All News articles – Page 4304
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Awards for radio journalists
The efforts and achievements of radio journalists across the country are to be recognised by a new awards ceremony launched by Independent Radio News (IRN), writes John Plunkett
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Off the record - And finally.
Simon Hunt, Front Row marketing director, had a brief and painful political career.
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Off the record - Toilet humour.
'You thought you had it bad, I was born in a shoe-box', was the refrain of
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Off the record - Plucked from the jaws of Dr Death.
Gunther von Hagens of Body Worlds fame, the man who carried out a live autopsy on
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Off the record - News in brief.
Meanwhile, that other essential office convenience the coffee machine has become the subject of a heated
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Off the record - Cardboard boxer.
Upcoming mind-artist Derren Brown, known as the British David Blaine, will be appearing in C4's forthcoming
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TX - The family next door.
The brief? Make a drama about domestic violence. It sounds straightforward, but the catch is that
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Interview: Stuart Murphy - Three's company.
On the eve of BBC3's launch, controller Stuart Murphy is certain the long-awaited channel is at last
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Children's TV - Telemagination hits the big time.
Being bought by German media group TV-Loonland was a major boost for London-based animation studio Telemagination. Now it has three major series in production and is considering the feature film market.
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Children's TV: Multichannel - Cut-throat kids.
Kids offerings have proliferated on multichannel, but is there a big enough audience to go around?
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Children's TV: CITV - Winning custody of the children.
The production powerhouse that is CBBC has given CITV a drubbing in recent years. But with BBC children's boss Nigel Pickard taking over at Network Centre, can CITV win back young viewers once again?
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Children's TV: Licensing - Television before toys.
Licensing deals for children's TV properties are becoming a fact of life for increasingly cash-strapped producers as their commercial potential becomes impossible to resist.
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Opinion - When 'balance' disguises truth.
When the Independent Television Commission vindicated Palestine Is Still the Issue, it made a landmark judgement which will ultimately improve the public's understanding of the conflict, argues John Pilger.
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Leader - What's public service, Greg?
This week Greg Dyke celebrates his third year as BBC director general, a period in which he has overseen sweeping changes at the corporation - as senior industry figures point out in this week's issue.
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Trade talk - Blue Sky thinking.
Sara Ramsden has been lured away from her post at Channel 4 by Dawn Airey to run Sky One. How will she change the Sky channel?
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Dyke's BBC - Greg Dyke: the verdict.
Marking Greg Dyke's third anniversary as BBC director general, Lord Puttnam, David Elstein and Will Wyatt assess his performance and point to future challenges.
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On the box - Buried wins on appeal.
John Chapman, producer of the Talkback/ BBC drama The Lost Prince, has little faith in Trust but is overwhelmed by Buried.
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News analysis - Politically correct.
The BBC is once again searching for the right way to engage younger viewers in the issues of the day, while winning bigger audiences for its topical programmes. But has its politics shake-up gone far enough?