More News – Page 3865
-
News
Inquiry email revelation puts heat back on Gilligan.
Pressure mounted on BBC reporter Andrew Gilligan this week after it emerged he had 'outed' government
-
News
Birt admitted to Campbell: BBC is wrong.
Former BBC director general Lord John Birt criticised Andrew Gilligan's report on the Iraqi dossier, claiming that 'everybody knew that the story was wrong', writes Gavin Stamp.
-
News
Box TV sets up comedy division.
Box TV, the drama indie set up by former Channel 4 head of drama Gub Neal, is expanding into comedy after inking a deal with a number of comedians and writers, including Smack the Pony star Sally Phillips, writes Penny Hughes.
-
News
Rolf Harris series paints celebrities.
Rolf Harris will put four mystery celebrities in front of a team of artists for a new BBC1 challenge show from indie Hotbed Media, writes Michael Rosser.
-
News
COOGAN HINTS AT PARTRIDGE RETURN.
Alan Partridge creator Steve Coogan has given a ray of hope to fans after admitting the
-
News
Rights reform to cost BBC and C4£36m.
The BBC and Channel 4 face losing up to£36m between them when they are forced
-
News
Comment - More bad news for BBC.
Little heard at the Hutton inquiry this week has helped the BBC's case ...
-
News
C4 orders film version of Dr Kelly scandal.
It has filled newspapers and news bulletins for months - now the Iraq dossier row and subsequent death of government scientist Dr David Kelly is to be made into a docu-drama for Channel 4, writes Leigh Holmwood.
-
News
ITV hands Carlton Saturday kids slot.
ITV has axed Saturday morning kids show SM:TV Live and handed Carlton a year-long commission for
-
News
O'Connor becomes highest-paid TV star
Des O' Connor has became the highest-paid TV presenter in the UK after signing up for another 70 hours of the hit Carlton daytime show, Today With Des and Mel, writes Sam Matthews.
-
News
Tony Ball prepares BBC offensive
BSkyB chief executive Tony Ball will launch an attack on the BBC licence fee in his MacTaggart lecture tonight, writes Jon Rogers
-
News
Premiership rights deal to get greenlight
The European Commission will wave through The Premiership's controversial deal awarding BSkyB sole rights to live Premier League football from 2004-7, the analyst which advised Uefa on its successful tender has predicted, writes Rosemary Gallagher
-
News
The Highest Bidder (BBC2) - Daniel Finkelstein, The Times
'The Highest Bidder (BBC2) turned out to be fascinating. The story of how the book was written and printed was acco...
-
News
High-profile BBC execs accused of bullying
Bullying is rife within the BBC, according to a survey carried out by the National Union of Journalists (NUJ), writes Leigh Holmwood
-
News
Highest Bidder (BBC2) - Christopher Matthew, Daily Mail
'The penultimate episode of Highest Bidder was one of the most fascinating of what has been as fresh, instructive a...
-
News
Intensive Scares (BBC1) - Robert Hanks, Independent
'Intensive Scares (BBC1), a series on health issues that is every bit as tasteless and fearmongering as the punning...
-
News
Bad Girls (ITV) - Charlie Catchpole, Daily Star
'This was a creepy, Gothic finale that wouldn't have been out of place in a hammer horror film.'...
-
News
What Women Want (Five) - James Walton, Telegraph
'To its questionable credit, What Women Want (Five) has managed to find another slight variation on the television ...
-
News
Masters and Servants (C4) - Nancy Banks-Smith, Guardian
'I hate this series in a hypnotised sort of way. You watch nervously for the moment when people start to fold their...
-
News
Carlton and Granada await merger decision
The fate of the planned merger between ITV giants Carlton and Granada should be decided within 20 days after the competition commission yesterday handed its recommendations in to the government, writes Paul Revoir