Read this: Are Film Crews At Breaking Point?
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Download MP3Olivia Lee wake up when I open diagnosed with throat cancer aged 48 to tell if you've got through smorgon up to 2 in 3 smokers die from smoking the help to quit download the free NHS quit smoking app to get into a world of art architecture and opulence the VMAs the great moguls Will immerse you in the stories of the Balfour emperor jahangir and Shah Jahan uncover the golden age of the mughal Court where different traditions combine to produce a radically new so bad book your ticket today V&A members go free supported by the whole family Foundation the Al Thani collection foundation and the blavatnik family Foundation
Hello wasn't the 300 edition of the media club on your house to Matt Deegan today long hours and broken turnarounds are TV and film being squeezed to Breaking Point film critic and broadcaster triana Dylan join us to look at the issue at plus.
How is the Oscars TV Show doing in its search for a younger audience on the program is one of the last three sheets standing editor Christian maze Hill to reveal its staying power and how the finance papers expanding beyond London all that plus the BBC gets another drilling from MP Channel 4 News gets caught up in the garden and try and come back to me you club before you get into the stories of the week Christian welcome to the club for the first time they still nice to have you on the sofa very nice to hear thank you.
No worries.
Who would you like to add?
Add to the membership Who be a plus one to join the media club this week, because they won't come with my business journalism hassle forgive me.
I'm going to talk about I would Games Workshop Warhammer fan or a gamer in that sense.
There's a bit and send it to me watch this company which has the share prices search for 50% over the year they smashed into the FTSE 100 last year of the most successful listed businesses in the country now and there were about 5 billion pounds everything about the business and a bricks-and-mortar stores the kind of relationship.
They have their customers but he's lying he's just million simple Media perspective and the Chief Executive he's worked in the company for 5 years is unknown.
He's never even been photographed in the market yesterday again and market updates the business is going at 49 words.
Most of them in these companies have dreams of financial advisors and PR advisors and their right is great loss statements about their purpose and what they doing on the sign of these guys.
Just said sales or profits.
Thanks for the media perspectives admire that brevity and at the same time.
I would like to get a photograph of the chief executive and shaking down after after a good addition and who do you who do your plus one as he has had a very successful launch with the BBC 6 music Breakfast Show and Lauren Laverne obviously massive shoes to film used to work with me back Radio 1 and just seeing is trajectory and how he has got a really matured in his taste the way that he knows how to talk to different audiences.
I really admired that and I think he was such a great choice.
Already smashing it with all of their guests and yeah, it really feels like they really are the six music forecast and sidetracked as well as interviewing someone in the back of a cab after the Brits both so happy to have them on our roles alright first up this week after on cruise being pushed to breaking point while the broadcasting Union back to believe so with new research suggesting an optical is known as broken turnarounds Rihanna what's a broken turnaround employers require their employees who work on a film set.
To return to work with less than 11 hour breast with rice and this seems to be happening more and more often and I think we all tend to glamour the film and TV industry generally anyway, of course.
It's homestars a course is beautiful and glamorous, but actually reality is there it's such hard work.
It's such a long hours.
There is barely any glamour, but it comes to working on a film set unless you're the accident actually when they would argue that sitting in the waiting and you know for the same take 20-30 is not glamorous, but this is now becoming even more of an issue.
I think film Crews are being stretched to breaking point and it's really is a very odd situation to explain because they don't feel like there is a feast or famine here for you if you work in the film or TV industry.
You will be hearing about this crisis at the moment and the shows just aren't getting made.
Is important to get work and have to get work at actually also turns out that there is a dearth of particular skills which means that the people who work in costume design are being pulled really thought my ankles and the expected to work at with a really short turn around and Chris and we've got a Letter Media before he listens that I know that the media sex all of it can be quite tough on employees.
It's not really a nine-to-five job.
Is it? No it's not really no, I mean I don't have much experience of film and tv.
I'm trying to think I'm in my sister-in-law headlong Korean film behind the camera and I do remember my wife is a very close friend who's an accident and have a good film on the face in Romania I think it was for a week when you come out for a few days to be fun and my wife, you know this will be fun and she quickly.
People working incredibly hard often to the outside to the untrained eye going on obviously there is it was in it's not how civilians my picture it.
I mean my own industry to say that all media news 24/7.
We don't quite have the resources at 6 a.m.
To do 24/7, but you're not far off about the 87.
So when I first did the job was quite quite predictable I work Sunday to Thursday 10 a.m.
To about midnight and actually days the hours that the 5-years for me to leave but I'm back now, but I'm back because there's so much more distal said that previous with them was very much about producing 5 newspapers a week.
Am that was aware of it is changed now and obviously you know we like to have a rated the stretch of people across Saturday through to the end of the day from a business media perspective lots of parts of the world.
Answer the world wake me up and starting work market start a trade perhaps is London wind down and we need to be a cross that so it can be quite punishing as there's no doubt about it new employers and employees have a tough of you on this then maybe we had when we're in the industry to see that, but it's in the by the time somebody gets a job in a Newsroom as a journalist they sort of almost prove themselves if you like in the sense that they have probably thought their way into it difficult to get into into the creators of full-time paid journalism and so I think it's James model as always been and remains the case that we have quite a lot of young bright hungry report hasn't started her career and I think he knows I mean like to get to know people circumstances, but if they haven't got family is your children all there are still being able to to rent a flat.
Friends in London it's not like you know who's got wider and longer commutes, but that's me now by the way, but thankfully they still extremely hungry and put in the hours because it shows in his career and I would like to think whether it's just sitting here anyway that they determine to make the best of it was sort of pressure impact on later.
Try and heating to be some slight offer rules on this doesn't to be a bit of a disconnect between packed and back to at the moment about 40% of people who are surveyed said they have been asked him right turn around and and payment because you told her exactly like this.
Constantly told if I ever sort of dead to complain or question anything that they would be somebody right behind me you take my place and that was just you know that was a film critic a let alone if you and I was like the only person doing that job.
Where is if you are somebody in a huge team that you could easily by you are told that you could so easily be dropped and somebody else could be found in your place the media sometimes you just think about your own career and you can go to ways that you can go well.
I worked hard.
I work long hours.
So why shouldn't I send this lot it is to take this job and that you can come from her actually maybe we speak about working don't understand mental health more than we are 20 30-40 years ago.
We are trying to create better working experiences for the generation 2 are coming up like below us.
We don't want them to go through the same things that we did.
Negative settings I don't feel like people need to prove themselves.
They shouldn't have to prove themselves in the same way this be able to do they work because they love it when they're hungry for it not because so desperate and the if they step out of line that they will immediately lose their career with more schools a bit later on and more streaming Levi developments is the BBC's new director-general Tim Davie face MPs on a culture Select Committee on Tuesday that streamers.
Have you got Netflix should pay a levy for local content to see what Tim Davie view about levels were 20% of content needs to be made here Lympstone there is such as well.
I understand the Dynamics of the day.
I suppose I'm a bit of a free market liberalism comes with this sort of thing and
Notwithstanding some new conversations were having about what it means for people working this afternoon in aggregate terms of favourite the market decide where content is made out of money.
I mean there's no doubt.
I mean this is relation to the conversation with him about the labour market and sector my inbox is overflowing with people trying to point out to me the creative industry in the Power House in the UK that are studio production is up and harpur square footage of Studios is off but you're always great job.
Tall is great value add to the economy.
Etc.
See someone again.
It's in aggregate.
We can see that the more granular look to see where it's perhaps even some people behind or not working when it comes to the idea that people who already pay their monthly subscriptions for that is Netflix or Amazon or Disney on the idea that there might be a fresh Levy on top of the I think I'm the one is interesting to consider what it might mean on the one hand to go into the pool to support perhaps the next generation of Talent or different to the end.
That's one thing the idea that you just say that the BBC licence fee is now going to also be levied on your Netflix subscriptions is obviously for the birds always an issue about BBC funding but also about funding of content.
What is local content doesn't about things in the film terror or will set here or just is it just stuffed, but wouldn't be made if it wasn't fun I guess it's about universal appeal so for example of something like wicked was filmed here and you know so so many people who worked on the film with British not all of them are the major challenge because you have Ariana Grande American dollars to the director American Cynthia erivo British you know there's a lot of the people stood behind the scenes of British and so of course that's doing pretty well for some of those specialist skills that we was saying earlier really need to have like that kind of money invested into the most special skills but
As we know the universal film it does incredibly well across the world if we talking about smaller more local stories.
I think that's where it starts to fall down a bit Harry Potter is always going to get made in that's great be made on British soil but smaller stories for example like shuggie Bain Norwich that was the prize winner coming by years ago.
That's really struggling at the moment that it is in development, but it's sort of stalling and it's a 24-hour helping it but because they are actually the have the universal appeal of this very localised Scottish story is not going to do well in America this early and that's where everything starts to cut a crumble and fall down the intervention has an earring in Media Production with the government has decided they should be popping Media have to be generally driven by the BBC and there is a mechanism.
I'm unhappy about about following I mean should the government get out the way should reach really lol this to the market.
Is it going to snow in Great successes and advantages and it's a problem, it is it is unique part of the ecosystem when it comes to the other production companies Azuma services your instinct which is the which doesn't matter it's made because it's enjoyed all over the world and that's the products and next week.
I actually of course we need to put in Great incentives for films to be made here and and the extent to which companies like canal plus take advantage of that and you can say the policies working to track and people here lots of things being made it cetera so right sort of balance of incentives and regulations.
Is is the way to go to ensure that we keep being told about the Jewel In The Crown of our economy is being that sexy has got to be longevity.
The tax rate to think about billion pounds worth of tax breaks to TV and film producers compared to the BBC get switch for billion.
It's less but it says that money but can I comes out of general taxation that perhaps you don't necessarily think about us as funding public Media but it's a big chunk remember not that long ago.
It was mostly associated with various tax games that there is individuals caught up in the films that never got made with tended to be made you know existed in mountain top drawer.
That's that sort of thing I keep an eye on there, but otherwise I think there is a place of government incentive and as long as it doesn't over regulate.
I think this is ultimately a it's a free market in the creative industry which is very spongy very responsive and needs to be responsive to what people want to watch Little read or listen to I do accept.
There's always a separate item into my mind.
Subsidising supported parts of the industry output the wouldn't be created an audience were not for some specific support and there's a place for that but ultimately we know the way the right place to continue to be successful for a very competitive globally successful industry.
Also in the hot seat at the selectivity was BBC chase and make sure who said this is around their recent documentary where a dagger to the heart to the organization's impartiality and indicated the little bit this week as well with with some of their material to you at the top.
You got a trust what comes below but you will decide when you try and find out some information position for it for anybody.
It is trust but verify pretty good.
It is the world over but will try and live by that clearly when it comes to the BBC if it's possible.
The the kind of sensitivities around the subject matter and just look at it from a production and journalistic process perspective.
There was a big mistake late should be the case that you're able to to do end up with somebody being interviewed if you are unaware or concealing.
I'm not sure how it pans out about the identity of the associations of a key part of your journey United it's just there was a clear break down in processes, which is why lead right to the top as you say with the BBC knowledge and this was a catastrophic error Channel 4 involvement.
It will be different.
I think revealed alright with knowledge that they have also interviewed the child and question and some of their own use output and have now gone back and identify the child I get it.
I think the sort of the news a one side of big documentary Focus is another it was a big mistake big mistake made with again to jump into the
Of the subject matter of debate itself in Israel Gaza on the topic as sensitive as they're there isn't there is a heightened requirement for good processes.
Good editorial clarity good judgement, because once that is released you know it's going to do this job is going to spark debate.
That's what is designed to do that's all great journalism is designed to do and the fact that debate is now moved to the side of questions as to how it was made and who knew what who's fallen short standards is obviously deeply regrettable Channel 4 of yeah.
You're absolutely right about that.
Sort of the difference between a big dog trainers near the just like the news packages, but it seems that channel 4 where presenting this child under a different name.
They're pretending that his uncle was actually has father so there was a sort of like there is
There is a bit of a mercury depth to this and they were aware of this may be aware of this month and it's only just really come to light so but I think this is a really kind of telling time isn't it for that wasn't the topic states that always forget over the years and this is only really coming tonight because of the density of the subject but yeah the Royal television society who were going to give Awards out to journalist specifically who have been reporting on Gaza have dislike have pulled that he is coming up soon.
I think in a couple of weeks and they've decided that.
They are just going to step away from there and you know they are obviously the crisis is still going to be disgusting.
It's all going to be rewarded in other ways the coverage of it, but I think it's they just don't want a dog in this fight.
Break up Paul Marshall is planning a journalism school that apparently the Guardian suggesting this week with The Spectator in GB news owner is looking to fund training for journalists outside the current scheme not a lot of information about this at the moment one hand review that may be raising some money around people that support more right-wing title sort who wrote entitles.
I think he was Aston he's you said I was much broader is much broader than that I was looking at it and in France the similar Thing Happened some billionaires bought a very famous journalism school and some of the views of the Vatican of the admixed that would you like to go to the journey from school from Paul Marshall if it says nice is unheard in Westminster I'm sure I'm sure you'll be very enjoyable.
So this is the first time in bed with my surprise come back and I'll be surprised if he's talking.
Turn up the school for right-wing so I've been through formal journalism training and over my years previously isn't in current City my probably hired 50oc young Mr Saturday career and so I've got a really good handle on I'm waiting to come from and you're not to put too fine a point on it and not to dismiss people who fall into this category.
I Got a Feeling they're very good if I wanted to start my Newsroom fully with people who went to Oxbridge and ended the Masters at city.
I could do that the truth is I tried very hard not to do that that I fell into journalism quite accident.
I did do masters in 10 years ago about but I did not then going to come and do something else though, my routine was unconventional than that so I don't think I got the job because I done my masters in broadcast journalism, so I'm always try very hard to to bring people into the industry from different backgrounds on different routes and so people are you looking for a career change? You know I've had a journalist who won the most probably.
Tennis in the country became to me this year being an accountant and saying I'd like to try my hand something else.
You know if somebody was working as an electrician, but was determined to get into financial journalism me once you get in a room with someone that I talking to them.
There's a lot more to an individual's in the sort of formal roots and hoots that you might want to jump through so if Paul Marshall is interested in expanding research agendas.
We didn't go to Oxford and didn't go and do a masters.
That's really important to be welcome socioeconomically to get into the media more broadly and it's always been tough and it doesn't seem to be changing super fast because myself myself but getting there and I'm teaching film and TV journalism specifically and it's really difficult to sort of tell the students that actually this is getting coffee and that you know you're your own.
Turnover is going to be so much smaller than it ever was I thinking you're going to have to get other jobs.
This is not you're going to have to do so much with this for the love of it and not have the money and that's a really good things to get the idea of portfolio career on the radio.
I think they are they but they might have to be working in shops and retail and cafes you until they may be breakthrough in the other ways, but it is it it's quite a difficult thing to tell the next generation that oh no we we are sorry.
Ok when we return the Oscars chat and a deep dive on City am after these messages hello Media cabinet from podcast Discovery B podcast marketing company well this week and thinking about podcast memberships.
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By using the code Media club, that's the code Media club at pawn shop online.co.in live.ly would we need the cigarette was diagnosed with throat cancer aged 48 to tell if you've got up to 2 in 3 smokers die from smoking download the free NHS quit smoking app to get into a world of art architecture and opulence the V&A the Great moguls exhibition will immerse you in the stories of Emperors and charger on the golden age of the way different traditions combined to produce a radically new style of art book your ticket today.
V&A members go free supported by the whole family Foundation the Al Thani collection foundation and the blavatnik family Foundation covent talking about the media club this weekend GB news is one decisive victory over Ofcom with the High Court ruling the regulator overstepped its powers when should Jacob rees-mogg show on to cancel last year that Ofcom now seeks to change the broadcasting code to clarify if a politician can host a show with breaking news very rare for Ofcom to be beaten in court mourning the loss of produce a builder who died this week in an accident whilst on holiday that he was 64 days no at work on spitting image and the Now Show and celebrated Radio 4 Dead ringers hitting 25 years on air and Peppa Pig will have a new sibling this summer at the voice of Mummy Pig Marina Banks revealed the news on Good Morning Britain this week.
At the m club congratulations to all of the pig family but especially to the hasbro merchandising team Awards this week, what did you think of it as a ceremonial or is a bunch of winners every year is always too long and it always really cringey and you know you get you get some brilliant at the moment of brilliant in the Oscars every year and then you get the Moments that just crawling into a hole and die and regret ever becoming a part of this really shallow world so yeah, and it was no different Conan O'Brien felt one interesting choice for host and I get up you know because he's sort of less of that chat show host that we've haps.
See that much over here in the UK
I feel like Jimmy Kimmel have had more recognisable phase.
How do you make him leaving said Friday such a good job the thing about getting Jay Leno next year and it does feel a little bit old fashioned a little bit not that it wasn't terrible but it wasn't that exciting.
I think they told her folk.
Are they trying to do they trying to bring in younger audiences and they've got picture of a lot of course everybody is but that's literally the point of everything isn't it to make sure that younger Generations at want to watch it all they trying to carry on.
I know the audience of the try and keep them.
Happy or do they just kind of like students themselves a little bit and and and don't quite do either could I have his wicked Madeley write the beginning of his strong way to start the show with Ariana Grande Cynthia erivo giving incredible performances beautiful singing you know standing ovations all around 1 most popular films with you absolutely.
It already was everyone already knew the songs but then to have those to sing in brilliant and then they had the bond medley which was so hard.
I'm going to be weirdly tone-deaf performers to have during the songs instead of The Originals who could easily have done it actually.
I haven't even been amazing getting it later dial on a doner or you know Paul McCartney back.
I didn't know that was that was weird and I I could maybe come around for the next Bond be doing as the leading up to something and it didn't do it before wet fart on the rating for the ratings in a little bit low on the full count to the after a few days.
It's gone a little bit above last year which was sort of Bob and Hymer time and that was sort of seen as the peak as you can stream it sorted for the first time in America but most of chop off the end of the to set the schedule for like yeah, it will turn on the stream at this time and finish it.
Play The Last of Us 2 Awards good good choice.
I love Emilia and when I talk to my class about her before they do to the kind of chicken shop dates are just perfect for me when it's Andrew Garfield obviously I think that's really smart ITV ITV news coverage was slightly different and a bit order and a bit random having these two presenters on the red carpet.
We didn't really know and we didn't really know why they were there.
I generally think they cut the interviews on ITV this you are much better the last level a learnt a lot, so that was good at least but I generally think I think marenahalli talking like this on the rest entertainment that only 5% of Americans watch the Oscars which is so.
A small and so every year when you're on your is becoming more more relevant and we we don't really want to admit that because there's so much nostalgia tidying you might have grown up watching the Oscars barbers, Hymer at least everybody had seen those two main films pretty much and so they were they did they were invested that was my and this year.
Hopefully think people will go and see and Laura and I think they're not allowed around it that if you haven't already because it's won Oscars that's a reasonably and that feels like a bit of a sea change film because it's not the were the Oscar winner that list the British is also excellent and I love that as well.
I love to you know I am the person that will go into a free 30-minute film with an interval in love it, but it is excellent and also winner for best director.
I know it's difficult to keep track of which awarding who did Rich speech 4.
The best director he was saying make sure that you distribute films in cinemas.
Please go and see films in the cinema, but again you're preaching to the converted for the people who are already watch Oscars they all go BA12 sing in cinemas.
How is the question is how do we get people who stopped going to the cinema back in how do we get them to care again about all of these stars that they're seeing do they call Adrien Brody I still feel the answer is probably not maybe Mikey Madison maybe they do have you seen any of the Oscar nominated films this year.
Could you tell me when you mention the name and inside and who I'm afraid I don't count as a younger person and I'm afraid.
I'm just more likely to start later.
What are US election and I am a us or show yes, but not at the cinema.
Turn my wife couple weekends ago because I read the book and I thought and I remember I didn't remember what was thinking it was great intrigue etc.
No matter which I felt made it into the film won an Oscar for that screenplay what it was beautifully shot and I do I mean it was absolutely fantastic images of Cardinals outside smoking and scrolling.
I would stay with me forever beautiful, but I'm afraid of some of this and you got someone and you've got movie theatres and the other end streaming but I'm in the middle premium video on demand has become a real boon for some of the film companies in distributors and people playing 20 and sometimes £30 for these to rent or or to watch these movies to transform of a model of movie making.
Yeah, including the family finances my children in 8 and 4 only known this sort of on-demand world and I think probably bye-bye household.
Have we got fewer streaming account than other people is always people say What You Gotta Get Up gotta get dizzy and I need to get discovered.
I've got Netflix and Amazon can't be that is not enough hours in the day and of course there's iPlayer so my kids are familiar with this and thought of you can buy what I'm the one that always check the cheaper in SDS last yeah in your time away.
What what a change was surprised you like yes like Donald Trump I have returned.
1 termon office and I haven't opened it something else and I'm back again so I did that with the trump similarities in 2015 to 2021 I started in a job as a reference for hire hadn't been in this before and I was 28 years old and everybody including me a ridiculous idea, but I enjoyed it and almost a great 5-years there, but leaving the cytosol of year of pandemic chaos but actually told the time the end of 2019 in 2020.
I'm going to go because as you met my wife about a month ago.
I started that job so she only Avenue me in that Sunday to Thursday to midnight rhythm, and we are going to try and find something else to do what I did a few years are in corporate Comms
And so I was actually a bit of this year things won't be landing for me in the way that I'd hoped and I really think about what to do in and pick myself as well.
I'm going to have to launch something on my own house and conversations about and I was saved from having to try to be an entrepreneur because I'm not an entrepreneur when the new owners of City am let me an idea and so didn't have to be in a twist my arm.
So everything has changed to answer your question the economics of changed the world is city my own is an Officers have changed at the government has changed so we do now free newspapers week is great because there's a real place in my heart for a products still it goes pretty little earlier than the old of stains on at 1 a.m.
Thank goodness, but with so much more digital as you would expect the first time round you say to the owners of the time things like.
We should have an app not unreasonably.
Why would we encourage people not to pick up the newspapers because the newspaper through the Tyne 2016 90% of the revenues of the business now.
That's it down in print ad spend not down as much as other parts require specialised audience but that trend is pretty clear and focused now is enormous which is great.
So now we do have a nap then.
We have only last time.
I think we have now more readers of the happy's morning there are printed copies of newspapers about 160000 on the app each morning and website is obviously much more important a digital sending loads of other platforms is usually important in the studio space have to say little more corporate the lot of plans and unfolding for a lot easier to be a specialist publication in today's world where you were battling for clicks.
Lot of opted out of that we can Oliver Tickell the way forward and and and buy specialised that can be Geographic be subject matter in the hyper specialised kind of niche substacks incredibly successful and has been doing in their expansion.
It's all power to them because I think that sort of specialism is is what's going to save the media.
There are a handful of a kind of a walled Castle the States your bloombergnef cheese etc and now they got their own problems but on the whole they're alright and then you know the meaning of the number of different times.
We have tried different commercial Focuses different experiments different ways to generate revenue etc and now.
Paste it really other than the kind of dairy hype AWOL high price point premium content and indeed write down the other in the scale kind of paywall hyper specialised continuously particularly the media organisations and people don't really see you know but if you work in insurance risk or derivatives trading there is going to be a publication is going to charge you £360 the website is free and the newspaper is 3 in a magazine is free.
It's so for us to pick that model would be a big a big step there might be a causes.you experimental routes into that around in a partial paywalls and pro membership schemes all the sources you expect us to experiment with which we are but I'm very happy to say this is in a good place at the moment.
I feel like.
Momentum I feel like I came in about a year if you was acquired by a new owners and I'm now sort of beneficiary of that my predecessor and he's good friend of mine was imposed during acquisition and have been quiet as a complicated for a business like to see him being folded into what was then a big PLC is a complicated things they I get to come in now things and we have very very patient very supportive very quiet this week as precise as you would like to be in and newspaper.
I've had one for the 2-minute conversation with owner in 6-months.
I'm sure if I was very widely of course phone ring again, but I think she has spent 20 years and I'd like to think of good reputation and entitled that you're taking stuff into my Playstation in Manchester as well.
Yeah, we do in Manchester with specific brief covering the non, London
The case of the Wii we've got very sad syndication agreements including with with which publishers city and provides a huge amount of business and financial content across reach stable of publications regionally in and want to do the nationals as well actually does forces into thinking outside of a listed London stock market bubble once written story saying the London listed firm which employees you know 6000 people is today and we will probably now right the London listed firm which employs 6000 people 315 Liverpool Liverpool organisation goes at the relevance networks use of the Normans partner for us Sinners Samsung and syndicated across a number of platforms as well so remind myself constantly is it was I can look at the live traffic to cityam.com.
Times it by 10 to get reviews to watch the real figure is because of all the different syndicated a few weeks ago for some publications are very large proportions of their digital audience on there now.
Yes absolutely and I think it's because you start to think is this cannibalising our own chat.
You know is the huge amount of our commercial operation which is dependant people coming to city and and with the roots now for people to consume city and content doesn't require you to that you won't be surprised to learn and addition to our video and audio output much bigger part of our portfolio and we've got some flagship events, but this huge scope to do a lot more and other publications are really good at The Spectator for example in his great events network and Happiness publishing magazine on site great events angry magazine.
Yeah, so basically is is will be no I'm sure I've been used review.
Used to people who listen to watch this show in the media really you just have to try and run as fast as you can to standstill is quite often our fields in the commercial sense and every so often the headlines will die down and you can make a bit of progress, but you got to keep running anywhere we've got the quiz on live.ly we go up when I open with diagnosed with throat cancer aged 48 to 3 Morgan up to 2 in 3 smokers die from smoking keep trying to quit it's worth it the help to quit download the free NHS quit smoking app today.
Step into a world of art architecture and opulence.
Google's exhibition will immerse you in the stories of the Balfour emperor jahangir and Shah Jahan uncover the golden age of the mughal Court where different traditions combined to produce a style of art book your ticket today supported by the whole family Foundation the Al Thani collection foundation and the blavatnik family Foundation come back.
I just enough time for the quiz let's see how much attention I guess I'm in pain to me the news this week.
It's entitled perfect 10 II stories from the week always one thing in common the number 10 is in there somewhere you could call this quiz tenuous right best of 3 so buzzing with your name if you know the answer to reality also will say.
Let's play Perfect 10 which news outlets has been offering £10 for social media pictures at the skinny offered we used to be up by the paper was £20 for online video Grabber store £25 for digital any picture using now.
It's a tenner this the way it's all going first time round at this year of the newspaper and online human pictures of course you want to be copyrighted and licencing section but every so often I get a letter from somebody who will say that drone shot of Westfield that you're running is mine and I hear from you now demand £200 and every few months and now what is it has a lot more because the entire industry of scraping around inside looking for potential copyright entirely automated and an absolute army of AI powered.
Demands and bills being sent out and actually works so I push back and say what I think you'll find actually and then you hang on a minute.
You don't exist you're just a thought that you have to engage to say something to say no actually is the licence in such a wee is an industry around trying to prove who owns what image in the rights to him.
What he going to pay which game show currently being counted to international sellers has a cash prize of £10,000 Christian yes, Supermarket Sweep fine because I also read this week.
If someone's going to bring that back but to YouTube I think the distribution rights from hasbro Scrabble ok, so I have seen a clip of the US version which is hosted by Raven from that.
Yeah, and Princess Diaries 2 fun fact I really cannot get anybody would like to watch this except.
I get at the same people that would watch catchphrase was so so daytime.tv not said that there's no place for it with Scrabble particularly.
This is all about like unscrambling words on screen slowly and it's quite alright.
I was just watching it going yes hedge.
Maybe you should just go on it coming from company's revenues that plummeted 77% since the Crown ended Left Bank
At the 10 connection is staff received 10 million in bonuses in January for that work on the Crown but yet another looking for new shows to the Abbey Charlie is it not even Megan's new show that I got from people wanting me to comment on that the more down very gently and say I've not seen it and I want you come back next time and tell us what you think of Meghan markle's new TV show on Netflix thank you to both of you for joining us Christian keep up with your work.
Well.
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Step into a world of art architecture and opulence the Great moguls exhibition will immerse you in the stories of the powerful emperor jahangir and Shah Jahan uncover the Golden Eagle Court where different traditions combined to produce a radically new style of art book your ticket today V&A members go free supported by the whole family Foundation the hour.
Collection foundation and family Foundation what historical events are we taking off on this week's run of the day in history anniversary Francis hospital attempt to invade a Welsh fishing village on Thursday Gotta Catch Em All we celebrate the birth of Pokemon and on Friday if you get your podcast.
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