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Tuesday 23 September 2014, PM

The Media Podcast #2 - Robert Peston Michael Woolf go off-message

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The Media Podcast #1: BBC News Cuts, Freeview Connect

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BBC Trust sets out minimum level for current affairs output | Media | theguardian.com

The BBC Trust has responded to concerns that the corporations current affairs output is lagging behind rivals by insisting on a minimum amount of programming each year which is less than the amount it already airs. However, the BBC said it already delivers more than this over the past five years, BBC1 has delivered between 44 and 52 hours of current affairs peak-time programming annually. It is vital for the BBC to maintain the volume, quality and ambition of its current affairs and this protection for some of its most-watched current affairs output will help it to do that. To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email mediatheguardian.com or phone 020 3353 3857. - theguardian.com

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RadioToday with RCS | Labour urged to change BBC radio policies

The official commercial radio body says all the evidence suggests it needs an overhaul of regulation, with a set of clear service licences that help it focus on its strengths and limit the overlap with commercial operators. In a rapidly changing media landscape, the BBC has a special responsibility to offer compelling and exciting programming to the broadest possible audiences. After the general election next year, debate will begin in earnest on the future of the BBC. - radiotoday.co.uk

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Should the BBC Trust be renamed the Licence Fee Trust? | The Big Ideas | theguardian.com

BBC governance is in crisis, not due to opaque management or a lack of leadership, but because of a growing distance between the corporation and its viewers, according to the shadow culture minister Helen Goodman. Her comments came as the BBC faces criticism for being run by a metropolitan elite, remote from the people it services. James Heath, BBC director of policy and charter, admitted that the corporation would have to make more effort to reflect its viewers and listeners. - theguardian.com

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Doctor Who: the Guardian is Clara’s constant companion | Media Monkey | Media | theguardian.com

Is the Guardian the newspaper of choice on Doctor Who At least two Whovians seem to think so, lodging complaints with Ofcom that the Guardian has been given an unfair amount of promotion in the hit BBC1 show. The scene that so incensed the complainants featured the Doctors companion Clara, a teacher, carrying a clearly identifiable Saturday edition of the Guardian. - theguardian.com

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Alan Bennett attacks repellent reality TV shows from Big Brother to The Big Allotment Challenge - TV Radio - Media -

The playwright, who said there was no longer a television producer he could trust to put his work on screen without interference, revealed that he had once been an unlikely Big Brother viewer. Asked if he watched reality shows, Bennett told Radio Times Very few. Maybe the first Big Brother but I thought God, theyre all repellent. - independent.co.uk

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Tuesday 23 September 2014, AM

BBC iPlayer Help - BBC iPlayer closing on some connected TVs and Blu-Ray devices

- iplayerhelp.external.bbc.co.uk

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Sunday 21 September 2014, PM

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/opinion/scottish-independence-its-a-yes-for-the-way-the-referendum-was-reported-

Bias, undiluted propaganda and outright lies from broadcasters and newspapers denied the separatists their destiny, the narrative went, as the Scottish news machine was operated by shadowy figures pulling levers south of the border. Only one Scottish newspaper the Sunday Herald had the courage to back independence and as for the British Broadcasting Corporation, well, the clue was in the name. On the upside, an exercise that drew 85 per cent of the electorate to the ballot boxes may encourage a wave of young Scottish news junkies, counter to trends elsewhere. - independent.co.uk

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Media Monkey’s Diary: Evan Davis, Radio 3, Neville Thurlbeck | Media | The Guardian

Monkeys attention is drawn to a name in the list of new members in the latest issue of the Society of Authors journal Neville Thurlbeck, the former News of the World news editor and chief reporter, who received a six-month jail sentence for phone-hacking. Perhaps fortunately for him, though, he wont be required to re-interview Rachel Reeves celebratedly called boring, snoring in a Katz tweet after a party conference grilling by Paxman a year ago and thereby put the new, gentler style potentially even more boring to the test of direct comparison. With peculiar timing, Davis will only come on stream for the Tories conference, having missed the Labour one. - theguardian.com

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BBC royal charter renewal: Scottish no vote could lead to a federal corporation | Media Network | Guardian Professional

The BBCs royal charter and agreements that underpin the BBCs existence specify the corporations public purposes, size, scale, scope, governance and funding mechanism. When the charter comes up for renewal by convention every 10 years coinciding as it does with the need for a new licence fee settlement the BBC must find a convincing narrative about itself to avoid losing complete control of the public debate to others with well-worn agendas bent on radical change. Although its programmes and services are by and large doing well and remain highly appreciated by the licence-paying public, the BBC corporately has been through a pretty torrid time. - theguardian.com

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Friday 19 September 2014, PM

Ariel - DG hails 'superb' referendum coverage

19 September 2014 Last updated at 1202 Tony Hall has thanked staff who worked through the night to bring the BBC audience news of the referendum result. 'I have been up all night and have witnessed first-hand our live coverage of the vote and had the chance to talk to and listen to staff. The programme presented by Huw Edwards - who was trending on Twitter on Friday after his well-received, marathon broadcasting stint - took a 25.6 average audience share. - bbc.co.uk

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Talking TV: Bake Off Rising Star

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Friday 19 September 2014, AM

Is second-screening a genuinely effective marketing phenomenon? | Media Network | Guardian Professional

The living room has become a hotbed of connected devices used in conjunction with watching TV with smartphone in hand, tablet on lap, smartwatch on wrist, were quickly running out of body parts that can accommodate the range of gadgets on the market. Consequently, second-screening has become a marketing phenomenon, enabling brands to enhance ad experiences across a number of platforms, from sponsoring companion apps such as Beamly formerly Zeebox to running promoted activity through social viewing services like Twitter. We have sought to squeeze every last second of attention span out of our TV viewers and why shouldnt we - theguardian.com

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Future of the BBC survey: the licence fee should not be cut | Media Network | Guardian Professional

These are the views of the majority of 580 media professionals recently surveyed by the Guardian. The results are set to inform a series of Guardian fringe debates about the BBC at this years party conferences, ahead of the 2016 royal charter renewal. Rhetoric on the licence fee has become increasingly aggressive over recent months with prominent critics and public surveys suggesting it should be scrapped altogether, and others saying it should be cut and revenue diversified. - theguardian.com

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White Paper Report September 2014

Ultra High Definition, Video to Mobile, Spectrum, Connected TV, Digital Terrestrial - dtg.org.uk

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DTG :: News :: Cox pleas broadcasters to expose audiences to something else.

I don't want a society when you are 15 years old you can sit in their bedroom and watch the computer games channel 24 hours a day because I want that 15 year old to be exposed to ideas. Prof Cox said despite the fragmentation, television remained the dominant cultural force. It's only in the 1860s that we discovered electromagnetic waves and within 40 years you had radio and then shortly afterwards television. - dtg.org.uk

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Thursday 18 September 2014, AM

Review: Humax DTR-T2000 YouView box | SEENIT

There are two ways to get YouView from TalkTalk or BT who both offer a selection of additional pay channels and a subsidised box, or subscription free from a high street or online retailer. Its performance is equal to BTs new G4 model unsurprising given that under the hood the two boxes are rumoured to be identical, though neither Humax nor BT will confirm this. Like the BT branded box this one uses an external power adapter which should help keep ir relatively cool and prevent overheating. - seenit.co.uk

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Android phones to have FM chips as standard - media.info

Google have announced Android One, a new, low-cost smartphone for developing countries and, unlike other flagship models, all Android One phones include an FM tuner. Android One phones are a new departure for the internet giant specifically designed to run on relatively cheap hardware, Google assists local manufacturers in building the phone and take care of all software upgrades for at least two years. We also added features that people in India will find particularly useful, like dual SIM cards, a replaceable battery and built-in FM radio. - media.info

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DTG :: News :: EU signs off BSkyB deal for multinational network

The executive commission didn't feel as though the transaction wouldn't hinder competition because the companies are serving currently serving separate markets with a language barrier. - dtg.org.uk

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Ladbrokes ads banned for 'irresponsible attitude towards gambling' | Media | theguardian.com

The ASA agreed that most people would not interpret the ads to imply that gambling would confer admiration or enhance personal qualities. - theguardian.com

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STAVRA Bill Passes Senate Commerce | Multichannel

A number of cable-unfriendly amendments, and some broadcasters didn't like, had been proposed by a variety of senators that would have delayed the ban on integrated set-tops, gotten the FCC more deeply involved in enforcing customer service, probed sports perograming costs, and more. But one by one those were withdrawn after their sponsors got to take the floor and make their case, and the bill, S. 2799, The Satellite Television Access and Viewer Rights Act, passed by voice vote. - multichannel.com

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BuzzMachine

These supposed bastions of conservative thinking are running to the government they all disdain to try to get unfair advantage on Google because simply put they have failed in the marketplace on their own. - buzzmachine.com

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Wednesday 17 September 2014, PM

Media: Mike Darcey, CEO of News UK; the role of the press in Scotland; Ofcom on London Live

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Tuesday 16 September 2014, PM

London Live was always a leap in the dark without a safety net | Media | theguardian.com

Ofcom's rejection of London Live's application to change the primetime broadcasting of local programming is a severe blow to its enthusiastic owner, Evgeny Lebedev. Ofcom must have been aware that at least one of them, maybe all of them, would protest at such a radical change. Despite market research, and the former culture minister Jeremy Hunt's convictions about the merits of local television, there was no real demand for it. - theguardian.com

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Ariel - DG is made honorary Doctor of Arts

He was appointed a CBE in 2005 and became a life peer five years later with the title Lord Hall of Birkenhead. - bbc.co.uk

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Romance languages - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

They form a branch of the Italic languages within the Indo-European language family. The Romance languages evolved from Latin from the sixth to the ninth centuries. Its proponents claim written Interlingua is intelligible to anyone who speaks a Romance language indeed, this was the goal of the creators. - en.wikipedia.org

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Monday 15 September 2014, PM

Ofcom: very unlikely all local TV channels will succeed

15 September, 2014 By Jake Kanter Ofcom has admitted that it is very unlikely that all local television stations will survive after the Birmingham operator went bust last month. In a progress update marking two years since it first started awarding the broadcasting licences, the media regulator said failure will be part of the ecology of local television. “The nature of awarding licences for a new type of service in a competitive media market means that it is very unlikely that all channels will succeed,” Ofcom said. “This is an inherent feature of the nature of awarding a large number of licences for a new service across very different parts of the UK.” - broadcastnow.co.uk

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BBC2 mockumentary W1A to return in 2015 | Media | theguardian.com

The new four-part series of W1A will begin with a 60-minute episode, followed by three 30-minute ones. W1A claims to operate in a parallel universe to the actual BBC but the first series like Twenty Twelve was notable for coming up with situations in which life imitated art. We cant wait to see what dysfunctional madness lies ahead for Ian Fletcher and colleagues in this sly fiction. To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email mediatheguardian.com or phone 020 3353 3857. - theguardian.com

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Monday 15 September 2014, AM

Ariel - Is Birmingham back on the BBC map?

15 September 2014 Last updated at 1003 It's been a difficult few years for the BBC in Birmingham. The workforce at the Midlands base was depleted after key factual productions, such as Countryfile, moved to Bristol in 2012 because of Delivering Quality First plans. BBC Birmingham staff also held a strike against the move but it didn't stop programme teams being relocated mainly to Bristol, with a few to Salford, leaving an array of empty desks and low morale among those remaining at the Mailbox. - bbc.co.uk

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Kia joins the "DAB as standard" family

Kia has committed to moving to digital radio as standard across most of its Kia models in the UK. The Kia Soul has been launched with digital radio as standard and the company says other Kia models will be upgraded as soon as possible within the product life-cycle. The Kia Sportage, the brands best-selling car in the UK, will get digital radio when the all-new version is launched this year. - radiotoday.co.uk

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Sunday 14 September 2014, PM

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/opinion/ian-burrell-idealism-still-exists--in-public-service-broadcasting--as-th

His masterpiece The Civil War, a nine-part epic of more than 11 hours watched by 40 million people in 1990, has left a lasting impression on the national psyche. Series such as Baseball 18.5 hours long and made in 1994 and Jazz 10 episodes, each of two hours, made in 2000 help Americans to understand the role of sport and music in their national culture. Burns is both a symbol of the essential value of non-commercial television and an example of what can be achieved in terms of quality and ambition. - independent.co.uk

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New financial radio station to launch on DAB - media.info

All this might change, with a promised new radio station called Share Radio. - media.info

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If ITV is sold to a foreign mogul, a vital bit of our culture is threatened | Will Hutton | Comment is free | The Observ

Photograph Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images It takes guts for politicians to stand up to powerful business moguls in general, and powerful media moguls in particular. Moguls trade commercial favours for political support, and media moguls have the media power to make their support or lack of it - much more telling. Now the drama is playing itself out in the media industry itself. - theguardian.com

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TV spectrum is under threat | Comment | Broadcast

Broadcast RF’s Nick Fuller calls on Ofcom to safeguard the radio frequencies used by broadcasters As a specialist wireless camera provider to the TV industry, we at Broadcast RF are heavily reliant on the availability of suitable frequencies for our wireless systems. Unfortunately, the section of the frequency spectrum most suited to wireless cameras and mobile links is ideal for a variety of other uses – the most popular being mobile phones. Rising demand inevitably leads to increasing prices as the licencing authority (the UK government) realises there is money to be made from the frequency spectrum. Broadcasters have gradually been squeezed out of the band as the demand for mobile phone spectrum has increased, and the deeper pockets of the phone companies have enabled the acquisition of swathes of spectrum previously reserved for programme-making and special events (PMSE).. - broadcastnow.co.uk

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Sunday 14 September 2014, AM

Could the licence fee double in Scotland? We have no idea, say BBC - Telegraph

The position is directly contradicted by claims the BBC has quietly drawn up reports into the implications of independence. The Guardian has reported Scotland faces a doubling of its licence fee if viewers wish to continue watching and listening to the same programmes. According to sources close to the corporation, preliminary calculations showed the annual licence may need to rise from 145.50 to nearly 300 per household to reflect the cost of running services in Scotland. - telegraph.co.uk

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Friday 12 September 2014, PM

#11 - Save Our Sources, Next Radio Conference - The Media Podcast

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Talking TV: BBC Arts Made in Chelsea

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Talking TV: Broadcast Awards special

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Talking TV: Benefits Street and Henry Winkler

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Talking TV: Doctor Who, Derren Brown and diversity

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Talking TV: BBC1 gymnastics and The Wrong Mans

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Friday 12 September 2014, AM

Freesat and SeaChange to Debut Connected TV Platform at IBC2014 - MarketWatch

To ensure rapid rollout and optimal performance, the platform offers the concept-through-commercialization capabilities of SeaChange Professional Services for customer integration, deployment and post-launch service monitoring and management. Freesat's Freetime UI and applications are proven solutions for a superior experience for television viewers. Freetime is also a key driver of the growth of Freesat in the UK with consumers choosing to purchase Freetime enabled-boxes and smart TVs to access the superior experience this delivers. - marketwatch.com

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Independent Scotland 'faces doubling of BBC licence fee' | Politics | The Guardian

According to sources with close knowledge of the matter, a BBC paper drawn up three years ago compared the total amount Scottish viewers paid towards the licence fee with the value of the services they received from the corporation. It is understood that the figures which suggested raising the annual licence fee paid in Scotland to almost 300 for each household from the current 145.50 were seen by some of the most senior BBC executives under the tenure of the then director general, Mark Thompson. Sources say that one of the most expensive elements is the transmission of radio and television programmes in Scotland due to its more widely dispersed population and topography. - theguardian.com

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http://www.ses.com/4233325/news/2014/20101788

The company provides satellite communications services to broadcasters, content and internet service providers, mobile and fixed network operators and business and governmental organisations worldwide. The culturally diverse regional teams of SES are located around the globe and work closely with customers to meet their specific satellite bandwidth and service requirements. Please visit www.smardtv.com for more information. - ses.com

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Thursday 11 September 2014, PM

Ariel - NUJ calls off journalist strike threat

The NUJ had been concerned that the plan to cut 415 full-time posts in the next two years would create 'overwhelming workloads' for remaining staff. Following Thursday's meeting, the union said that a recruitment freeze across News had been agreed until the end of March at least, with exceptional appointments to have NUJ approval. There would also be a moratorium on compulsory redundancies across the division, with volunteers for redundancy not permitted to leave before the end of December. - bbc.co.uk

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C5 poised for profile boost | Comment | Broadcast

Thanks to Viacom’s scale, the broadcaster will be parking its tanks on Channel 4’s lawn, says Stephen Arnell There was a distinct feeling of complacency in Jay Hunt’s Meet the Controller session at the Edinburgh TV festival, when she declared: ‘If anything I’m actually less worried about Channel 5 than I have been at any point in my career.’ A career, lest we forget, that has included an eight-month sojourn actually running C5. A calculated position worked out for industry consumption? Maybe, but if she’s at all serious in this view, it signifies a worrying lack of attention to the potential threat a supercharged Viacom-funded C5 could well pose - not only to C4, but especially to E4, which often picks up the slack in C4’s general ratings decline - broadcastnow.co.uk

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TV ad buying will soon be fully automated | Media Network | Guardian Professional

At 74bn, television is still the largest and most powerful advertising market out there. Now, programmatic advertising companies are close to cracking this huge marketplace, meaning ads will be bought automatically with minimal human interaction. According to the IAB, 28 c500m of the UK digital display market was traded programmatically last year, and by 2017 this could rise to between 60 and 75. - theguardian.com

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RadioToday | Finance radio station to launch on DAB

A new radio station all about finance is launching on DAB in London this autumn. Share Radio will be dedicated to providing information on handling money and investments, and will primarily talk-based. It says it will have programmes to inform and empower listeners with the information they need to help them make better financial decisions. - radiotoday.co.uk

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TVPlayer: Watch Live TV Online For Free - Channels

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