Thursday 21 June 2018, AM

Media Masters - Les Hinton

Guy North to step down as Freeview boss
Guy North is to step down as managing director of Freeview in October. North will continue to lead Freeview until October 2018. - www.broadbandtvnews.comWednesday 20 June 2018, PM

The Media Show Revolutions: News

Freeview retune in Norfolk has left people tearing their hair out
MORE Freeview viewers in Norfolk describe signal loss as 'very annoying'. MORE Freeview viewers in Norfolk and north Suffolk advised to retune. - www.edp24.co.ukMonday 18 June 2018, AM

BBC wants to work closer with Commercial Radio – RadioToday
The BBC has since told RadioToday it will continue striving for bigger audiences but confirms fighting over the share of a cake which is not getting any bigger will not serve any of the broadcasters well. We have the strength of BBC Radio - the best in the world, and a way into the lives of 7 out of 10 people in the UK every week. - radiotoday.co.ukFriday 15 June 2018, PM

Drivetime Radio 2, Grenfell Inquiry Podcast, Brexit Vote

#98 - Local TV, Dacre s legacy hope for Audioboom - The Media Podcast with Olly Mann
Thursday 14 June 2018, AM
Wednesday 13 June 2018, PM
Tuesday 12 June 2018, PM

BBC staff accept new pay deal after two years of negotiations
As a result BBC will staff benefit from a backdated pay deal under which wages rise by 2 in 2017/18, 2 in 2018/19 and at least 2.5 in 2019/20. Union leaders say the deal includes an increase in the BBC minimum salary from 15,687 to 20,000 as of August, increased sick pay and wellbeing arrangements, and a simpler, more transparent pay structure. - www.theguardian.comMonday 11 June 2018, AM
Broadcasters agree £125m Freeview deal to combat Netflix threat
The BBC, ITV and Channel 4 have agreed a new deal to invest in Freeview, the free digital television service, in response to sweeping changes in audience behaviour and competition from streaming operators such as Netflix and Amazon. The three broadcasters, together with Arqiva, which owns and operates the national transmitter network, have sealed a £125m, five-year deal to develop new services for Freeview, including an app that will allow viewers to watch programming from the broadcasters live and on demand. Proponents of public service broadcasting hope the investment will lead to more collaboration between channels, including a Netflix-style service that aggregates all available content from the BBC, ITV and Channel 4. Pressure is building on the three organisations to work more closely together in the face of competition from Netflix and Amazon, which have vastly greater spending power. Sharon White, chief executive of Ofcom, the UK’s media regulator, recently called on them to “collaborate to compete”. When competitors like Netflix are spending $8bn a year on content and $1bn a year on engineering, we need to think about what is good for the consumer and the creative industries Carolyn McCall and Alex Mahon, the new chief executives of ITV and Channel 4, have also talked of the need to join forces in an increasingly competitive marketplace. “When competitors like Netflix are spending $8bn a year on content and $1bn a year on engineering, we need to think about what is good for the consumer and the creative industries, and where we should work together to make sure those values of public service broadcasting are best served in the UK,” said Ms Mahon recently. Channel 4 also is working with the BBC to lobby for the prominence of public service broadcasting content in the user interfaces and programme guides of new streaming services. “This new commitment from our shareholders is a major boost for UK viewers,” said Jonathan Thompson, chief executive of Digital UK, which runs the Freeview platform. Further collaboration between the broadcasters would “safeguard free-to-view TV” and “reinvent it for a new age of viewing”. As viewers “cut the cord” and cancel pricey pay-TV subscriptions, free-to-air terrestrial television has become increasingly important, with viewers taking Freeview alongside a subscription to Amazon or Netflix. Today, more than 11m homes use free-to-air terrestrial services — 1m more than in early 2016, according to BARB, the standard for TV measurement in the UK. - www.ft.comThursday 07 June 2018, AM
Wednesday 06 June 2018, PM
Friday 01 June 2018, PM

#97 - Evening Standard's 'Money Can't Buy' offer, Grimmy quits R1 Breakfast Show - The Media Podcast with Olly Mann
Friday 01 June 2018, AM
Thursday 31 May 2018, AM
Wednesday 30 May 2018, PM
Friday 25 May 2018, PM
Thursday 24 May 2018, AM
Wednesday 23 May 2018, PM
Friday 18 May 2018, AM

#95 - Audioboom Takeover Off The Table, Digital Radio Listening Overtakes Analogue, TV BAFTAs - The Media Podcast with O
Thursday 17 May 2018, AM
Wednesday 16 May 2018, PM
Friday 11 May 2018, AM
Thursday 10 May 2018, AM

Journalism fights back!

DTG Summit 2018
Now new distribution networks, devices and viewing experiences are further transforming television. The DTG Summit explores the impact of this transformative change and considers TV's evolution over the next 20 years. - www.youtube.comWednesday 09 May 2018, AM
Tuesday 08 May 2018, AM

BBC, ITV and Channel 4 in talks to create UK streaming service
The BBC, Channel 4 and ITV have held discussions about joining forces to create a British streaming service to combat the increasing power of Netflix and Amazon in the UK. The early-stage talks, which are also understood to involve NBC Universal, the US TV and film group that owns the maker of Downton Abbey, are focusing on how the UK's main broadcasters and makers of top shows can work together to create a streaming rival to the popular and deep-pocketed newcomers that have transformed broadcasting. The established British broadcasters held similar talks two years ago but in the end only the BBC and ITV managed to hook up to launch a Netflix-style service in the US called BritBox. - www.theguardian.comFriday 04 May 2018, PM
Wednesday 02 May 2018, PM
Friday 27 April 2018, AM
Thursday 26 April 2018, AM
Friday 20 April 2018, PM

BBC to 'reinvent the iPlayer' in a bid to remain relevant to 16-34 year-olds – Digital TV Europe
The BBC will focus on reinventing the iPlayer this year and making it more of a destination for young people, according to BBC chairman David Clementi. Outlining how the BBC will face challenges like changing viewing habits and competition from global giants like Netflix and Amazon, Clementi said that the BBC's focus on modernising its services will allow it to alter how it delivers content to audiences and how they respond. - www.digitaltveurope.com
Ofcom seeks to scrap local TV roll-out
Since the first service launched in 2013.several stations - including the capital's service London Live - have asked Ofcom to reduce their local news obligations. Ofcom had identified 13 further locations as local TV candidates, but said it was now minded to end the roll-out. - www.bbc.co.uk
20/04/2018 Radio 4 Feedback

#93 - Daily Mail’s Accidental Profanity, Radio 4’s Rivers Of Blood, Test Match Special’s Early Tea -The Media Podcast wi
Thursday 19 April 2018, PM

BT set to ditch traditional phone lines, go VoIP-only by 2025
BT will be left with one less network to maintain, allowing it to concentrate its spending on improving broadband rather than needing to spend thousands on a legacy technology that's being used by less and less people annually. The BBC's iPlayer has even started to outpace traditional TV as next generation technologies like HDR are tested over the streaming service while being more or less absent from traditional TV. But other transmission technologies are proving much more resilient. - www.trustedreviews.comThursday 19 April 2018, AM
Wednesday 18 April 2018, PM
Friday 13 April 2018, PM
Thursday 12 April 2018, AM
Wednesday 11 April 2018, PM
Wednesday 11 April 2018, AM

Mysterious Google-branded 4K Android TV dongle shows up at the FCC
With the existing device lineup, there is no way to buy an Android TV device that will get Android P in a timely manner. Google's TV strategy had long been split between bigger, more functional Android TV set-top boxes and smaller, easier-to-use Chromecast devices. - arstechnica.comMonday 09 April 2018, PM

BBC Radio 4 broke impartiality rules in Nigel Lawson climate change interview
BBC Radio 4 broke impartiality rules by failing to sufficiently challenge climate change denier Nigel Lawson's controversial claims in an interview, the broadcasting watchdog has ruled. Co/HtqJf9sBFW. The Today programme featured five interviews on climate change prompted by the release of former US vice-president Al Gore's film An Inconvenient Sequel, the follow-up to 2006's An Inconvenient Truth, each conducted by presenter Justin Webb. - www.theguardian.comFriday 06 April 2018, PM

06/04/2018 Radio 4 Feedback

#92 - The Gender Pay Gap, Interns and a lifeline for Sky - The Media Podcast with Olly Mann
Friday 06 April 2018, AM

Do you really need a 4K TV? – Which? News
4K TVs can display HD content better than HD TVs. It's fair to say the vast majority of what people watch on 4K TVs will be HD channels from Freeview or a pay TV services, which is why we continue to see how good these TVs are at displaying HD and SD video. While the results are close, so too are the cost of many 4K and HD TVs. By choosing a 4K TV, you'll get better HD picture quality and you're ready when the 4K channels do launch. - www.which.co.ukThursday 05 April 2018, AM
Wednesday 04 April 2018, PM

How porno conquered podcasts

Local DAB radio coverage expansion complete – RadioToday
The launch of the two new transmitters completes the transformative initiative to expand the UK's local DAB transmission network towards FM equivalence, which was announced by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport in 2015 and jointly funded by the DCMS, BBC and local DAB multiplex operators. The programme of work, which was delivered by Arqiva, has doubled the local DAB network, with new transmitters or modifications to 221 local DAB sites, boosting local DAB coverage from 72 to more than 90 of UK households. - radiotoday.co.ukpick a page





















