Radio Broadcasting in Britain has traditionally been based on the principle that it is a public service accountable to people. While retaining the essential public service element‚ it now also embraces the principles of competition and choice: • the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation)‚ which broadcasts television and radio programmes; • the ITC (Independent Television Commission)‚ which licenses and regulates commercial television services‚ including cable and satellite services. • the Radio Authority
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How is your selected industry regulated? Use examples to support your ideas ‘X factor’ ‘The Inbetweeners’ ‘BBC News’ All television programmes must stay within certain regulations set by Ofcom or for the BBC the BBC trust. Some programmes stay within these regulations but others do not. Before the watershed programmes must be suitable for their target audience‚ especially if there is a chance children could be watching. TV channels need to keep this is mind. The watershed stop at 9:00pm and
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information services is BBC. The BBC is the world’s oldest and largest broadcaster‚ and is the country’s principal public service broadcaster. The BBC is funded primarily by a television licence and from sales of its programming to overseas markets. It does not carry advertising. All the households with a ttelevision reciever have to pay the licence and the fee is determined by periodic negotiation between the government and the BBC. The first Broad Cast by the BBC was from Alexander Palace
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Bf44rl@sunderland.students.ac.u Analyse the selected television news extracts (from the screening) showing your understanding and ability to apply Personalisation and impartiality to your own critical discussion. In this essay I will analyse ITV 1‚ BBC 1 and Channel 4’s News programmes. I will give detailed definitions of impartiality and personalisation; I will investigate the concepts of personalisation and impartiality and use them to critically evaluate the news. I will examine how these three
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Study one The rise of citizen journalism From live blogs on ’Occupy’ protests to footage of Syrian atrocities on YouTube‚ filmmakers now have access to a wealth of raw material – but can it all be trusted? * Monday 11 June 2012 00.29 BS * http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/jun/11/rise-of-citizen-journalism In a digital world with a whole host of different ways to communicate a factual message it is increasingly hard to judge the value of amateur eyewitness film shot on a mobile phone
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so controversial? And is it really that different from BBC‚ CNN and other news agencies? Al-Jazeera was launched November 1st 1996‚ in Doha‚ Qatar‚ which still contains the headquarters. Its birth followed the closing of BBCs Arabic TV station. So in truth‚ it was made almost as a replacement and not a competitor to BBC. Even though that is how many views it today‚ a different prospective. But is Al-Jazeera really that different from the BBC and other news agencies? When we look at the stories
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Bibliography: Acklam‚ J.‚ & Chang‚ C. (2009). ICT-enabled UK-based Global Virtual Hubs. Position Paper BCS Management Forum Strategic Panel . BBC (2013) [online] Available at:(www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice) {accessed 20/02/2013} Brett‚A Cameron‚ P (2007)‚ “The Marketing Review‚ Volume 7‚ Number 4” [online]Available at : http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/westburn/tmr/2007/00000007/00000004/art00002
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23 November 2012 INTRODUCTION: The media is a medium conveying information and is a means to communication. Its evolution over the years‚ through newspapers‚ radio‚ television and the internet has made a significant impact on our lives all over the world. You could say that the world has become a lot smaller because people can instantly get in touch with one another and even have video conferences with people on the other side of the earth. But like our presentation title indicates we’d
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He made his television debut in 1965 as a reporter for Granada Television’s Rome Bureau. Burke’s impressive following in the British Isles dates back to 1966‚ when he joined the BBC’s weekly science show‚ Tomorrow’s World. As the chief BBC correspondent for all Apollo space flights‚ Burke won critical acclaim or his interpretation of the US space program to an audience of over 12 million people. During this time he developed and resented a variety of documentaries
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should be commercial alternative to the BBC. According to Minority Report‚ there should be freedom of choice rather than ‘the brute force of monopoly’ (Negrine‚ 1998: 18). In this essay‚ I will discuss which factors helped to create independent television. In order to assess the important aspects that made ITV possible‚ we have to keep in mind political‚ economic and ideological factors as well as the living conditions of the 1950s. The growing alienation from the BBC of its audience‚ the rise of official
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