All Broadcast articles in 28 January 2005 – Page 10
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Opinion - Peer Poll: Jerry Springer - the opera.
The BBC must not be cowed by the noisy minority who object to the antics of Dick and Dom in da Bungalow.
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Opinion - (He) Bogey men of the right.
I was minded this week to write about the extraordinary revelations under the Freedom of Information Act that, for a short time in 2002, Tony Ball, the then chief executive of BSkyB actually moved in to the DCMS on a camp bed - at least this is the deduct
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Comment - BB is no playground bully.
Germaine Greer's decision to quit Big Brother had more to do with an inability to deal with the challenges the show presents rather than bullying or psychological torture, says Ashley Hames.
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Analysis - The God-given right.
Does the unprecedented campaign against the BBC for showing Jerry Springer: The Opera portend a real threat to free speech on TV and, if so, what is the best way for broadcasters to respond?
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Facilities - Technicolor hiring.
Technicolor Creative Services has appointed senior online editor Dominic Thomson to drive its Smoke suite and
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Facilities - Lipsync buys DI kit.
Soho's Lipsync Post has bought a second Quantel iQ digital intermediate grading suite, totalling£3.5m of
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Creative briefs - Lipsync puts images to eulogy.
Lipsync Post has produced titles for and onlined Holocaust - A Music Memorial Film from Auschwitz
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Facilities - BIBC internet launch.
British Internet Broadcasting Company (BIBC) has launched an end-to-end internet broadcasting service called Internet Master. BIBC
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Analysis - Profile - Milkshake Man's new flavours.
Five controller of children's Nick Wilson has put the channel's kids strand Milkshake on the terrestrial map - can he now push it into multichannel?
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Analysis - On the box - Big Brother casts a spell.
Rachel Arnold is transfixed by a lolloping, leering Brigitte Nielsen and the rest of the inspired cast list of Celebrity Big Brother as the reality show hits a new high.
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Facilities - ASP's software aid.
Adaptable Software Products (ASP) has launched accounting software developed specifically for media freelancers and contractors. Accolyte
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Creative briefs - Fold7 has designs on Paramount.
Fold7 has designed new channel idents across the Paramount Comedy Channels. The series of branding focuses
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Creative briefs - Precursor gives E4 a fresh look.
Precursor has redesigned E4's channel idents and menus, winning a five-way pitch. Precusor developed a parallel
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Facilities - M2 seeks major stake in VTR plc.
An M2-led consortium is understood to be close to making a£3m bid for a major
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Facilities - Blue spends£1m boosting HD capacity.
Blue Post Production is to spend£1m on expanding its HD and sound capacity, writes Rick Dacey.
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New Zealand sticks to the facts.
Factual specialist TVF International has sold 26 hours of British documentaries to broadcasters in New Zealand.
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Facilities - Filming in London reaches record high.
Filming on the streets of London has soared by 10% over the past 12 months according to a study by Film London, writes Rick Dacey.
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Format Focus: Face off.
This general knowledge knock-out format has done well in France and could soon reach UK shores, writes Michael Rosser.
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New diary entries for distraction.
Distraction Formats has sold its TV Diaries format to Ireland, Canada and the Middle East. The
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Postman pat makes more deliveries.
Entertainment Rights (ER) has sold the new Postman Pat series to the Netherlands, Belgium and Scandinavia.