More News – Page 3662
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IN PRODUCTION - OPTEX TO SELL SONY.
London-based reseller and rentals company OpTex has inked a deal with Sony to become the latest
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Production - Rough Cut.
Sky has introduced numerous innovations in its sports coverage. Now, it's the BBC's turn, says Roger Moody.
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Production - A Bluffer's Guide to: Widescreen DV.
Broadcasters have embraced widescreen but it is still difficult for those shooting on DV. The 16:9
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Production - On Location - Filming in the round.
Three Mills studio in east London is the location for a new reality show that locks three contestants inside a small pod and then sets them challenges. John Oates finds out more.
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Production - Children of the digital revolution.
Producer Carl Schoenfeld heralds the TV industry's very own 'punk era', a time when digital technology is enabling producers to experiment with different formats to create new looks.
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Production - Family planning issues.
Overhauling Five's soap Family Affairs in line with audience research resulted in a change in direction of storylines, a culling of redundant characters and a significant injection of cash. Rory O'Donnell reports.
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Off The Record - Lookalikes.
The venerable Lord Hutton and the veteran Today anchor John Humphrys. One sticks the boot in,
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Off The Record - Ticking the boxes.
The BBC press office has been busy this week pumping out a series of 'major' public
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Off The Record - Grand gesture.
The amount of goodwill shown towards deposed BBC director general Greg Dyke by his former employees
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Off The Record - Highbrow arts channel.
Five had us all fooled that its days of football, fornicating and films were all in
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Interview: Stuart Murphy - A happy first birthday for BBC3?
Critics have ruthlessly dissected the ratings for the BBC's 12-old-month baby and questioned whether its£97m budget is money well spent. So does Stuart Murphy, BBC3's controller, have cause to celebrate?
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Opinion - In My View - Here's to you ITV plc.
ITV might be the darling of the Competition Commission, but has Charles Allen come to the end of his nine lives, asks Dawn Airey.
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Opinion - Comment - Confessing all over dinner.
Television increasingly relies on serving up private revelations for entertainment. It's all part of a rather worrying outbreak of confessionalitis in our culture, says Tessa Mayes.
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Opinion - 'I'm a DG ... get me in here!'.
There are more difficult jobs in the world than the role of director general at the BBC, but it's hard to think of any.
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Interview - Red's storyteller.
Putting the writer at the centre of the creative process is key for successful drama, says Nicola Shindler, whose indie, Red Production, is behind some of the most original television dramas of recent years.
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Genre Focus: Drama - The American way.
US subscription channel HBO has built both a business and a creative reputation based on quality drama which taps into the Zeitgeist; can UK producers ever hope to emulate such success? Meg Carter reports.
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Genre Focus: Drama - Creating fiction from fact.
Drama-documentary is taking advantage of TV drama's increasing sensationalism and is attracting viewers with topical storylines and provocative subject matter.
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Genre Focus: Drama - Breaking the Silence.
Hear the Silence writer Timothy Prager on the challenges of turning real events and people into a drama about autism.