all networks in the world-famous Television Centre in London Despite the central location of BBC Studioworks’ Television Centre studios in London, the in- building mobile coverage was poor on all floors. After unsuccessful attempts to resolve this, Studioworks found Cel-Fi mobile signal boosters – an OFCOM-compliant solution that caters for all mobile networks. 2 The Business BBC Studioworks is a commercial subsidiary of the BBC, providing studios and postproduction services to all the major TV broadcasters. Its studio facility in White City, London is home to some of the nation’s most watched and loved television shows, including The Graham Norton Show, Good Morning Britain, This Morning, Sunday Brunch and The Jonathan Ross Show. Television Centre has three fully equipped TV studios, ranging from 3,430 ft² to 10,800 ft² which are fitted with industry-leading technology. Other facilities include edit suites, apparatus rooms, dressing rooms, green rooms, and production offices. The Challenge The purpose-built production facility is soundproofed throughout and comprises thick concrete external and internal walls. While this creates ideal conditions to capture TV shows, it can severely hinder mobile signal from penetrating the building. 3 With the facility used by BBC Studioworks’ employees and freelancers, client production teams, on-screen talent and contributors, an in-building mobile coverage solution to cover all networks was required. Mindful of the problem, BBC Studioworks set about finding a solution that could provide adequate mobile coverage for the scale and complexity of the building.
    [Show full text]