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This book traces how the channel came about, and provides an
account of its eventful history through a focus on key figures
including Jeremy Isaacs, Liz Forgan, Phil Redmond, Michael Grade,
Andrea Wonfor and Michael Jackson. It covers signature and
stand-out (for good and bad reasons) C4 programs such as "Right To
Reply," "The Tube," "The Comic Strip Presents," "The Big
Breakfast," "The Word," "Brookside," "Wife Swap" and "Faking it";
the channel's success with American imports such as "Hill Street
Blues," "Friends" and "Sex and the City," and the rise and fall of
Film Four. Luke Johnson, Chairman of C4, has contributed a foreword
for this book.
This book covers a dramatic decade in the fortunes of Britain's
quirkiest broadcaster. It opens in 2009, with the realisation that
Channel 4's biggest money spinner, Big Brother, had become a toxic
asset and would have to be discarded, at the same time as
advertising revenues were shrinking in the wake of the 2008
financial crash. Maggie Brown's compelling narrative, which draws
on interviews with key players in Channel 4's story and unique
access to the broadcaster's archives, takes us inside the boardroom
battles, changes in senior management and commissioning teams,
interventions by the media regulator Ofcom, and the channel's
response to a rapidly-changing media and political landscape. Brown
describes how the channel, under its new chief executive David
Abraham, successfully fought off the threat of privatisation, which
became a reality after the Conservatives' general election victory
in 2015. The price for remaining publicly funded was a substantial
relocation of Channel 4's operations, with Leeds announced in 2018
as a new 'regional hub'. The Channel 4 story is also one of
ambitious and innovative programming, with a new director of
content, Jay Hunt, instigating radical changes in commissioning and
scheduling. Brown traces programming hits and losses during this
period, with the departure to competitors of celebrity chefs, Black
Mirror and Charlie Brooker, horse racing and Formula 1, and a
reappraisal of the remit of institutions such as Channel 4 News and
Film 4. But there were successes too, with the 2012 Paralympics
helping to restore a public service sheen, and new programmes such
as Gogglebox in 2013 connecting with younger audiences, and, in
2016, the coup of taking The Great British Bake Off from its home
at the BBC.
This book covers a dramatic decade in the fortunes of Britain’s
quirkiest broadcaster. It opens in 2009, with the realisation that
Channel 4’s biggest money spinner, Big Brother, had become a
toxic asset and would have to be discarded, at the same time as
advertising revenues were shrinking in the wake of the 2008
financial crash. Maggie Brown’s compelling narrative, which draws
on interviews with key players in Channel 4’s story and unique
access to the broadcaster’s archives, takes us inside the
boardroom battles, changes in senior management and commissioning
teams, interventions by the media regulator Ofcom, and the
channel’s response to a rapidly-changing media and political
landscape. Brown describes how the channel, under its new chief
executive David Abraham, successfully fought off the threat of
privatisation, which became a reality after the Conservatives’
general election victory in 2015. The price for remaining publicly
funded was a substantial relocation of Channel 4’s operations,
with Leeds announced in 2018 as a new ‘regional hub’. The
Channel 4 story is also one of ambitious and innovative
programming, with a new director of content, Jay Hunt, instigating
radical changes in commissioning and scheduling. Brown traces
programming hits and losses during this period, with the departure
to competitors of celebrity chefs, Black Mirror and Charlie
Brooker, horse racing and Formula 1, and a reappraisal of the remit
of institutions such as Channel 4 News and Film 4. But there were
successes too, with the 2012 Paralympics helping to restore a
public service sheen, and new programmes such as Gogglebox in 2013
connecting with younger audiences, and, in 2016, the coup of taking
The Great British Bake Off from its home at the BBC.
A collection of one hundred intense love poems
This collection comprises of mainly love and inspirational poetry,
much of which I channel from Spirit, exploring all aspects of love.
Many too explore the philosophy of life and are designed to uplift
and challenge the reader into looking at life and love from a
different point of view. I have written these verses from the heart
and I hope they will touch yours This book is for those, who are
about to fall in love, for those who are deeply in love, those who
were in love, lost loves and those who always will be and for the
deepest love of all "Soul mates" Dear 'J' For the deepest love I
have ever known Through the pain my soul's enriched and I have
grown
A collection of 700 love, inspiring and philosophical poems by
Maggie Brown covering all the different facets of love, some
romantic, some erotic and others describe unconditional love, all
guaranteed to touch the soul and inspire the reader
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