July/August 2020
Is TV just painting over the cracks? Television www.rts.org.uk September 2013
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Journal of The Royal Television Society July/August 2020 l Volume 57/7
From the CEO Diversity and inclusion are back at the forefront of the political agenda. Everyone who works in the media business is doing some soul-searching. Broadcasters and platform owners have responded to the new impetus of the Black Lives Matter movement by announcing fresh initiatives in order to tackle what remains a serious structural problem in the UK TV sector. Our cover story is by veteran diversity campaigner Marcus Ryder and provides a valuable and passionate contribution to the diversity debate. We will be returning to this topic in
the coming months and look forward to hearing other perspecÂtives on this hugely important issue. It may be summer, and we are only just emerging from lockdown, but itâs been another frantic period for RTS events. Our national and regional centres have excelled by putting on some extraordinary webinars and virtual events, some of which have made a splash internationally and attracted large audiences. Huge thanks to all of you who have been involved in these events, especially the panellists and producers. At HQ, weâve had another month of must-watch lunchtime events. Iâm thrilled that Fran Unsworth could find
Contents 5 6 8 9 10 12 14 16
Emma Scottâs TV Diary
Emma Scott realises that she does not want to swap TV for teaching â and succeeds in Hollywood via Zoom
Working Lives: stunt co-ordinator
Gangs of London stunt co-ordinator Jude Poyer is interviewed by Matthew Bell
Comfort Classic: Father Ted
âFathers⌠finish your breakfast and come outside for your daily punishment.â Steve Clarke applauds a comedy gem
Ear Candy: Talking Sopranos
Steve Schirripa and Michael Imperioliâs podcast is perfect for bingeing on The Sopranos, says Kate Holman
Why black lives have to matter more
Commitment at the top is vital if ethnic minorities are to achieve equality in the TV sector, insists Marcus Ryder
An opportunity for change
The BBCâs new Director-General, Tim Davie, needs to be bold, argues Roger Mosey
Keep it safe, keep it simple
The RTS takes a detailed look at the new working methods getting programmes back into production
No compromise on impartiality
BBC news chief Fran Unsworth says the corporation must hold those in power to account â without editorialising
Editor Steve Clarke smclarke_333@hotmail.com News editor and writer Matthew Bell bell127@btinternet.com
Production, design, advertising Gordon Jamieson gordon.jamieson.01@gmail.com Sub-editor Sarah Bancroft smbancroft@me.com
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
Royal Television Society 3 Dorset Rise London EC4Y 8EN T: 020 7822 2810 E: info@rts.org.uk W: www.rts.org.uk
the time to talk to the RTS at a very demanding time for anyone running a news operation. Thanks, too, to Stewart Purvis for chairing this session. Also outstanding was the âBack in productionâ event in which John Whiston explained to the RTS how ITV successfully restarted filming its two super soaps, Coronation Street and Emmerdale. Finally, congratulations to all the winners of the RTS Student Television Awards 2020.
Theresa Wise
Cover: The recently unveiled mural on the EastEnders set by Nottingham-born artist Neequaye Dsane, aka Dreph (BBC)
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The trouble with experts
Dr Charlie Easmon casts a sceptical eye at the TV pundits proffering their expertise during the pandemic
The joy of difference
An RTS event unlocks the secrets that made BBC One drama The A Word such a success
The real cost of lockdown
Televisionâs freelance workforce is suffering mentally and financially from the impact of the pandemic
Mining for TV gold
BBC Oneâs The Luminaries brings a subversive edge to period drama. Caroline Frost learns how it was done
Why we love property shows
Series that hook into viewersâ obsession with their homes are here to stay, says an expert RTS panel
Lockdown winners
Viewing of linear channels has surged, but not as much as it has for on-demand services such as Netflix
Our Friend in Leeds
John Whiston hails a TV doctor like no other â and still finds time to dance the coronavirus two-step
RTS Student Television Awards 2020
Matt Richardson and Siobhan Greene hosted a virtual ceremony sponsored by Motion Content Group
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Legal notice Š Royal Television Society 2020. The views expressed in Television are not necessarily those of the RTS. Registered Charity 313 728
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Proud sponsors of the RTS Student Television Awards
TV diary Emma Scott realises that she doesnât want to swap TV for teaching â and finds that Zoom helps her to succeed in Hollywood
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tâs the end of an era. The country is slowly easing out of lockdown. Against the odds, weâve delivered a show to the BBC and become surprising best mates with the Bank of England, and Iâm leaving the Beano for new adventures. Our brilliant Beano team adapted to lockdown at lightning speed, despite some becoming quite poorly with Covid-19 symptoms. We mobilised everyone to work from home early and weâve kept all content production across TV, digital and the comic on track. Endless innovation, creativity and cheer has shone through. â At home, my two teenage daughters somewhat reluctantly adjusted to me being around a lot more. Funnily enough, I quickly discovered I was never destined to be a teacher. Home schooling is officially a nightmare. Give me working in telly any day. â Mark Talbot has powered away. He joined us from Hat Trick Productions to head up our teen/young adult slate based on the comic archive. In March, he told me that you canât do a writerâs room by Zoom. âRubbish,â I said, and then, of course, he totally nailed it: the Beanoverse came alive. Suddenly, writers are at even more of a premium, but you can get the attention of directors and on-screen talent because theyâre not stuck on a set. As a result, our projects now have additional quality creative talent attached.
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
â Pitching our slate to Hollywood executives via Zoom wasnât part of the plan. I soon discovered that all pretence and poker face go out the window on Zoom. Weâve encountered many LAbased kids, cats, dogs and a truly disastrous exploding coffee cup. Not forgetting the behind-the-scenes hysteria in my home and total bans on streaming anything in case it messed with the wi-fi. These glitches and travails of tech have, ironically, brought levity, warmth and greater acceptance. After all, we are all in this together. And did I mention it? We even managed to sell two shows. â Over on the kidsâ side of the business, Iâve seen the sheer ingenuity and hard graft that go into keeping our production of Dennis & Gnasher: Unleashed! on schedule for CBBC this month. Beano Studios producers Tim Searle, Karina Stanford-Smith and Louise Condie, along with the BBCâs Jo Allen, have created a really fun, witty show. Working with our fantastic animation producers, Jellyfish, they have kept the show on track. Before lockdown Jellyfish managed to move a team of 250, including 57 artists and 30 animators, to work from home. Their work is outstanding. We are on air in mid-July. I could not be happier that weâre delivering a dose of much-needed joy and laughs to kids and families.
â During lockdown, the power of the revitalised Beano brand reached new heights. The comic production line kept going and delivered each week, just as it did in the Second World War. My most delightful and bizarre lockdown moment was being quoted alongside Andrew Bailey, the Governor of the Bank of England, on the front page of the Financial Times. We had been working with the bank to produce Beano-inspired learning materials to help kids better understand money. The launch was brought forward to help teachers with home learning. The press exploded with joy at the prospect of Dennis and Minnie helping kids to understand interest rates. A skill we all may need in the coming months and years.⌠â And then, amid all the madness, I decided it was time for me to leave Beano Studios. After five and half years, I want to do something new. Taking an old and iconic comic and turning it into a digital-first entertainment business has been a rollercoaster ride. Iâm really proud of what weâve achieved. I will be cheering from the sidelines, looking out for the commissions, while lying down in a darkened room for a little while. Emma Scott is the outgoing CEO of Beano Studios.
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Gangs of London
J
Stunt co-ordinator ude Poyer is responsible for the high-octane action sequences and bone-crunching but balletic fights of Sky Atlanticâs hit crime thriller Gangs of London.
What does the job involve? There are two sides to the job: safety and creativity. We identify scenes that are potentially hazardous and, where possible, remove those risks, or reduce them to an acceptable level. That may involve using a stunt double instead of an actor or using safety equipment, such as elbow pads under costumes, out-of-shot crash mats or complex wire-rigging. Creatively, we could be
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Sky
WORKING LIVES
choreographing fight sequences or staging shoot-outs. How did you become a stunt co-ordinator? Growing up, my passions were film, drama and martial arts. In 1996, when I was 18, I moved to Hong Kong, where a lot of martial arts action movies were made, to pursue a career in film and TV. I stayed for eight years, working as a stunt performer and then taking my first steps in co-ordinating stunts and action directing. What was your first major TV job in the UK? The BBC childrenâs series Spirit Warriors.
I read that the BBC was making a fantasy martial arts show, heavily influenced by Hong Kong films and Chinese folklore. I wanted to be involved, emailed the producers and got the job. I was credited as the showâs choreographer because there was no contact in the fight scenes as they involved children. What makes a good stunt co-ordinator? You have to have performed a variety of stunts and observed other performers and co-ordinators on set. Thereâs very little that hasnât been done before, so you need to draw on a full range of experience. A creative and visual mind helps. And you need humility. You
make something totally safe. Stunts are inherently risky, but itâs the job of a co-ordinator to carry out risk assessments and mitigate the risks.
Combined physical choreography and visual effects in Gangs of London
Have you refused to do a stunt? If thereâs something beyond my expertise, I wouldnât do it. But, usually, there will be a way to make a stunt safe â often by employing visual effects.
Sky
Can you share a trick of the trade? On Gangs of London we used pre-vis [pre-visualisation] for a lot of the action sequences. I spent three months with my team, Gareth and the cinematographer, Matt Flannery, in a rehearsal space and we built the sets out of cardboard and shot low-tech versions of the fight sequences and set pieces. When it came to the shoot, we followed the pre-vis sequences, shot for shot. This saved time and money. In the US, itâs been common for more than a decade; in the UK, thereâs resistance to pre-vis. We should embrace it.
shouldnât pretend you know it all â seek the advice of experienced co-ordinators. Are there specialists? There are specialists in, say, vehicle or horse stunts. In the UK, most stunt professionals have more than one skill, including, usually, some experience with fighting. Fight scenes are my strongest suit, but I also do a variety of stunts, including fire and wire work. Who do you work with? Primarily, the director and cinematographer, but also with other heads of department, including special effects, armoury, production design, costume and visual effects. Together, we are working to realise the directorâs vision. When are you brought on to a production? On an action-heavy show such as Gangs of London, the stunt co-ordinator is brought in early. Thereâs lots of Âplanning, even down to the material the costumes are made of â if weâre doing stunts with fire, we want [non-Â flammable] natural fibres to be worn. For a fight, we might request long sleeves so elbow pads can be hidden. We sometimes scout locations for
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
stunts or train cast members for fight sequences. Alternatively, on a sitcom or soap with only the odd stunt, we might turn up on the day to, for example, teach an actor to fall safely. What stunts are you most proud of? Iâm very happy with how Gangs of ÂLondon has turned out. Series creator Gareth Evans is a fantastic director of action but also very collaborative, so we worked together to design the sequences. It has been gratifying to see the positive response of audiences. The series is stylised, so action scenes are heavily choreographed, like a dance sequence. We actually had professional stunt performers playing some roles. What are the best and worst parts of the job? Stunt people are well paid and we get to see the world â itâs a privilege. It doesnât feel like a job â films and fight choreography are my hobby â and, if it all comes together, I love seeing the end result. Occasionally, you encounter the odd director or actor with an ego problem, or someone who doesnât value safety on set highly enough. Are stunts always safe? It would be arrogant to say you can
Has the job changed over time? We have a more safety-conscious culture now, which is a good thing. As a result, we take more time to assess risk and plan sequences. We are also making progress in being more inclusive. Is digital technology a threat to the stunt co-ordinator? I welcome advances in technology. We use it to paint out wires and crash mats, which makes stunts more realistic. Long ago, if a person was flying on a cable, the hope was that the cable was thin enough that it wouldnât be picked up on camera. But sometimes those cables broke.⌠Now, people hang on ropes that can hold enormous weight but, using visual effects, we remove them from the shot. Knowledge of visual effects is part of the stunt co-ordinatorâs arsenal. I donât see a time when we wonât be needed. What advice would you give to a would-be stunt co-ordinator? Get lots of years under your belt performing, and study action cinema and TV, old and new, from all over the world. You have to know more than how to throw a fake punch or land safely; you need to be a film-maker. n Stunt co-ordinator Jude Poyer was interviewed by Matthew Bell.
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Channel 4
COMFORT CLASSIC
Father Ted
F
ather Ted is one of TVâs greatest British sitcoms â up there with other giants of the genre such as Fawlty Towers, Gavin and Stacey and The Thick of It. It is plain loopy â daft, surreal, edgy in its debunking of the Church and blessed by four timeless characters. This quartet were delivered to the small screen fully realised in the first episode shown on Channel 4 in 1995: the utterly gormless Father Dougal McGuire; the debauched Father Jack Hackett; the obsequious housekeeper from hell (sort of), Mrs Doyle; and the eponymous Father Ted Crilly, vain and hapless. Ahead of its time, Father Ted is no cosy, suburban sitcom poking gentle fun at well-meaning vicars fond of a
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âFathers⌠finish your breakfast and come outside for your daily punishment.â Steve Clarke applauds a comic gem pre-dinner nip of sherry. Father Jack is a sex-obsessed, uber-sozzled priest, an alcoholic sometimes in the full grip of delirium tremens. He rarely says anything apart from: âDrink! Feck! Arse! Girls!â There is a lot of the anarchy of The Young Ones in Graham Linehan and Arthur Mathewsâ comic masterpiece. The showâs reckless attitude to the
Catholic Church would have been unthinkable in the wake of the child abuse scandals that have rocked the institution in recent years. Slapstick is often a vital ingredient in comedy. In Father Ted, made by comedy powerhouse Hat Trick, slapstick is given a surreal edge in, say, the episode (the writersâ favourite) in which Ted kicks the pompous and tyrannical Bishop Brennan in the arse. Or as the insanely clumsy Mrs Doyle again falls out of a window or lurches into a door, the contents of her tea trolley scattering across the cluttered and moth-eaten sitting room. The set itself is a joy, shabbier even than its occupants. All great sitcoms are based on characters that jump out of the screen. Father Crilly, scheming, always on the
make and yet ultimately kind-hearted, is brilliantly portrayed by Dermot Morgan, who was a celebrity in Ireland but largely unknown in the UK until Linehan and Mathews came knocking at his door. Crilly is another sitcom lovable rogue, but this time a wayward priest whose innocent love of money is set at odds with the teaching of the institution that employs him. He has been banished to Craggy Island, the showâs windswept, rain-sodden location, for âfinancial irregularitiesâ. Father Tedâs sidekick, Father Dougal, zestfully played by the Irish stand-up Ardal OâHanlon (spotted by the writers performing Shakespeare) is empty-Â headed in the extreme, a dunceâs dunce. As for Pauline McLynnâs matchless portrayal of Mrs Doyle, letâs just say itâs comic heaven when she appears in the sitting room brandishing yet another pile of sandwiches higher than a baptismal font. âGo on, go on, go on,â she urges, pressing the food on her unholy employers. With Father Ted, less was more. Sadly, the show ran for only three series, leaving audiences wanting more. Ever since, the 25 episodes have been on more or less permanent repeat, a staple of UK Gold and latterly shown by All 4 and BritBox. The seriesâ demise was caused by the untimely death of Morgan, perfectly cast as the eternally put-upon Father Ted. He died from a heart attack, aged 45, the day after recording the final episode of series 3. Twenty-five years later, his legacy as the Catholic priest with a dodgy past is secure. All this plus a cast of minor characters who, in a lesser show, would have received star billing. Thereâs boring priest Father Paul Stone, who canât stop talking, the alcoholic and self-Âregarding TV presenter Henry Sellers, and hyper Father Noel Furlong, played by a man who would go on to become one of TVâs biggest stars, Graham Norton. Even when coronavirus is beaten, Father Ted will still be making us all laugh. A tonic for tough times. n Father Ted is on Channel 4 and also available on All 4 and BritBox.
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
Now TV
Ear candy
Steve Schirripa (left) and Michael Imperioli
Talking Sopranos
T
he ground-breaking US crime drama The Sopranos, from HBO, is often ranked as one of the greatest television series of all time. During its six seasons, it won numerous accolades. Thirteen years after the dramatic finale, co-stars Michael Imperioli and Steve Schirripa have reunited for Talking Sopranos, a new re-watch podcast that takes fans through each episode from the very beginning. The pair recount behind-the-scenes stories, their favourite memories from filming and some surprising facts about the real mob lifestyle they portray on screen. The friends give fans an insight into their own lives and friendship. They discuss their experiences in the TV industry and the intriguing characters
theyâve met on their journeys to stardom. The pair reveal in-depth details of the characters they play in The Sopranos and share candid comments about what some of their fellow actors in the series were really like. The podcast also treats fans to an exclusive reading of a new lockdown Sopranos script, written by creator David Chase. Joining Imperioli and Schirripa are the showâs producers, writers, crew and special guests, including fellow cast members Michael Rispoli, Robert Iler, Jamie-Lynn Sigler and Edie Falco. Whether itâs for a nostalgic trip down memory lane or an introduction to an iconic series, this podcast is essential listening. For a real binge, watch The Sopranos on Now TV alongside the podcast. n Kate Holman
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BBC
Director Steve McQueen on the set of BBC Oneâs forthcoming 1970s drama Small Axe
Why black lives have to matter more Commitment at the top is vital if people from ethnic minorities are to achieve a breakthrough in the TV sector, insists Marcus Ryder
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nother day, another Black Lives Matter protest. Another day, another testimony by a black figure in the industry about all the direct and systemic racism they have faced working in the industry. Another day, another statement by a British broadcaster about how it is responding to the current crisis. When I was first approached by Television to write this piece, the brief was simple: go through recent events, assess the different policy initiatives the industry has announced and offer a prediction as to whether this would lead to lasting change. And so I started to do just that. On 8 June, Sky announced a ÂŁ30m
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racial injustice fund over the next three years. It will create a diversity action group and invest in programmes that highlight racial injustice. And it will redouble its efforts to increase black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) representation both on-screen and behind the camera. A day later, Channel 4 announced its commitment to be an âanti-racistâ organisation, setting out a six-point plan to âbe a driver of anti-racism in the industry and improve black and minority ethnic representationâ. The broadcaster reaffirmed previous diversity commitments as well as adding a few new ones, such as doubling âthe number of BAME-led independent producers that we commission from by 2023â and launching âa new
mentoring programme for our diverse staff in 2020â. Two weeks later, on 22 June, the BBC caused a minor earthquake, in the way only the BBC can, by announcing it would commit âÂŁ100m of its content spend on diverse productions and talentâ over the next three years. I have highlighted three of the bigger announcements of the past few weeks but they are far from isolated cases. Bafta is consulting on how it can address failings around race (my words not theirs). Netflix has a new âBlack Lives Matterâ category. And there are a host of additional initiatives and programming by other broadcasters and industry stakeholders. This has all happened against a background of almost daily examples of
black people working in the industry giving public accounts of their experiences. These include Oscar-winning director Steve McQueen calling out parts of the British film industry for âits blatant racismâ, accusations of racism on the set of Channel 4âs Hollyoaks and thousands of media professionals signing an open letter addressed to the UKâs major broadcasters calling for substantial changes to âreshape our industry into one whose words are supported by actionâ. It would be possible to go through each announcement made by every broadcaster and dissect whether it will really lead to substantial long-term change. Or go through each statement by a high-profile person of colour in the industry and ask, âwhat do they really meanâ and what will be the repercussions of the statements? But, for me, that is missing the far larger and more important picture. Taken collectively, what has come to the surface in recent weeks is the acknowledgement that, for black and brown people, the UK media industry is a toxic place to work. Privately, black and brown people have thought this for decades (for as long as I have worked in the industry) and the research bears this out. According to The Looking Glass report â commissioned by The Film and TV Charity and conducted by Lancaster University Management School â black African, Caribbean or black British men are almost 40% more likely to have been bullied in comparison to men overall working in the industry. The same report said: âBAME women are most likely to report that their ability to speak out about working practices or the working environment was negatively affecting their wellÂbeingâ. And, possibly most importantly of all, âthree-quarters of mid-career BAME women have contemplated a career change to protect their wellbeingâ. To their credit, the broadcasters seem to be implicitly and explicitly acknowledging the scale of the problem and have not defensively tried to counter the testimony of black and brown people working in the media. They are at least talking about Âpolicies that may address some of these issues. But the bigger question must be: how could an industry toxic for nonwhite people have been allowed to be
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
âFOR BLACK AND BROWN PEOPLE, THE UK MEDIA INDUSTRY IS A TOXIC PLACE TO WORKâ created and sustained for so long? And to answer that question we must look beyond the broadcastersâ individual statements and new policy initiatives and look at who regulates the industry. If there is a long-term, systemic problem across the entire sector we must ask ourselves what has the industry regulator, Ofcom, been doing over the past two decades or, in the case of the BBC, the BBC Trust and then Ofcom? When an entire industry seems to be suffering from an issue it is not good enough to simply ask whether Channel 4 will be successful in implementing its anti-racist policy. Or whether the BBC will be able to start doing a better job with its ÂŁ100m commitment. It is the very reason we have an industry regulator â to solve industry wide-issues and for it to put conditions within the broadcastersâ licences to rectify market failures. Interestingly, as far as I can tell, Ofcom is one of the few major industry stakeholders that has not commented on the racial issues that are currently raging through the very industry it regulates. The obvious question is: how did the industry regulator not spot this huge issue in the industry? Or, to the extent that it did, why did it fail to put sufficient conditions within licence agreements to make sure the issue was addressed to a satisfactory degree? The answer lies in the structure of Ofcom. The regulator has several
âHOW DID THE INDUSTRY REGULATOR NOT SPOT THIS HUGE ISSUE IN THE INDUSTRY?â
advisory boards and subcommittees to represent different groups, raise important issues and give Ofcom focus and direction. There is the Content Board, which represents the âinterest of the viewer, the listener and citizenâ. There is a Consumer Panel to âmaintain effective arrangements for consultation with consumersâ. And there are four advisory boards to represent âinterests and opinionsâ specific to people living in the four UK nations. The nationsâ boards are crucial to âprovide specific advice⌠on matters relating to television, radio and other content on services regulated by Ofcomâ in the respective nations they represent. Despite the UKâs BAME population accounting for 14% of the entire population and therefore being roughly the same size as all the nations outside of England combined (16%), there is no board dedicated to the interests of the countryâs ethnic minority communities. Recent events have surely proved that Ofcom has failed, since its inception in 2003, to give sufficient attention to the task of policing the industry when it comes to ethnic diversity. When four different chairs (and innumerable changes in personnel) over nearly two decades have failed at a specific task it is naive to attribute this to one personâs failings. We must look instead at structural solutions. The time has surely come for a new board to be established on the same level as the four nations, with the specific remit of looking at the issue of diversity in general and the BAME communities in particular. To use the Latin phrase Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? (Who guards the guards?): if we want the regulators to do a better job at making sure our industry is a better place for all of us to work, we need to look at the diversity of those advising, overseeing and even judging them. We have a unique opportunity to change the industry we all love. And that means we cannot just look at the broadcasters. We must look at the regulators who should have ensured we never reached this position. n Marcus Ryder is the Acting Chair of the Sir Lenny Henry Centre for Media Diversity and an executive producer at Chinese financial media group Caixin Global Media.
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FT/Daniel Jones
The BBCâs new Director-General, Tim Davie, needs to be bold, argues Roger Mosey
Tim Davie
S
An opportunity for change
ome BBC director-Â generals are a reaction to their predecessor. After the remorseless strategising of the John Birt years, Greg Dyke was chosen to bring the human touch to staff who felt unloved. When Dyke turned out to be a little too populist and freewheeling for some, the governors opted for a more cerebral traditionalist in the form of Mark Thompson. But, now, we appear to have a continuity candidate: Tim Davie is one of Tony Hallâs key lieutenants, supported by many senior colleagues and representing a known quantity, with 15 years of BBC board experience. The truth, though, is that he may have to be a revolutionary: the external and internal
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pressures on the BBC mean that âno changeâ is no longer an option. BBC executives are fond of Lord Hall, but many have been bothered by his avoidance of the tougher strategic decisions that they believe are overdue. âI think Tony himself accepts that it is time for something different,â murmurs one. These decisions cannot be avoided, because the financial outlook is bleak. It isnât known whether Hall plans to emulate the Labour politician Liam Byrne MP and leave a letter behind saying, âThere is no more moneyâ, but there is certainly no magic money tree outside New Broadcasting House. The financial worries include: the long-running issue of free licences for over-75s, which has been costing the BBC an extra ÂŁ40m a month during
the coronaÂvirus crisis; the worry that decriminalising non-payment could cost hundreds of millions; an absence of dividends from BBC Studios, as a further consequence of the pandemic; and undelivered savings from the last budget round after Hall withdrew controversial plans to cut BBC News. Further politically toxic savings need to be made in the nations and regions. âThey are royally screwed,â says one corporation finance expert. This would be a grim picture even without the likely long-term trends. The BBC has come into its own during the pandemic as an institution that can bring the nation together, and it has been buoyed by increased consumption levels even among younger audiences.
âTHE CONTINUITY CANDIDATE⌠MAY [BE FORCED] TO BE A REVOLUTIONARYâ But it seems improbable that those will endure. Consent for the licence fee will remain shaky if the media habits of the young resume their regular pattern. That, in turn, feeds the bloodlust of the Tory right, who see a way to diminish the corporation by extolling the virtues of drama and entertainment on YouTube, Netflix and the rest. One well-placed corporation figure notes that two reviews are looming â the 2022-23 licence fee negotiation and the Charter mid-point review â and that âtime is short to make a compelling case, and to get the BBC seen as a critical investmentâ. The national and international economic meltdown makes that task even tougher. And yet⌠the BBC still has a much bigger budget and a more guaranteed income stream than its UK commercial rivals. ITV or Channel 4 can only dream of ÂŁ5bn a year coming into their bank accounts. One critic says the financial crisis in the BBC is partly self-inflicted: âIt created an inherently unstable economic model in the digital era, cemented by the BBCâs inability to stop doing things while it continued to add more and more.â The question for Davie, then, is whether he can get the size and shape of the organisation right, and match that to its core funding, in a way that has eluded his predecessors. One former senior television executive outlines a possible approach. âBBC drama has stayed in the game despite being outspent tenfold by its competitors,â he says, citing shows from The Night Manager to Normal People, âbecause the quality of commissioning and production has stayed up to par. But what the BBC doesnât need is three or four terrestrial channels to spread its drama across.â Another figure with experience of running BBC budgets concurs: âIf ever âfewer, bigger, betterâ should apply, itâs now.â The corporate strategists will, of course, be reluctant to saw off limbs if
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
this undermines the commitment to universality. But that may be forced upon them, and it could even be an ultimatum that the corporation needs. Which parts of the BBCâs output should, in future, be funded by the state for the good of the state â and which might be discarded or be paid for directly by new financial models? A seasoned observer suggests: âTim getting on the front foot with this kind of initiative could change the weather.â Also at the top of the Davie in-tray will be the future of BBC News. He, himself, is not a journalist, but it is a curiosity of the Hall regime that the outgoing DG â a very effective director of news under John Birt â has not seemed sure-footed as editor-in-chief, from his unfathomable defence of the Cliff Richard coverage to persistent crises about impartiality. Trust ratings are still high, but being eroded; and one of Hallâs colleagues who is normally stout in the defence of the BBC describes the current position on employeesâ use of social media as being âlike the Wild Westâ, with an urgent need for management control. The particular problem for the BBC is that many of its staffâs Twitterings reveal the metropolitan, âRemainerâ, liberal bias that its critics have always suspected; and there is a battle ahead, too, to counter that perception about the mainstream output. It is fine for the BBC to be a liberal organisation internally, and it still needs to do more to increase the diversity of its staff. But it is not acceptable for the BBC on air to morph into a news organisation like
âPRESSURES ON THE BBC MEAN THAT âNO CHANGEâ IS NO LONGER AN OPTIONâ
MSNBC in the US, which is open about its left-of-centre position. Recent research by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at Oxford finds that there is still a public demand in the UK â 76% of those surveyed â for news to be âneutralâ. Davie should stick on his wall Matthew Syedâs recent piece in The Sunday Times, which argued that any corrosion of the BBCâs reputation for impartiality âis of unusually grave importance.⌠This could yet destroy the BBC itself, turning a great organisation into a facet of polarisation rather than a bulwark against it.â Related to that is the imperative to make devolution real, and to reflect the whole of the UK. The BBC has been good at moving staff into the nations and regions, but much less effective at giving them real power. Almost all the top decision-makers still sit in a small piece of real estate in W1A. It is time to give authority and budgets to the likes of Glasgow and Salford in a way that can allow them to overrule a London view, rather than the other way round. There are, of course, many more pages in Davieâs âto doâ list. Much of it about regulation and distribution and influencing legislation: the kind of stuff that is a hard slog but vital if public service broadcasting is to retain its prominence in a digital era. And he will have to cope with the usual storms that accompany any DG. One current executive notes that we should never underestimate how difficult the job can be and how much firefighting is involved. He cites the amount of management time spent on the equal-pay debacle. Davie will, therefore, need luck. But he also has the opportunity in his early days to set an agenda and seize control of events. He will, I hope, do that. Change is coming â like it or not. n Roger Mosey is a former head of BBC Television News and is now the Master of Selwyn College, Cambridge.
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Keep it safe, keep it simple
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nprecedented times demand creative thinking. An RTS webinar heard that shows as different as ITVâs Coronation Street, the BBCâs Top Gear and Channel 4âs Sunday Brunch have all learnt how to adapt their production routines to keep cast and crew safe in the age of Covid-19. The so-called pope of soap, John Whiston, managing director of continuing drama at ITV Studios, explained how Coronation Street and Emmerdale have streamlined their filming schedules. In the process, they have complied with Government-approved producersâ guidelines on social distancing and hygiene protocols. Four key phrases have been introduced: âKeep your distanceâ, âKeep in groupsâ, âKeep it simpleâ and âKeep awayâ. Film units are kept in their own studio spaces, avoiding shared areas. âThe only people who move around are the actors,â said Whiston. The number of people involved in filming is kept to a minimum. Camera
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The RTS takes a detailed look at the new working methods that have got programmes back into production assistants and other crew membersâ assistants are banned; cast members aged 70 or over and children (because they come with tutors and chaperones) are excluded from the soapsâ storylines. Location filming is out. If a court room is needed for a plot, the soapsâ carpenters can make one. As Corrie gears up for its 60th anniversary in December, expect fewer pyrotechnics than usual for an anniversary special. âNormally, we blow everything up,â said Whiston. âWe will be doing something, but it wonât be quite on the scale that audiences are used to.â Scripts (paper scripts are no longer allowed on set) have been simplified. Rather than the normal 21 scenes per episode, 16 or 17 is the new norm. âWe
can no longer have half the cast fighting at a wedding. Weâve been reduced to the essence of soaps â fantastic scripts and great performances,â stressed Whiston. As for sex, a steamy romp is left to the imagination. âA lot has to be done with smouldering eyes rather than touching,â said the executive. He hoped that Corrie would be back to its full six episodes per week by autumn. For Top Gear, a show famous for its spectacular stunts filmed in exotic climes, executive producer Clare Pizey told the RTS that Bolton was the new BogotĂĄ. Half of the footage â including sequences filmed overseas â for the next series of Top Gear was already in the can before lockdown. But filming had to resume in the UK. âItâs a huge change that we can no longer go abroad,â admitted Pizey. âBut, sometimes, when you forced into a constraint, it makes you think differently. One of the films weâre doing is a direct result of having to think more creatively.â Following a difficult patch, critics
agree that Top Gear, being promoted from BBC Two to BBC One for its 29th series, has got its mojo back, thanks to the chemistry between presenters Freddie Flintoff, Chris Harris and Paddy McGuinness. âWith Paddy, Freddie and Chris, we know what weâre aiming for and the performances weâre looking for. All we do is set up a playground and off they go,â said the executive producer. Money that would have been spent on travel has been diverted to enhancing production values. âWeâve done a film in Bolton that
would give Top Gear a sense of scale but, as with every other production, costs are spiralling,â she said. With luck, the new one metre-plus rule may help. For studio-bound series Sunday Brunch â three hours of live TV, transmitted 52 weeks a year â Susan King, head of Âproduction at the showâs producer, Remarkable, explained how they had kept going throughout lockdown. âWe did the show remotely for about eight weeks, while working on a plan to return to the studio as quickly as possible,â she said.
using public transport in London and other big cities. Weâre spending more money â we [consider using] private transport to travel to productions â to ensure people are comfortable.â Pact CEO John McVay said that, on average, extra costs, including medical checks and longer production schedules, have added between 10% and 30% to budgets. He said: âIndies, where margins were already slim, [when] trying to soak up those additional costs [face] a bit of a challenge. That may change with new health and safety guidance,
Pre-lockdown, Sunday Brunch depended on having guests remain in the studio throughout the broadcast. That was no longer possible. The number of guests and the size of the crew have been scaled back, but presenters Tim Lovejoy and Simon Rimmer have returned to the studio, albeit with only one guest present at a time. Video calls have become commonplace and have given Sunday Brunch access to guests who would have been unlikely to agree to appear on the show in person. Whiston said that one of the biggest barriers to resuming production was overcoming his staffâs fear of contracting the virus. King agreed that this had been a problem: âA lot of people are desperate to get back to work â it is important for everyoneâs wellbeing â but, interestingly, some people are still very nervous. âPeople are happy once they get to the office. They know the office is going to be very well set up, with all sorts of measures and protocols in place. But they are nervous about
but that is what the initial analysis is looking like.â For many freelancers working in TV, the crisis has been a severe setback. However, there was some hope from King. She said that, so far, Remarkable had no plans to employ fewer freelan cers in future: âWeâll be working really hard to ensure weâre able to employ people as much as we were before [the lockdown] at level market rates.â Pizey added: âAs long as weâre making Top Gear, weâll be using freelancers. One difficulty is that some of our directors make car ads. The bottom has fallen out of that market. âItâs really tough. We can supply work, but thereâs not the same amount of work out there.â n
I would argue is one of the funniest films weâve ever made,â said Pizey. For one item, to ensure social distancing and avoid having two people sat in a car, one person was strapped to the top of the vehicle. Even before the health crisis, health and safety were, according to Pizey, âon speed dialâ, since men driving fast cars is inherently dangerous. Coping with the threat of coronavirus, therefore, does not require huge changes to filming. âTheyâre quite often two metres apart in normal times,â she noted. But the logistics of accommodating and feeding 35 people on location is more challenging: âAt the moment, weâre in a hotel in York â but if key workers need the beds, we have to get out.â Travel, too, is something of a headache, with spaces in minibuses being left empty and cars accommodating only one person. The studio part of the show is, inevitably, more problematic than filming outside. Pizey conceded that having 700 people indoors was impossible. âWeâve got a couple of ideas that
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Top Gear
Report by Steve Clarke. The RTS webinar âBack in production â unlocking the TV production industry in a Covid-19 worldâ was held on 17 June. It was chaired by Broadcast deputy editor Alex Farber. The producers were Tessa Matchett, head of press, ITV Studios, and Sarah Booth, director of communications, Endemol Shine UK.
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No compromise on impartiality BBC news chief Fran Unsworth explains why the broadcaster needs to hold those in power to account â without editorialising
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Fran Unsworth criticism of Newsnight in late May, which she said, failed BBC guidelines in its presentation of Government advisor Dominic Cummingsâ controversial trip to Durham. On 26 May, Emily Maitlis introduced the programme with the words, âDominic Cummings broke the rules. The country can see that and it is shocked that the Government cannot.â Unsworth said the very next day that this script âdid not meet our standards of due impartialityâ. âEmilyâs comment was rooted in evidence but the problem was the language in which it was put â it belonged more to the op-ed of a newspaper page than to the introduction of a BBC broadcast programme,â maintained the head of news. She expanded on why she immediately criticised the approach without waiting for an official internal inquiry. âI didnât need to wait for some complaints
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ran Unsworth used her recent conversation with the RTS to support incoming Director-Â General Tim Davieâs statement of 5 June, when he stressed the need for impartiality across the organisation, regardless of whatever battles between the BBC and government might be going on behind the scenes. âThe more valuable we are to audiences, the greater our standing is going to be with the Government,â the BBCâs director of news and current affairs said firmly. This came as the news chief continued to perform a high-wire act, providing a platform for the Governmentâs crucial health messaging while simultaneously holding it to account. Interviewed by former ITN CEO and editor-in-chief Stewart Purvis, she defended her journalistsâ challenging of ministers in the daily coronavirus briefings (which ended in late June), even if viewers did not always support this approach. âWhen this first happened, there was a sense in the UK of, âWeâre all in this together, everybodyâs got to pull togetherâ,â she said. âThe political response became contested over the past 10 weeks, and itâs the job of journalists to ask questions and highlight that, even if the public donât like it.â This situation followed a period in which ministers had boycotted other BBC news programmes. Unsworth said she was pleased to see them back on Radio 4âs Today, The World at One and PM, at least for now. âThis is an opportunity to speak to 8 million listeners a week. I wish they would put themselves up more widely.â Still citing impartiality, she didnât hesitate to double down on her
process to take its course,â she explained. âOur guidelines had been crossed in terms of attributing motivation to the public, to the Prime Minister.â Unsworth stressed that nobody on the Newsnight team was disciplined â âWe had a robust discussionâ â and emphasised that the programme had had a âbrilliant run during this pandemic. They got to the care homes first. We did some great stuff on an Italian hospital. That is the totality of what Newsnight is all about.â Inevitably, her judgement faced criticism from both sides, leading to accusations that she was bowing to Government pressure. âThere was no question of us being cowed by the Government over this,â she insisted. But was it further proof that BBC presenters could no longer be relied upon to be impartial? âI think it just shows how difficult my job is,â she said with a wry smile. Another challenge is the corporationâs use of social media, now used by so many people as their main source of news. Unsworth cited a recent Africa Eye story, Anatomy of a Killing, that reached an online audience of millions across the world. âSocial media is a force for good,â she said. âItâs a way of getting information out to particular sections of the audience who now make it their main source of information, but it has its limitations. It lacks context. A limited number of characters makes it quite difficult to fulfil BBC editorial values.â A running controversy is to what extent BBC News presenters and journalists can comment freely on social media, while adhering to editorial guidelines in their day jobs. The issue is so contentious that former BBC News chief Richard Sambrook has
South West News Service
Black Lives Matter demonstration in Bristol been commissioned by the corporation to conduct a review. Given the example of BBC world affairs editor John Simpson, who runs his own YouTube channel, in which he is far more opinionated than BBC impartiality guidelines would allow, Unsworth agreed that it was complicated, particularly as Simpson and others were freelance employees. âWhat licence they have to express their views elsewhere is something weâve got to look at,â she said. The coverage of the Black Lives Matter protests was another balancing act for Unsworth, as she strove to navigate a path between the clear moral cause sustaining the movement and covering the protests in all their complexity. âYou can say, âI believe black lives matterâ â itâs a statement of fact â but does the BBC sign up to #BlackLivesMatter? The BBC didnât endorse Black Lives Matter because itâs a campaign. It can endorse the sentiments behind it.â She was speaking four days after protests in Bristol culminated in the toppling of the statue of Edward Colston, slave trader and city philanthropist. She called the coverage of the protests a complex area for her staff. âThe BBCâs not impartial about racism,
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
and that [the killing of George Floyd] was very bad, but there are areas where it goes into matters of public policy, which we have to treat impartially â what shall we do with statues? What shall we do with the education system?â Telling the story of the pandemic has provided unique challenges, such as when medical correspondent Fergus Walsh filmed inside intensive care units at Londonâs University College Hospital. âIt was clearly a really important part of the story, how hospitals were coping,â said Unsworth. âThere are so many things you have to think about â the safety of your people, the perception issues, because Fergus had to go in full PPE, at a time when it was in short supply. A lot of viewers were saying weâd used up some PPE there, which, actually, we donated. Itâs important to show audiences what is happening.â How BBC News has responded to the pandemic will clearly have implications for the departmentâs future. But Unsworth confirmed that cuts first announced in January â some 450 jobs to save ÂŁ80m by 2022 â would go ahead. With 90% of BBC staff working from home, she predicted that high numbers of staff may prefer to remain in their
home offices once New Broadcasting House is back to normal. Meanwhile, on screen, audiences have become used to seeing guests contribute via Zoom. âWhat this has shown is that the audience is more tolerant of things [that are] not of high broadcast quality. Thatâs a lesson we can apply going forward.â Lockdown has brought audiences back to the delights of linear-television news bulletins and 16- to 35-year-olds have been tuning in. âWe thought they were a lost audience for linear-TV news bulletins, but they havenât been. But to be honest, there is a question mark over the longevity of that.â Does this give pause to her focus on a digital strategy? Unsworth hesitated to use the behaviour of the captive audience of the past few months as a long-term guide. She said: âItâs difficult to make a judgement at this stage. It doesnât make you reverse your strategy, it makes you take stock and consider.â n Report by Caroline Frost. Fran Unsworth, director of news and current affairs at the BBC, was in conversation with Stewart Purvis for an RTS webinar held on 11 June. The producers were Sue Robertson and Martin Stott.
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Dr Charlie Easmon casts a sceptical eye at the TV pundits proffering their expertise during the pandemic
The trouble with experts
Getty Images/Roger Kisby
y idea of heaven is Monty Pythonâs Whickerâs World spoof, Whicker Island, where our hero wistfully waters whisky while wantonly waxing words with W. For me, hell would be a post-lockdown lock-in in a dodgy pub full of TV pundits. Brexit and football have taught me not only to distrust these people, but to despise them as they fling unsubstantiated opinions around like the proverbial brown stuff hitting the fan. It is messy, unpleasant and the odour stays with you for ages. Football managers are famous for having opinions on everything, but it took a steely German, responsible for guiding Liverpool to their crushing Premier League championship win, to bring some sense to the coronavirus pandemic. The wise words of JĂźrgen Klopp should be on permanent loop in every town centre, as he told a journalist that his opinion did not matter and they should instead go and ask the experts. However, history has shown us that everyone, from Mao Zedong to Michael Gove, can hate experts. Mao was a tad harsher than Gove and killed quite a few experts. Latterly, Gove has had to recant as he claimed the Government had been âfollowing the scienceâ. In the eyes of many, that phrase has become to be synonymous with following the lead lemming off a cliff as tens of thousands of our fellow citizens and loved ones have died. But who are the experts in this pandemic and how do they differ from pundits? Who gets wheeled out when, and whose voices get heard and whose get silenced? Listening back to specialists in virology, infection, epidemiology and public health, these experts tend to fare well if they stick to what they know, but, like everyone else, start to look a tad less credible when asked to speculate. Doctors David Lipkin, Anthony Fauci and Peter Piot are all still much quoted on TV networks. When they do appear on TV, experts are often shunted aside by a popular creature of modern fiction that the 19-year-old Mary Shelley would have recognised. The modern Frankensteinâs monster is the popular TV doctor who is made up of the following parts: a conventional level of attractiveness; well-groomed hair, if they
US medical commentator Dr Mehmet Ăz has said he âmisspokeâ after suggesting on Fox News that it might be âworth the trade-offâ to reopen schools despite potentially increasing the coronavirus death toll
have any; reassuring smile; and, finally, the ability as a generalist to comment on specialist subjects knowledgeably after hurriedly jotting down a few notes before going on air. The US has Dr Phil and Dr Ăz (judged to be as âreliable as the Wizard of Ozâ by one commentator). One with no hair and the other with a legendary barnet. Both have come credibility croppers as the pandemic has rolled on. The great saying that, âYou can fool some of the people some of the time, but you canât fool all of the people all of the timeâ, is superbly reflected in the comments sections in YouTube. If you need a laugh in these troubled times, the sharp wit of some of these spears the interlocutorsâ arrogance and some of it is, of course, plain old-fashioned mean. Mad magazine has a gap-toothed cover star called Alfred E Neuman. Alfredâs satirical byline is: âWhat, me worry?â. But I have found it sad to see supposedly serious TV personality medics take this same approach, and often delivered in a patronising manner. Many lessons can be learned from watching the World Health Organizationâs first press conference on ÂCovid-19. For such a large institution, it is strange that those involved appeared to have received such poor media training. Dr Tedros Adhanom, the WHOâs Director-General, comes across as amiable but obsessed with trying to raise cash. He is the parish priest less interested in saving your damned soul than in saving the damned church roof. Many experts disagreed with WHO consultant and former Imperial College academic Dr Maria Van Kerkhoveâs 8 June comment that âit still seems to be rare that an asymptomatic person transmits onward to a secondary individualâ. This was jumped on by doctors and those parts of the media that disliked the idea of social distancing. âThat has not aged wellâ is my favourite comment under a fourmonth-old YouTube clip from early February when there had been only 300 deaths worldwide. The video has not one but three medical experts talking on Al Jazeeraâs Inside Story about the early stages of the pandemic. I suspect all three now wish it could be erased for ever. You can watch it here: bit.ly/AJinside. The culprits are in the public domain and so can be named. Dr Mark Parrish, who works for International SOS,
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Dr Charlie Easmon
âTHERE HAS BEEN AN OVEREMPHASIS ON âCALM DOWN, DEARâ SCIENCE VS COMMON SENSEâ
praises Chinaâs response to the crisis (âitâs been contained and managed very wellâ) and rebuts each sensible question posed by the journalist (one commentator says that Parrish treats every question âlike a hostile witnessâ). Professor Sanjaya Senanayake, an infectious diseases specialist based in Canberra, Australia, plays down the threat of coronavirus, while Dr Nicholas Thomas (in Hong Kong) aligns with groupthink, claiming: âThere is not a lot to be worried about.â Astute comments from the public on YouTube include the telling view that the âcomments section is giving better information than the actual videoâ. Others observed: âI must be living in a parallel universe to these experts!â; âI came here to get an update â these people obviously donât have a clueâ; and âThey donât build four hospitals in four days for fluâ. TV medics get wheeled in, dropped in, dumped and ultimately yanked off the media stage. Experts get as much right as they get wrong but, regrettably, few public-health or social-sciences experts are given decent airtime. The smarter members of the public can work things out for themselves. Looking back on the past three months, there has been an overemphasis on âcalm down, dearâ science vs common sense. The public use of masks and face coverings is a good example. Of course, there was scant definitive scientific research on the use of these because no one had thought it important enough to conduct the studies. That, however, doesnât stop any sensible person working out that the fewer droplets you spread in the environment, the better the outcome for all concerned. Experts and media-friendly doctors can give you some idea, but it is always best to get a range of views. From that, you can then try to work out what makes sense in any disease situation. No matter how adorable they seem on TV, no one person is infallible, not even me. n Dr Charlie Easmon MBBS MRCP MSc Public Health DTM&H DOccMed is: medical director of Your Excellent Health Service; president of the International Association of Physicians for the Overseas Services (www.iapos.co.uk); co-founder of YEHS We Care; and co-founder of Global Health Action, Strategies & Solutions (www.ghass.co.uk).
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The joy of difference
Max Vento plays Joe in The A Word
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An RTS event unlocks the secrets that made BBC One drama The A Word such a success
ver three series, The A Word has been widely praised for its honest portrayal of autism and the tensions this unleashes on a family. But The A Word is also laugh-out-loud funny and joyful â and, given its Lake District setting, beautiful to look at. The BBC One drama, which finished its third series in early June, tells the story of Joe, a young boy with autism, and his fractious, larger-than life extended family. At an online event hosted by RTS North West, BBC North and MediaCity UK, BBC Breakfastâs Naga Munchetty spoke to its writer, Peter Bowker, and two of its stars, Christopher Eccleston and Pooky Quesnel. Stockport-born Bowker taught children with severe learning disabilities, many of whom had autism, for 12 years before his writing career took off. He was spurred into action by the Israeli series Yellow Peppers, which provides the template for The A Word â âa dysfunctional family with, at its centre, a young boy whoâs on the autism spectrum. âIt felt like I was being giving permission to write about my own material and understanding of it. As the series has gone on, itâs moved further and further away from the original.â Max Vento, who is not autistic, plays the dramaâs central character, Joe. âWe decided that it was too much to ask of a child of five on the autism spectrum to play another child on the spectrum. When weâve cast older characters with autism, weâve always insisted the actor is someone on the spectrum. âMax was pretty much everyoneâs first choice from the moment we saw him. I remember seeing Max and saying that he looks like a chubby Ian Curtis [from Joy Division]. For me, that fulfilled the criteria, given that his musical tastes are, bizarrely, the taste of a 61-year-old man from Manchester.â Music is a prominent feature of the programme, with Joe playing post-punk classics through the headphones almost permanently clamped to his head. âIâve been Stalinist about this: itâs entirely my iTunes [collection]. Max hates my musical taste,â said Bowker. Quesnel â who, like Eccleston, was born and brought up in the Salford area â plays Louise, the mother of Ralph, who has Downâs syndrome, as does the actor who plays him, Leon
Harrop. âHer whole life has narrowed down to championing Ralph,â she said. âShe is a tiger mum.â Fiercely protective, when she feels Ralph is threatened she turns on people, even her boyfriend, Maurice. Eccleston plays Maurice, Joeâs grandad, who, when the series starts, has entirely unreconstructed views about disability and a vocabulary that is decades out of date. It is a fantastic role that the Our Friends in the North actor and former Doctor Who makes the most of it. âThereâs nothing more glorious in a PC world to play somebody non-PC,â he says. Now, the actor says he is âa fully paid-up memberâ of the âPC brigadeâ, adding: âI used negative terms for people with learning difficulties as a child and as a young person. Coming to London, going to drama school, changed me.â âItâs the stuff of drama: whenever we present a character who is fully rounded, we all switch off. The [best] characters in drama are the ones that make mistakes.â âYou have a responsibility,â said Bowker, âto be authentic without celebrating that [pejorative] language [about disability] and making it respectable again. I donât like dramas that rub your nose in it, that say, âLook how daring I am as a writer.ââ
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Series 3 ends with the marriage of Ralph and Katie ( played by Leon Harrop and Sarah Gordy) Writers, Bowker added, who make a subject âso repellent and difficultâ donât engage the audience. Rather, they âinvite [viewers] to celebrate the ego of the writer whoâs brave enough to use these termsâ. TV viewers embrace the realism of Bowkerâs writing, even if Maurice can make them feel uncomfortable. âPeople always say, âThank God, youâve not soapboxed or been po-faced about it.â Maurice is the key to that,â said Eccleston. The actor is familiar with both Bowker and the theme of autism. They worked together on the 2002 BBC Two drama Flesh and Blood, which won each of them RTS awards, for Writer and Actor. Eccleston plays a man, adopted at birth, who finds out that his birth parents have learning disabilities. In March, the duo discussed Flesh and Blood at another RTS North West event (see Television, April 2020). Bowker has also bagged RTS Writer awards for Occupation and Eric & Ernie. To get inside the character of Maurice for The A Word, Eccleston drew on his own fatherâs life. âThereâs something about him thatâs desperate to connect to his family and to life. I got that from my father, who had a rudimentary education to the age of 14, when he was kicked out into the world. âItâs based very much on my dadâs beautiful, beautiful heart but lack of
confidence with medical terminology. But my dad had the nobility to see a human being for what they were and⌠try to connect. âMy dad, my brothers, a lot of the men I grew up with, felt trapped in the machismo, but, when really needed, the feminine and the tenderness could come out.â Quesnel added: âWe can all see so many different aspects of our true selves, across many of the characters, male or female. Pete gets to the authenticity of how people think and feel.â In series 3, Harrop â who has also appeared in north-west-set dramas Moving On and Brassic â takes centre stage, as Ralphâs romance with Katie blossoms. She is played by Sarah Gordy, who also has Downâs syndrome. Eccleston explained how working with Harrop had forced him to reassess his craft: âYou have to up your game. The thing weâve all done for 20, 30 years is reinvigorated by Leonâs presence and working methods. âHe taught me to relax, he taught me to have more fun. Leon unabashedly loves acting and performing. He has insecurities and heâll have a chat with his dad about whether heâs done it right or wrong but, basically, heâs free of a lot of the neurosis that I carry about the impact of my performance.â âHeâs completely unselfconscious,â said Quesnel. âHeâs such a spontaneous and very, very funny person. Heâs got this incredible sense of comic timing.â âHeâs got all the technique but [also] the joy on top of it,â added Eccleston. Series 3 ends with the jubilant marriage of Ralph and Katie. Will there be more? âTowards the end of each series Iâve thought I was written out, I didnât know where we could go,â said Bowker. âBut then something grows in these characters and I can think of other journeys to take them on. âNever say never again. I wanted something that would be satisfactory [to end on] if this was the last time we did it, but the doorâs open from my point of view.â n Report by Matthew Bell. âSpotlight on⌠BBC Oneâs The A Word: The secrets of its successâ was held on 8 June, produced by Rachel Pinkney and supported by the University of Salfordâs media production team. All three series of The A Word are available on BBC iPlayer.
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The real cost of lockdown
he coronavirus outbreak has left much of the television workforce idle, with most TV production suspended since March. Freelancers, who account for 100,000 of the total TV and film workforce of 180,000, have been dealt the rawest of deals. They have been hit hardest by the lockdown â 93% are out of work, according to The Film and TV Charity. Worse, according to the charityâs CEO, Alex Pumfrey: âThree-quarters of freelancers working within the television sector have been unable to access the Governmentâs employment and self-employment support schemes.â Financial woes have exacerbated the mental-health problems that were already known to affect so many TV workers before the pandemic. Mental
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Televisionâs freelance workforce is suffering mentally and financially from the impact of the pandemic ill health is widespread. The Film and TV Charity says almost nine in every 10 people in the industry have experienced problems, compared with 65% in the UK population as a whole. Covid-19 has made a bad situation worse. âResearch done across the UK has shown a huge spike in anxiety and depression around 24 March,â revealed Pumfrey. She was one of the panellists at an online event, hosted by the RTS and The Film and TV Charity in June, which asked whether the industry has
been doing enough to keep its people safe and well. The prospects for young people trying to break into television appear particularly bleak, certainly in the short term. RTS bursary student Charlie McMorine, who had finished university and was awaiting his results, said the Covid-19 crisis had been extremely stressful: âFor us, as graduates, we donât know when we will be able to make our break into the industry. We donât know how to move forward.â The Film and TV Charity unveiled some sobering research at the event. The most common words used by freelancers to describe their treatment by the industry, said Pumfrey, were âdisposableâ and âexpendableâ. Bullying, she noted, was still âincredibly prevalentâ. Partly, this reflected the
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
thatâs diverse and representative, and young, exciting, vibrant and creative.â Charlie McMorine agreed, adding that meeting industry execs in person could be âdauntingâ for university students. âSessions like this are really helping build connections for people like myself,â he said. Discussing the return to making TV, Opie said that while, in the short term, âthere might be fewer people involvedâ, in the longer-term, âthe production sector will continue to be vibrantâ. BBC Studios, she said, had âpausedâ 82 productions in March, but had
from fast-turnaround shows to big reality shows. âThe protocols we are using for the shows that go into production or restart production this year will be robust enough to continue whatever happens with the virus, so we donât end up having to stop everything again.â Bectuâs Childs called for âa new deal for freelancersâ. She emphasised: âWe donât just want to return to things as they were before the crisis.â RTS bursary student McMorine said he and his fellow graduates needed âmore knowledge about what happens
 ontinued working on 28. âHold the c faith: we will return to production â not as fast as Iâd like, but we will.â Coronavirus hit Channel 4 harder than other broadcasters. TV advertising, which sustains the channel, collapsed when the UK went into lockdown in late March. âWe lost hundreds of hours of content overnight and have taken a ÂŁ150m cut to our content budget, along with huge cuts across the rest of the channel. Weâve also had to draw down on ÂŁ75m of borrowing,â said Webb-Lamb. âWeâve faced a pretty stark year. âThe very best thing we can do for freelancers and the industry is to continue to commission. Despite the Âchallenges we are facing, we have ring-fenced money to continue to commission this year.â Programme tariffs were lower, she admitted, but âwe still have the same number of hours on telly. We are working out how to fill our schedule with a significantly lower budget this year. âWe need to get back to work. And we need to work out how we can make a full range of shows, starting as soon as possible, to ensure we can get people back to work across the industry, from scripted to unscripted,
next. A lot of people coming out of university are terrified at the thought of freelancing. Now, they have been put off it completely because of Covid and having seen whatâs happened to freelancers in the industry during this time.â He wanted âmore information, more conversation with industry expertsâ. The Film and TV Charityâs Pumfrey said that, as well as the obvious health benefits, there was also a business case for looking after peopleâs mental health. âThis isnât a cost,â she insisted, highlighting research from Deloitte earlier this year, which found that âthere is a ÂŁ5 return for every ÂŁ1 you invest in mental healthâ. â[TV] budgets will be constrained, but that cannot be at the expense of the welfare of our people. In fact, that should be at the top of the list.â n
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culture of an industry that valued âtoughnessâ and praised people for âearning their stripesâ. She added: âThis idea that you should tough it out when you are being badly treated is very commonplace.â Worst of all, Pumfrey claimed that âmore than half of people working in the industry have considered taking their own lifeâ. Philippa Childs, head of broadcasting union Bectu, said the charityâs research was âshockingâ, but added: âI canât say Iâm surprised by these findings. âWe know that there were real problems prior to Covid-19 and we all know that those problems are only going to be exacerbated in the current situation. âFrom our research, lots of people have had to rely on loans and borrowing from family; theyâve lost their homes⌠because they simply havenât had the financial support. âThere is a great deal of anger out there [among] the freelance workforce.â Lisa Opie, MD of UK production at BBC Studios, found grounds for optimism, however, as the industry prepared to resume full production. âWhat Iâve been really encouraged by is that Iâve seen more collaboration and joined-up thinking across our industry than ever before⌠on how to return to work safely,â she said. âWe are in an industry that is built on insecurity, with freelancers working from project to project,â admitted Kelly Webb-Lamb, deputy director of programmes at Channel 4. âThat, in itself, is a very difficult way to work and has always meant that certain people are better able to access the industry than others.â Like Opie, though, Webb-Lamb saw a brighter future. The coronavirus crisis, she said, had highlighted structural problems within the industry and was bringing it âtogether to tackle [them]â. The âinformality of the industryâ she said, held some people back because advancement was âso much based on who you know. That informality has gone as a result of this virus, because we are all talking to each either like this [via Zoom], and you canât go for lunch or drinks. âWe can use the [crisis] as a catalyst for change. âWe have to question whether expecting young people to sidle up to powerful people at drinks events is the right way to help them get into the industry. I donât think thatâs the way that weâre going to get an industry
Report by Matthew Bell. âAre you staying safe and well? Mental wellbeing in the TV industry during Covid-19 and beyondâ was hosted by the RTS and The Film and TV Charity on 9 June. Paul Robinson, director of the consultancy Creative Media Partners, chaired the online event, which was produced by Terry Marsh and Jonathan Simon.
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Channel 4
Phil Spencer and Kirstie Allsopp in Location, Location, Location
Why we love property shows
P
roperty shows have long been an essential part of many broadcastersâ schedules. Theyâre ubiquitous in both daytime and peak time and have made celebrities of presenters such as the seriously posh Kirstie Allsopp and her charming Location, Location, Location co-host, Phil Spencer. But what is the secret of their success and how do they endure while other factual fare is more ephemeral? Is it our guilty pleasure in seeing beyond other peopleâs front doors, the relationÂship between the programme presenters, our obsession with property prices â or something loftier, such as an interest in the rich variety of British architecture? According to an RTS webinar, itâs probably a mix of all these factors plus something less tangible to do with escapism.
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Series that hook into viewersâ obsession with their homes are here to stay, says an expert RTS panel Allsopp, who first co-hosted Location, Location, Location back in 2000, pinpointed the âhuman storiesâ that exist at the centre of her show, which aims to find dream homes for house hunters with the minimum of heartache. âWe invest so much in where we live and how we live. We use our homes to say something about ourselves. Weâre fascinated by peopleâs stories. Thereâs an intrinsic nosiness that we all have.â So what about the R factor? Thatâs R for her relationship with Phil Spencer â described as âone of the great TV relationshipsâ by her fellow panellist
Nick Knowles, the presenter, producer and writer whose credits include BBC Oneâs DIY SOS. What did she think? âSomeone once said about Phil and I that weâre very different personalities but very similar characters. I am genuinely fond of Phil. We are a unit.⌠But I do find it strange that people think itâs all about our relationship. Iâve acknowledged thatâs true, but I think itâs important that Phil and I donât think itâs about us. âIf we became too obsessed with that, it would wreck everything. It has to be about your relationship with those people who youâre helping to find a home.â Extraordinarily, Location, Location, Location is 34 series old and has undergone at least one big revamp. DIY SOS has knocked up 30 series. Strictly speaking, itâs a different kind of show to Location, Location, Location. As Knowles suggested, the roots of DIY SOS lie in a more innocent, less
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
Nick Knowles in DIY SOS r elationship with their homes and neighbourhoods: âTheyâve discovered attractions on their doorstep that they werenât previously interested in.â Knowles agreed that people were rethinking these things. In the past 20 years, UK homes had been seen too much as investments and not enough as places where people wanted to live, he suggested. âMy quality of life is about the place I live in now,â he said. âBecause of the lockdown, people are thinking more like this than, âWhat is my house worth if I sell it?ââ Property as a commodity was likely to become less important as homeowners became more connected to their homes and local communities. âPeople are going to try and improve the space in which they live for the purpose of living in it, rather than for profit,â added Knowles. âThat hangover from the property boom of the 1990s is something weâre moving on from,â agreed Damion Burrows, architect and presenter, whose property show credits include Grand Designs: House of the Year and Your Home Made Perfect. In the new normal, people would need to think hard about having workspaces at home and dedicated areas for kids. Burrows said: âHow can I do more with what Iâve got, with small additions and cleverly reworking the space so that I can enjoy being here more? People are seeing their house in a different light â theyâre seeing it [every] afternoon.â Allsopp made the point that people were realising that they had been
BBC
consumerist age â that of TVâs first Mr Makeover, Barry Bucknell, the BBCâs DIY guru of the 1950s, when make do and mend was for many people a way of life rather than a leisure pursuit. âItâs part of the human condition that you want to make the space you live in a nicer place to be,â said Knowles. âFor the past 20 years or so, weâve become obsessed with increasing the value of our homes. Our homes have become a commodity. From early cave paintings onwards, people were painting things on their walls to make them a little bit more homely and interesting. âA show like DIY SOS evolves over time. At the end of each series, the producer and I sit down and think about where itâs going to go next â unlike, say, Changing Rooms, which never really changed.â Kitty Walshe, Co-Managing Director of Remarkable, the production company responsible for such shows as Your Home Made Perfect, The House That ÂŁ100k Built and Restoration Home, opined that, for a property show to last, it needed to be âusefulâ and, of course, entertaining. âEven with DIY SOS, thereâs a lot of take-out in that show. You learn about what you may be able to do in your own home,â she said. Over the years, Channel 4 has become synonymous with shows based on property. Four years ago, it was reckoned that the network broadcast no fewer than 12 programmes built on the P word. âOften, these shows are more about people than property,â acknowledged Deborah Dunnett, commissioning editor for popular factual at Channel 4. âThatâs what keeps them fresh and why every episode doesnât feel derivative.â What impact would the pandemic have on this much-loved TV staple? As the UK experienced an economic downturn of unprecedented swiftness, would property shows feel the pinch? There was consensus that audiences were likely to see more shows encouraging homeowners to improve what they had than programmes helping them to find new homes. âPerhaps itâs less about how to make money from your property than actually to find a home you want to live in for the long term,â said Walshe. âThat is the zeitgeist. âI spend all this money on stamp duty, removal costs. You know what, I could just refigure what Iâve got, rather than move.ââ Allsopp said that, during lockdown, many people had changed their
expanding their properties and filling them with stuff they didnât need and that failed to make them happy. Knowles told the RTS how he had downsized to a small country cottage from a large Georgian house and, as a result, become more content. âYou donât always have to get bigger to be happier,â he said. Would peopleâs changing attitudes towards their homes and local areas affect the kind of property shows that Channel 4 commissioned, asked the webinarâs host, Boyd Hilton, entertainment director of Heat magazine. Dunnett said she thought it would. âDuring lockdown, a lot of our best programmes have said: âWe know how youâre feeling at home right now. Let us be useful or transport you somewhere else.â You really get that connection to your audience that you didnât have before.â Allsopp said she was desperate to get back to work, enabling would-be purchasers to find their perfect home. But she conceded that the coronavirus had changed everything: âDo they want now what they wanted before? Have they lost their job, have they changed their job?⌠âIâm champing at the bit to get out there in this new market and to get on with our job, which is helping people.â n Report by Steve Clarke. The RTS webinar âWhy we love⌠property showsâ was held on 2 June. The producer was Sarah Booth, director of communications at Endemol Shine UK.
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Channel 4
Lockdown winners
Celebrity Gogglebox
G
ifted a captive audience, television has seen its ratings soar during the coronavirus crisis. âPeople are spending much longer in front of TV sets,â Justin Sampson, CEO of ratings body Barb, told an RTS Zoom event in June. During the first nine weeks of the lockdown, people spent an average of five hours seven minutes in front of the box, a third more than during the same period in 2019. Audiences are at âthe kind of levels youâd normally see at Christmasâ, added Sampson, who was one of a four-strong panel discussing TV viewing during the lockdown. It is unsurprising that â confined to their homes â audiences have turned to TV for both news about the coronavirus crisis and respite from it. But, delve a little deeper into the stats, and far more interesting changes in viewing habits emerge. Traditional TV is doing well â and perhaps better than many expected. A snap poll of the RTS webinar audience revealed that almost two-thirds thought that the most surprising viewing story to come out of lockdown was the rediscovery of linear TV. Yet, viewing of Barb-reported channels, which includes the public service
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Viewing of linear channels has surged in recent months, but the biggest victors are on-demand services such as Netflix broadcasters but not âunidentified viewingâ â the likes of Netflix and other SVoDs, gaming, YouTube and overseas satellite channels â has risen by only 18%. Unidentified viewing, however, has increased to almost 30% of all TV set usage during the lockdown. âThis is a significant step change in what was an increasing trend anyway,â said Sampson. Among younger viewers, unidentified viewing accounts for more than half of all their TV watching during lockdown. Sampson said the rise in unidentified viewing had been âmore significant than I would have estimated. From the data weâre starting to see, we think the SVoD services are instrumental in that.â Given both the severity and novelty of a global pandemic, it is scarcely surprising that viewers have been glued to the news. âThereâs an enormous amount of viewing of news programmes among
older people,â said Sampson, âbut there are some very encouraging growth figures in younger audiences.â Coronavirus has brought back younger viewers to traditional TV, an audience that many media pundits thought had abandoned it for good. Digital UK, the organisation that runs Freeview, carried out a survey into attitudes to broadcasting a month into lockdown. âTV is still seen as the most important medium for information by all [age] groups,â said its CEO, Jonathan Thompson. Public service broadcasting is highly valued, the survey found. âThere had been this narrative emerging that anyone under 30 was completely disengaged with PSBs, but both the viewing behaviour during the lockdown and the attitudinal evidence weâre seeing in our research highlight that this is not true.â Among 16- to 34-year-olds, he added, âtwo-thirds are saying that they are relying on the PSBs for news and information, and that they trust them much more than other providersâ. The same group also values universality, with 90% supporting a âfree TV serviceâ. âAt the start of lockdown, people wanted trustworthy news sources,â said Martin Greenbank, head of advertising research and development at Channel 4. This view was âpretty much
Netflix
Netflixâs Tiger King uniformâ in a survey of some 1,200 people carried out by the broadcaster. Greenbank revealed that â90% of the adult sample put TV as their number-Â one [source]. Newspapers were also important, but, way down the list, were Facebook and the social platforms.â More than 50% of the young people surveyed said they âwere aware of fake news stories circulating, predominately on social platforms. That is one of the reasons they [come back] to the PSBs.â Greenbank said that Channel 4 News had âgone pretty much through the roof for all audiencesâ. In the 16-34 age group, he said, âit has doubled its reachâ. âEstablishedâ shows, he added, were doing particularly well: âGogglebox is doing the biggest numbers itâs ever done, both on overnight and consolidated [figures].â Other programmes proving popular during the lockdown include The Great Celebrity Bake Off and Friday Night Dinner. âAt the BBC, weâre seeing record audiences in linear and across iPlayer,â said Rachel Shaw, the corporationâs head of content portfolio and audiences. âSince lockdown, weâve seen 1 billion iPlayer requests,â she added. Initially, this was driven by peopleâs thirst for news; now drama is the spur, with Killing Eve and Normal People the most popular series.
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
âAUDIENCES ARE AT THE KIND OF LEVELS YOUâD NORMALLY SEE AT CHRISTMASâ People are watching TV in groups during the lockdown, said Shaw; previously, âco-viewingâ was the preserve of big sporting events and entertainment show finales. Now, this extends to programmes âacross the boardâ, including The Repair Shop and Normal People. As with most industries, when the UK went into lockdown, TV production ground to a halt. With new programming at a premium, the number of repeats has grown steadily. The danger for the linear broadcasters is that, faced with reruns of shows they may not have much liked the first time around, viewers may switch off. The BBCâs Shaw admitted that scheduling was âgoing to be a tricky balancing actâ. A second poll of the RTS webinar audience asked which of the lockdown viewing trends would persist. The rise of the SVoD companies was thought most likely to continue, while the
popularity of co-viewing was judged the least likely. Looking to the post-lockdown broadcasting landscape, Barbâs Sampson hoped that young audiences would continue ârelying on public service broadcasters for newsâ. âFor us, itâs a massive opportunity,â said Shaw. âYoung people are coming back to the BBC in enormous numbers. Itâs beholden on us to⌠offer them content that is meaningful to them.â Channel 4âs Greenbank predicted a âperiod of consolidationâ for SVoDs, arguing that consumers would not sign up for the all the new streamers coming on to the market. He predicted that they were more likely to âfollow the contentâ, buying subscriptions to âdip into contentâ and cancelling them when theyâve watched it. âBusinesses such as Netflix, that were built on a debt mountain, rely on the debt being serviceable in the longer term. Iâm not sure the global economics of this are going to support some of these businesses.â Digital UKâs Thompson added: âSVoD is not going away â itâs going to become a permanent feature of the market, but that was the case before the coronavirus crisis. Itâs probably been nudged forward.â However, he argued that PSBs had natural advantages, such as offering live TV. âLinear is absolutely vital to its health, because [live TV] is the thing that Netflix doesnât have. âI hope all the PSBs remind themselves of the importance of their organisations to viewers.⌠One of the things theyâve done brilliantly is to respond quickly to events, to feel live and connected and part of the community, which is very hard for a Netflix to do as a global broadcaster.â But it was easy to get carried away by the notion of a connected nation, keeping in touch via Zoom and bingeing on Netflix during the lockdown. Thompson pointed out that â20% of this country barely use the internet. For them, the BBC, ITV and Channel 4 are their main means of communication with the outside world, particularly at a time like this.â The notion of âuniversalityâ, of âfree, equal accessâ to television, he added, had ânever been more importantâ. n Report by Matthew Bell. The RTS online event âLockdown viewingâ, held on 4 June, was chaired by the media commentator Kate Bulkley. The producers were Liz Reynolds and Keith Underwood.
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OUR FRIEND IN
LEEDS
30
John Whiston hails a TV doctor like no other â and still finds time to dance the coronavirus two-step
Paul Hampartsoumian
I
have had a few cool titles in my time â head of youth, head of the north, the pope of soap. But none quite compare with that of Dr Paul Litchfield, formerly titled surgeon commander, in charge of Royal Navy nuclear, biological and chemical defence. Heâs now an independent medical adviser to ITV and a great guy to have on your side â or, indeed, on a Zoom call during a pandemic. Thatâs exactly what the discussions needed: level-Â headed rationality to chart a way through all the lockdown fear caused by the nightly news beat and to get the soap teams back to work. In a way, the infrastructure changes were the easy bit. Once ITVâs health and safety gurus had plotted out a set of guidelines, together with other broadÂcasters, Pact, the unions and the Government, we just had to apply them. Luckily, we are good at making things. We have amazing construction shops, which can whip up a courtroom or a hotel bar if we need one. Making a few Perspex screens and inventing a see-through camera shield and separating our buildings into colour-co-ordinated zones was a breeze. Our gallery partition screens are now much in demand all over ITV, not least for their clean, aesthetically pleasing lines â Covid cool, if you will. We also have brilliant editorial teams and writers. Adapting our storyÂlines to take out all our clinically vulnerable cast (the over-seventies) and the kids (too many add-ons, such as chaperones and tutors), and all the snogs and slaps, and yet still have
scripts that crackled with the usual levels of high tension was hard work. But achievable with the application of some serious creative thought. It was satisfying to be getting on with stuff when, all around, the country seemed to be moribund with despond. We knew that, once in the studio, our directors and crews would throw themselves into plotting out scenes where the characters could do the two-Âmetre anti-mating dance around each other â the coronavirus two-step â without it seeming weird or unnatural. With such clever staging and crafty lens work, my real fear was that weâd get complaints from the audience
that our actors didnât look like they were properly two metres apart. The social-distance poles helped. Some people are born to wield a two-metre pole. In another age, they would have been a samurai warrior or a merry man of Sherwood. These days, they are called cohort managers and they ward off evil spirits. When you are used to making nearly two feature filmsâ worth of drama a week on both soaps (Coronation Street and Emmerdale), you would expect us to have a well-oiled and adaptive production machine. Which is why the toughest challenge was overcoming our collective anxiety about going back. This was early May and that invisible, deadly enemy was very much out there. And in here, lurking in our minds as much as in the air. Thatâs where Dr Litchfield came in. In Zoom call after Zoom call, he listened patiently to the concerns of over 500 soap cast and crew, all in different places on their Covid journey. And, like the GPs of your TV youth, Dr Finlay or Dr Cameron, calmly and sensibly talked through the risks and the mitigations. We may all have worked on medical dramas, but it turns out that we arenât actually doctors. Having one of those to deliver impartial reassurance and hard-and-fast advice is a producerâs secret weapon against both fear and complacency. Get yourself one before you start up again. The longer the title, the better. n John Whiston is managing director, continuing drama, and head of ITV in the north, ITV Studios.
Undergraduate Animation
Margin of Terror Kieran McLister, University of Edinburgh âStrong acting and performances⌠and an amazing attention to detail. Lots of in-jokes and strong, rich touches.â Nominees: â Ctrl + Alt + Z, Holly Keating, Conor Leech, Ciara OâShaughnessy and Kai Munoa, Ballyfermot College of Further Education â Youâre Fit, Lydia Reid, Kingston University
Postgraduate Animation
RTS Student Television Awards 2020 Sponsored by
Matt Richardson and Siobhan Greene hosted a virtual ceremony that was streamed on 26 June
Biggy, Undergraduate Comedy and Entertainment
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
Heatwave Fokion Xenos, Priya K Dosanjh, Brendan Freedman, Stella Heath Keir, Kevin Langhamer and Team, National Film and Television School âVery accomplished and hugely enjoyable. Very playful and colourful, with brilliant production design. The ambitious crowd shot view blew us all away.â Nominees: â Almost There, Nelly Michenaud, Tim Dees, Nathanael Baring, Kate Phibbs and Team, National Film and Television School â In Her Boots, Kathrin Steinbacher, Royal College of Art
Undergraduate Comedy and Entertainment
Biggy Henry Oliver, Jordi EstapĂŠ Montserrat and Liam Morgan, Ravensbourne University âBrilliantly shot, with impeccable detail throughout, and a first-class edit. The song is a hit and Biggy is a star.â Nominees: â FLIT, Jack Allen, ElĂas Nader, Ina Morken, Laurence Jenkins and Carey Melanie Osborne, University of Edinburgh â Holiday!, Toby Matthews, Amy Lindley and Charles Power, Falmouth University
Postgraduate Comedy and Entertainment
Lucy Menghan Zhu, GwennaĂŤlle Counson, Lia Monguzzi, Ziyu Qiu, Elliot Barker and Ruojing Yang, Goldsmiths, University of London âA very unusual concept. A work that wasnât afraid to be bold.â Nominee: â Go for Alanya, Anna Castelaz, Arianne Smith, Madeleine Quarm, Daniela Velasco, Olga Lagun and Jessica Halee, Goldsmiths, University of London
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Margin of Terror, Undergraduate Animation
Undergraduate Drama
Starry Night Emma Smith, Caoilinn Handley, Rachel Moloney, Lori Stacey, Anna Heisterkamp and Team, IADT DĂşn Laoghaire âWonderful playfulness, strong performances, with a compelling non-linear narrative that really stood out.â Nominees: â A Dead Canary, James Davis, Elle Ralph, Charlotte Murphy, Rachel Neill and David Richards, University of Gloucestershire â Sealskin, Anna Venuto, Lara Karam and Daisy Leigh Phippard, Arts University Bournemouth
Kieran McLister
Postgraduate Drama
Ufo Harvey Gardner, Reece Steel and Luca Michelli, University of the West of Scotland âA moving and poignant story, told with real visual boldness and wit.â Nominees: â Azaar, Myriam Raja, Nathanael Baring and Team, National Film and Television School â November 1st, Charlie Manton, Teodora Shaleva, Molly Manning-Walker, Theo Boswell, Celina Ăier and Team, National Film and Television School
Undergraduate Factual
Building Bridges Josephine Cressy, Guillermo QuintanillaPinto, Maximilian Wilson, Pierre Niyongira and Luke Denton (University of the West of England, Bristol) âVery moving, honest [and] brave [with] the storyline cleverly woven throughout the story.â Nominees: â The Curiosity of Edward Pratt, Thomas Sandler, Oscar Godfrey and Alex Gordon, University of York â Women Uprooted, Dominique de Villiers, Fran Brotherton-Cottrell, Ellie Price, Grace Mosley and Andrea Stensholm KlĂŚboe, Falmouth University
Lucy, Postgraduate Comedy and Entertainment
Wei Han
Postgraduate Factual
Separation Wei Han, UCL âPerfectly told, [with] lyrical power worthy of a feature film. It left you caring deeply for the young girl at its heart.â Nominees: â Carrying Myself, Matea PetroviÄ, University of Salford â Green and Grey, Lucia Amoroso, UCL
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Ufo, Postgraduate Drama
Separation, Postgraduate Factual and Postgraduate Editing
Henry Oliver
Undergraduate News
It Takes All Sorts Katya Fowler, University of Leeds âConsumer journalism [that] was cleverly storyboarded and creatively filmed and edited.â Nominees: A Roof Over Our Heads, Pien Meulen steen, University of Salford Inked, Alex Bridgewood, University of Derby
Biggy, Undergraduate Comedy and Entertainment
Postgraduate News
Host or Hostile? Issa Farfour, Cardiff University) âA powerful story packed with suspense and drama. A stand-out piece of firstperson journalism.â Nominees: â Tarred by the Brush of Modern Slavery, Huong Nguyen, Nottingham Trent University â The Decline of the Great British Bee, Adam Smith, University of Sheffield It Takes All Sorts, Undergraduate News
Undergraduate Short Form
Night Hopper Lauren Burnham, Staffordshire University âWith some beautiful shots⌠this film felt visceral and inventive and was very accomplished.â Nominees: â Looking For, Cian Desmond, Caoilinn Handley, Jack Desmond and Lori Stacey, IADT DĂşn Laoghaire â Tia, Jamie Walsh, University of Central Lancashire
Issa Farfour
Postgraduate Short Form
Host or Hostile?, Postgraduate News
The RTS Student Television Awards 2020 reward outstanding work Âproduced during the 2018/19 academic year. Undergraduate entries were first judged at a regional level by their local RTS Centre in the winter of 2019. The winning films from each RTS
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
Centre, along with all postgraduate entries, were then judged nationally in April 2020. You can see a selection of the studentsâ films at rts.org.uk/ article/watch-films-rts-studenttelevision-awards-2020
Rough Hands Fabio Mota, Lily Grimes, Francesco Cibati, Beatriz HonĂłrio, Malika Ruzmetova and Team, National Film and Television School âHad a great story at its heart⌠looked great and [was] very well executed.â Nominees: â Hungry Mobsters, Francis Corby Ceschin, Paola Gonzalez Camarero, Said Englund, Ava Isak, Fabio Mota and Team, National Film and Television School â Timing is Everything, Michele Vicenti, Twan Peeters and Team, National Film and Television School
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Undergraduate Camerawork
Starry Night Anna Heisterkamp, IADT DĂşn Laoghaire âNice lighting, good camerawork and good story. It flowed well.â Nominees: â Looking For, Jack Desmond, IADT DĂşn Laoghaire â Biggy, Liam Morgan, Ravensbourne University London
Postgraduate Camerawork
Azaar Michael Filocamo, National Film and Television School âBeautifully shot⌠to create a brilliant atmosphere. Simple but effective.â Nominees: â Heatwave, Brendan Freedman, National Film and Television School â November 1st, Molly Manning-Walker, National Film and Television School
Women Uprooted, Undergraduate Editing
Undergraduate Editing
Women Uprooted Grace Mosley, Falmouth University âGood sound design and a great edit. A well-told piece.â Nominees: â The Curiosity of Edward Pratt, Thomas Sandler, University of York â Biggy, Henry Oliver and Justin GrangeBennett, Ravensbourne University London
Starry Night, Undergraduate Drama, Undergraduate Camerawork, Undergraduate Writing Clockwise: Hazel Clifford, Caoilinn Handley, Lori Stacey, Anna Heisterkamp, Emma Smith and Rachel Moloney
Postgraduate Editing
Separation Wei Han, UCL âExceptional film-making. The way the narrative unfolds is captivating and thought provoking.â Nominees: â November 1st, Celina Ăier, National Film and Television School â Heatwave, Stella Heath Keir, National Film and Television School
Undergraduate Production Design
FLIT Ina Morken and Jack Allen, University of Edinburgh âGreat production design and art department; good colours and lighting [and] great detail in the set.â Nominees: â Margin of Terror, Kieran McLister, University of Edinburgh â A Dead Canary, Rachel Neill, University of Gloucestershire
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FLIT, Undergraduate Production Design
November 1st, Postgraduate Writing
Postgraduate Production Design
Azaar Lauren Taylor, National Film and Television School âThe strong use of the red elements in the costumes, curtains, doors and blood⌠brought everything together.â Nominees: â Heatwave, Antonio Niculae, National Film and Television School â November 1st, Theo Boswell, National Film and Television School
Undergraduate Sound
Ctrl + Alt + Z Rose Connolly, Ballyfermot College of Further Education âVery good animation, well told, [with] good, stylish use of foley and a good soundtrack.â Nominees: â Building Bridges, Luke Denton, University of the West of England, Bristol â Margin of Terror, Kieran McLister and Mike Meurs, University of Edinburgh
Azaar, Postgraduate Camerawork and Postgraduate Production Design
Postgraduate Sound
Heatwave, Postgraduate Animation and Postgraduate Sound
Heatwave Kevin Langhamer, National Film and Television School âAn excellent-sounding animation. We loved the bouzouki strum for toe-testing the seaâs temperature.â Nominees: â Almost There, Ioannis Spanos, National Film and Television School â November 1st, Edward Guy, National Film and Television School
Undergraduate Writing
Starry Night Rachel Moloney, IADT DĂşn Laoghaire âA well-thought-out script that allowed you to feel the story.â Nominees: â Building Bridges, Josephine Cressy, University of the West of England, Bristol â Biggy, Henry Oliver, Ravensbourne University London
Postgraduate Writing
Ctrl + Alt + Z, Undergraduate Sound
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
November 1st Charlie Manton, National Film and Television School âGreat dialogue. Powerful subject matter dealt with expertly. Brilliantly written.â Nominees: â Azaar, Myriam Raja, National Film and Television School â Separation, Wei Han, UCL n
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RTS NEWS RTS West of England
âThe media sector has not done enough,â said Grant Mansfield, discussing its attempts to improve diversity. â[It] is changing for the better, but we are where we are because lots of people have talked about stuff and not enough people have done anything.â The Plimsoll Productions CEO added: âWeâre trying to appeal to broad audiences. How on earth can we do that if itâs all being seen through the prism of a bunch of middle-class white people? They should be part of the group, not the whole bloody group.â Mansfield was part of a panel assembled for an RTS West of England webinar, chaired by the centreâs Chair, Lynn Barlow, in late June to discuss the health of the regionâs TV production. Coronavirus has hit the South West hard, as it has the whole country. The Creative Industries Federation forecasts that the region could lose almost a third of its creative jobs, 43,000 in total. Mike Jenkins, co-founder of Blak Wave Productions, had his first commission cancelled when lockdown came. With the Black Lives Matter protests, âthings have
The Shadow of Slavery
Diversity: more action, less talk really started to pick upâ for the new black-owned indie. Jenkins filmed the Bristol protest, which saw the statue of slave owner Edward Colston thrown into the harbour: âWe managed to capture history. We were in the right place at the right time.â He approached Sacha Mirzoeff, head of Channel 4 in Bristol, who commissioned
the indie to make The Shadow of Slavery for its series of short films in response to the killing of George Floyd, Take Your Knee Off My Neck. âWeâve battled through. I think weâve done some positive commissioning during Covid, with fast-turnaround shows that have been extraordinarily reflective of the nation,â said Mirzoeff.
Looking forward to better pictures RTS London
A panel of experts discussed current and future TV technology at a joint RTS London/ Digital Television Group (DTG) event in June. Looking forward over the next decade, the panellists highlighted the technologies that would most improve the TV-watching experience. âMass-market adoption of high dynamic range [HDR]â would be the big thing, said
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Simon Gauntlett, director of imaging standards and technology at Dolby Laboratories. HDR improves both contrast and colour, giving brighter colours and greater depth. âA wider adoption of HDR in more content genres is the thing that people will notice at home.â âHD [adoption] was very patchy initially, then it burst forward. Now, if you donât watch a channel in HD, itâs
not really worth watching in my humble opinion,â said Chris Johns, chief engineer, broadcast strategy at Sky. âI think UHD [ultra-high definition] will be very similar. At the moment, itâs very niche and thereâs a very limited amount of content available. As people start to produce this content, especially in a costeffective way, and incorporate the HDR element in it, that will become the norm.â
âThere are challenges but weâve adapted and we feel far more fleet of foot. Thereâs lots to be excited about, particularly in the West and Wales. âWhatâs on the shelf is pretty bare. Broadcasters are going to need programmes to be made.⌠I know itâs tough⌠but we can look forward to some exciting times ahead.â Natural history specialist True to Nature continued to shoot in the UK, although, with overseas travel coming to a standstill, filming on the second series of Expedition with Steve Backshall was suspended. The indie hopes to film abroad in the autumn. âWeâre looking, where possible, to work with camera people who live⌠where we want to film,â said CEO Wendy Darke. Mansfield added: âWe need to be able to get on planes and get into other countries. The response and competence of our Government is pretty significant [here]: there are certain countries where we want to film at the moment, where weâve been told expli citly⌠that, if you form a queue of people that they want in the country after coronavirus, the Brits would be at the back.â Matthew Bell
Johns added that virtual reality will give the consumer something different: âItâs not mass market but it is something that people can dip their toes into.â DTG strategic technologist Yvonne Thomas agreed HDR would prosper, because it offered a âgreat image quality at a lower bandwidth than you would have with a high resolution or high frame rateâ. RTS Fellow and DTG Chair Simon Fell chaired the event, and Phil Barnes and Georgina Wilks-Wiffen produced it. Matthew Bell
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BBC
Great British Menu
Gloss it, donât Zoom it RTS Midlands
eâre all bored of Zoom and ready for some gloss and high production values,â Lindsay Bradbury told an RTS Midlands webinar in June. The BBC daytime and early peak commissioning editor was one of a panel of three factual TV experts discussing production as it emerges from its coronavirus- imposed hibernation. During the lockdown, Bradbury has enjoyed watching the Sally Rooney adaptation Normal People, and CBBCâs Malory Towers, which âtook me to a happy place, pretending I was 12 againâ, and Channel 4âs First Dates Hotel. âI havenât enjoyed any of the specific lockdown stuff. If lots of commissioners had their time again, they wouldnât have commissioned half as much of the Zoom-related content as they did,â said Optomen TV executive producer Sarah Eglin. She argued that much of the programming that âreflected people being stuck in their housesâ wasnât âvery watchableâ. Production executive Sabrina Ferro found the Zoom programmes âso awkwardâ. They âhave not been funny when they have supposed to have been funny. This is a time when everyone has wanted to escape because â speaking on my own behalf â we have become obsessed with checking the news. We have⌠to give everyone something entertaining and positive.â Eglin is planning to start filming the new series of BBC Twoâs Great British Menu in September. âIâm hoping to do [it] without coronavirus being too much in your face.â But filming will be more complicated and time- consuming than usual.
Matthew Bell hears how the industry is getting ready for the return of television production in the Midlands
âIn Great British Menu, we taste the food and that normally involves everybody crowding around a plate â clearly, we canât do that,â said Eglin. âWhat will probably happen is that the chefs will plate up⌠and, through the magic of television, it will [appear] on separate plates to taste, scattered around the kitchen. âThereâs so much practical stuff that the audience wonât see that we will be doing, like full cleans twice a day.â Bradbury said: âPeople in TV donât take no for an answer â they want to carry on working and thereâs lots of creative ways of working within government guidelines.â Production budgets have been under pressure during lockdown and this is unlikely
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
to change. Freelancers have been worst hit, said Eglin: âSo many colleagues have not benefited from government schemes at all and have had to live on savings or take breaks from paying their mortgages. âOne of the things that really motivates me at the moment to get my productions back up and filming is to give work to people. âThe sooner we get out filming, the better. Who knows if thereâs a second wave coming? If we all sit around waiting to see what happens, then we risk being in a worse position. âI remember having to ring [people] and tell them that we were going into lockdown, abandoning filming and that they didnât have
âPEOPLE ARE CHOMPING AT THE BIT TO GET OUT THERE AND FILMâ
jobs. Thereâs no way Iâm going to wait to help those people pay their mortgage.â âPeople are chomping at the bit to get out there and [film],â added Bradbury. âYou can work around the twometre rule if you are creative.â Using two cameras, she explained, âyou can cut between them so you donât notice thereâs a huge gap [between people]â. Ferro has experience of working during the lockdown on Channel 4âs Coronavirus: How Clean Is Your House âWeâve learned a lot from the last 10 to 12 weeks. It can be done sensibly. âThe world is opening up again and weâre more informed now,â she said. âBest foot forward and letâs crack on.â n âEmerging out of lockdown and beyondâ, was held on 10 June, and produced by Becky JonesOwen and Perjeet Aujla, who also chaired the event.
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RTS FUTURES NEWS RTS Futures
Steve Clarke, Matthew Bell & Imani Cottrell report on another busy month of webinars for TV newcomers
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Africa with Ade Adepitan
BBC
eople from BAME backgrounds who feel âthey donât fit inâ should âkeep on banging on the doorâ if they want to work in TV, recommended Ade Adepitan, the BBC and Channel 4 presenter. The disabled basketball Paralympic medallist said he had got into TV by luck: âI didnât go to uni, I went to the university of life.â His first job in TV was working for a cable station, which, in the early 1990s, was looking for a wheelchair-using basketball player to appear on screen. Initially he declined their invitation but, when the station offered him ÂŁ250 for the gig, he seized the chance. The presenter said it was easier today for newbies to acquire the skills to become a TV presenter thanks to smartphones: âYou can practise your skills on social media and live-stream, as Iâve been doing during lockdown.â Adepitan has never looked back. Forging a life as a presenter, as he and his fellow panellists made clear, requires resilience and determination. âThereâs no set path to getting into TV,â he said. âThe main thing today is passion.â His BBC Two series Africa with Ade Adepitan took almost two decades to get on air. Commissioners were reluctant to order a series that defied the stereotypes of a continent too often defined by poverty, corruption and conflict. Jackie Long, Channel 4âs social affairs editor, said that those considering working in
On-screen stardust TV should remain true to themselves â and to avoid doing what she did at the start of her career. âDonât feel grateful for the opportunities you are given,â advised Long. âDonât try to be someone else. Be proud of who you are.â All the contributors agreed that successful presenters had an authentic voice and were themselves in front of the camera. Anita Rani, a regular presenter of BBC Oneâs Countryfile, said she had begun her career as a 14-year-old by working part-time for a local radio station. âI was there at weekends and school holidays,â she recalled. âFind your own voice, your own tone and make it look effortless, even though youâve done loads of preparation and are dependent on a team.â Radio presenter Anna OâNeill, who works as a reporter for BBC London,
said an essential quality for being a successful journalist was the ability to spot a story. âStories are everywhere â your friends and neighbours have them,â said OâNeill, whose first degree was in Italian and Arabic. âYou can have all the technical skills, but you still need to be able to spot a story, tell a case history.â She emphasised the impor tance of tenacity â and told the RTS how she got her first break as a student journalist on Radio 4âs You and Yours. This was despite the programmeâs reluctance to agree to work with her on a story sheâd found involving the loss of hundreds of passports. âAt first, they said, âWeâll give you ÂŁ50 for your contacts and weâll do the rest.ââ Persistence paid off and she did the story for You and Yours. The Grenfell fire was the most powerful story she had covered: âIt was like a war
zone. I was there for three months. Listening to all that tragedy and grief was traumatic. âIâm still in touch with the contacts I made at Grenfell. Itâs important to keep your contacts close to you.â Rani said she would never forget reporting from India, where she had met some of the poorest people on earth. âI canât express how that makes you feel,â she said. âIt alters your perspective on life.â For Adepitan, encountering war victims in Vietnam poisoned as children by the US use of chemical agents, and meeting gay and transgender people in Jamaica forced to live in a storm drain, have both left lasting impressions on him. âI think about that every day,â he said. n Report by Steve Clarke. âThe life of a presenterâ, was held on 9 June, and chaired and produced by Jasmine Dotiwala.
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Britainâs Got Talent
ITV
rom drafting to making models to dressing sets, the TV art department offers a wealth of opportunity to the creative person. For an RTS Futures webinar in June, a panel of art directors and assistants talked art and design. All had graduated from university with a range of arts degrees, but they also stressed the need for more practical skills. âThe most basic skill is to be able to cut in a straight line,â said art director Maddie Flint, who studied performance design. âYou donât have to have a TV course background but something creative definitely helps.â âIf you want to be a set dresser⌠then you donât necessarily have to have technical skills, [but] it helps,â added art director Lizzie Chambers. She studied interior design at university and has worked on ITV2âs Love Island for the past five years. The panellists discussed the make-up of the art department. On ITVâs Britainâs Got Talent, Flintâs team includes two assistants and two runners, a buyer, and a crew to build and decorate sets. âItâs a huge show, with lots of cogs, but on other shows it could just be me, or me and an assistant,â she said.
A job for TVâs true artists âGenerally speaking, youâve either got a dressing job where itâs just you and maybe a runner or an assistant, or a bigger job such as Love Island⌠with three or four art directors,â added Chambers. In drama, said Emma Ryder, budget dictates the size of the team. The assistant
art director studied TV and film design, before landing a job storyboarding a crash scene in ITV soap Emmerdale. She has since worked on Netflix drama Sex Education. On a big movie, the art department can grow to 100 people but, on a TV drama, it typically includes a supervising art director, art
More freedom to film n With so many people having access to a smartphone, creating high-quality TV reports and packages has never been easier. For BBC News video journalist Dougal Shaw, capturing stories alone is a lot easier with just a phone: âYouâre not very nimble with a normal camera and all the equipment⌠and, with news output, people donât know the difference between footage filmed on a phone and on a camera.â
He added that interviewing people with a big camera could be intimidating, whereas a smartphone felt more natural. Reporter Vivien Morgan, who has worked on BBC current affairs programme Panorama, said it was important to plan a script: âStorytelling is about getting things right. âYour story needs to be watertight⌠think about how the words and pictures go together.â Freelance journalist Toby
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
Sadler, whose outlets include ITV News, said filming with a phone allowed him to be âimmediate and spontaneousâ. He offered tips: ensure you have a spare battery and enough phone storage; make shots long enough so they can be edited; and donât use the zoom facility because the image will pixelate. He suggested using a variety of shots âto make a sequence more interesting.⌠You can do so much with LED lighting
directors, their assistants, set decorators and builders, buyers and a draughtsperson. Ruby Asare is at the start of her career. After studying interior design, she secured a place on the ScreenSkills Trainee Finder entry-level placement scheme, which matches trainees with productions. She worked as an art department trainee on the movie Supernova, which stars Colin Firth and Stanley Tucci. âA lot of my job entailed picking things up from suppliers or sourcing things,â she recalled. âI also helped the art directors with measuring and drafting on location.â The basic requirement of an art assistant, said Olivia Hodder, who studied fine art and works with Maddie Flint, âis to always be on time and do what your art director tells youâ. The job is unpredictable. On Britainâs Got Talent, she said: âWe have a general plan at the beginning of the day but⌠by 4:00pm, everything has turned on its head. We could be [hurriedly] making massive foam bubbles that need to float in the air.â n Report by Matthew Bell. âWorking in the TV art departmentâ was held on 16 June, chaired by Alex Wootten, and produced by Alex Wootten and Jude Winstanley.
â it raises the quality of your footage.â And filming is not the only skill video journalists require. âLearn both filming and editing â the two skills reinforce each other,â said Shaw, who recommended Final Cut Pro for editing. Mobile journalism, said Morgan, is âa wonderful, creative process and youâll get better as you repeat itâ. Report by Imani Cottrell. âAn introduction to mobile phone journalismâ was held on 4 June, and chaired and produced by Ed Gove.
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RTS NEWS RTS Cymru Wales
Huw Rossiter listens in as TV chiefs in Wales discuss the effect of Covid-19 on broadcasting
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RTS vis Zoom
T
he coronavirus pandemic has demonstrated the value of public service broadcasting at a time of unprecedented national crisis. But the economic fallout from the lockdown leaves PSBs facing a fight to sustain high-quality programmes and services. This stark message was delivered during an RTS Cymru Wales webinar featur ing a panel of the heads of the countryâs broadcasting organisations. Taking part, were: Rhodri Talfan Davies, director of BBC Cymru Wales; Phil Henfrey, head of news and programmes at ITV Cymru Wales; and Owen Evans, CEO of S4C. The session was hosted by Sian Morgan Lloyd from Cardiff Universityâs School of Journalism, Media and Culture. Davies said the logistical challenge of moving some 240 journalists out of their offices into a home-working environment within 48 hours was âa tribute to the level of focus and the clarity of thinkingâ in the newsroom and the technical and operational teams at BBC Wales. Looking to the future, he warned that current pressures on BBC funding and the prospect of an economic recession meant that all public service broadcasters would âinevitably need to look at their cost baseâ, with implications for jobs. âItâs fantastic that audiences have seen the value of public service media in all its forms in recent months,â he said. âBut weâre going to face
Clockwise from top left: Phil Henfrey, Rhodri Talfan Davies, Sian Morgan Lloyd and Owen Evans
PSBs come to the fore a fight to sustain the breadth and richness of what we currently have.â Henfrey described the pandemic as one of the most challenging news stories ITV News Wales had covered. âBut on another level, itâs among our proudest achievements,â he said. âOur first priority was to keep people safe.⌠That was counterbalanced by the need to stay on air and that was a huge challenge. âWe were able to keep a comprehensive news and current affairs service on the air, as well as upscaling the amount of content produced online â underscoring the value of PSB in Wales.â Evans said the pandemic
saw viewing of S4Câs daily news programme Newyddion (made by BBC Wales) rise by 40%, with a 130% jump in consumption of its digital services. âOn top of what the BBC and ITV are making for us in news and current affairs, we developed a daily digital service around Covid. We also moved our current affairs programmes into peak-time slots,â he said. The participants said that Âcurrent commissions were âon pauseâ rather than cancelled. âItâs all about cash flow and maintaining the development and commissioning process,â said Davies. âThe key thing is that the Welsh broadcasters have not
âWE FACE A FIGHT TO SUSTAIN BREADTH AND RICHNESSâ
pulled up the drawbridge.â Evans said a priority for S4C was to bring security to Walesâs independents: âOne of the first things we did was to have commissioning rounds, so that we could keep things going. But Iâm concerned about what will happen when the furlough period finishes.â Henfrey said that, as a global producer, ITV would learn from other countries in terms of restarting production. A significant aspect of the crisis has been the divergent approaches adopted by governments in the devolved nations and the role of the broadcasters in explaining those differences. âThis will be seen as one of the defining moments in the development of devolution in Wales,â said Davies. n The webinar was held on 15 June and produced by Edward Russell.
RTS NEWS
Picture perfect RTS London
Matthew Bell hears how Sky Arts has tuned into peopleâs creativity during the lockdown
Artist Kimberly Klauss painting Noel Fielding and you just listen to their conversation.â Regular presenter Joan Bakewell hosts Portrait Artist of the Week: âBecause of my age, Iâm in an isolated group, so I welcomed anything that would challenge me to use my wits and keep my spirits up. âI thought it was a great idea. Of course, [I thought] it would be impossible, but I decided to give it a go â I like a new challenge and a new format. Throughout my career, Iâve followed all the different forms that television has taken and, it seems to me, that this is a form that wonât go away â weâve discovered something rather special here. We can speak across nations to each other and, immediately, get a response.â The artists featured in the series include Portrait Artist of the Year semi-finalist Kimberly Klauss, who joined the RTS webinar from Munich. âIt was both exhilarating and completely petrifying,â recalled Klauss, who painted Fielding. âMy stomach was in knots.â Sky Production Services
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
studio manager Ben Burdon explained how, once the lockdown had started, he was still able to facilitate programme-making, âand not just put out archive material. We tried to work out a platform at home that would be accessible to all of the contributors, our technical teams and our content-makers,â he explained. It would have taken too long to configure broadcast equipment, so he came up with a solution, âBlue Peter fashionâ, to grab bits of kit around the house â âiPads, laptops, tablets â and, remark ably, make televisionâ. Sky Production Services director Adam Noble said Portrait Artist of the Week threw up âlots of issues you wouldnât get in a traditional galleryâ. And it made huge demands on the portrait painters, who had to set up their studios for filming and work with alien technology. Noble added: âThey had to take all of that on board, and then paint and talk. My biggest challenge was making them feel comfortable with the technology.â
Portrait Artist of the Week proved a hit. Audiences built steadily, week by week, said director of Sky Arts Phil Edgar-Jones â episode 1 generated 70,000 views; episode 6 passed 210,000. âWith most TV,â he said, âa lot of people come to episode 1 and then it tails off quite dramatically.â The showâs run was extended from four to eight episodes, with TV historian Mary Beard as the final sitter. âThere was a lot of love for it,â said Graham. âWe realised that, unlike Portrait Artist of the Year, this was more about community than competition. More and more people were saying, âItâs keeping me goingâ. Without wanting to sound too grandiose, it was really helping peopleâs mental health. âIt felt like we were doing something really lovely for people at an awful time.â n The webinar âProduction focus: Portrait Artist of the Weekâ was held on 11 June, chaired by Aradhna Tayal and produced by Phil Barnes.
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Sky
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ky Arts reinvented Portrait Artist of the Year as a global, live, paintalong show for a lockdown audience, streamed free on its Facebook page. Celebrity sitters, including comedian Noel Fielding, posed in their homes for each four-hour Sunday episode. During an RTS London webinar, the showâs producers and talent explained how they created Portrait Artist of the Week. Sam Richards, an executive producer at Story vault Films, which makes both series, describes the parent show as âthe Bake-Off of art â itâs not a niche art programmeâ. âItâs warm, inclusive and multi-generational, but it can also be âshout at the tellyâ. Itâs very competitive and people root for artists.â Richardsâ fellow Storyvault Films exec Danielle Graham explained the thinking behind the new weekly programme: âIt became clear that lots of people were being creative. I realised our programme was made for lockdown â weâre all at home with more time on our hands.â Making the show, she added, âwas the steepest learning curve ever but it has been incredibly rewarding. âI donât know any other format that puts two creative people together for four hours
RTS NEWS
TV Centre celebrates 60 years
Gillespies
RTS London
BBC Television Centre is the âperfect TV buildingâ. So said TV presenter Phillip Schofield during a special RTS London programme marking the 60th anniversary of the official opening of the BBCâs White City HQ. The architect, Graham Dawbarn, based his design on a question mark heâd doodled on the back of an envelope, revealed head of BBC history Robert Seatter. âHe realised, in a eureka moment, that he had found the perfect shape for Television Centre. âIt [has] a circuit in the middle for offices and managerial
BBC Television Centre people and, around the back, a panoply of different access points for all the paraphernalia of television, the cameramen, the engineers, the scenery builders and the talent.â âIt was a vision of the future,â said former studio
cameraman Roger Bunce: âIf Dan Dare had a headquarters, Iâm almost certain it would look exactly like TV Centre. âItâs a lovely piece of architecture and the public got to know it because it appeared in so many programmes.â
Newbies offer advice RTS bursary scheme
The flourishing RTS bursary scheme held three webinars in June for young people set on a career in television. Paula Ugochukwu and Richard Walker have both started to climb the TV ladder. Walker left the University of Gloucestershire in 2017 with a degree in TV production. During his final year, he attended the RTS Futures Careers Fair and introduced himself to production companies. Having moved to London, he got a job as a runner for RDF and is now a shooting researcher. Ugochukwu, originally from London, graduated with a degree in journalism studies from the University of Sheffield in 2019 and chose to stay put. She had made
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connections in the north and observed that media companies were moving north, including Channel 4 to Leeds. She now has a full-time job in learning and development, and is also a freelance digital content creator, hosts her own podcast, creates content for brands on social media and makes videos for her YouTube channel. The next stop on the RTS Bursary virtual tour was further north, with alumni Emma Duncan and Colin MacRae selling the Scottish dream. Both said Scotland had a lot to offer, from BBC Scotland to STV to the wealth of production houses based in Film City Glasgow. Duncan graduated from Glasgow Caledonian University in 2018 with a degree in
multimedia journalism and now works for the East Lothian Courier. MacRae left Edinburgh Napier University in 2018 with a degree in television. He then completed a masters in film-making at the University of the West of Scotland. His documentary Walking in My Shoes won an award at Ukraineâs Kaniv International Film Festival. The pair offered some practical advice. âDo as many work experiences and placements as you can while at uni,â said Duncan. MacRae seconded her, recalling paid work experience as a location marshal, extra, runner and assistant on blockbuster films while he was at university. Earlier in June, Dave Castell,
Schofield first came across TV Centre as a child, when he was given a Ladybird Book, How It Works â Television, which contained an illustration of the BBCâs home. âI studied that map â I knew it better than the inside of my house,â he recalled. Years later, working as a BBC childrenâs presenter, Schofield found himself âworking in the building that Iâd studiedâ. In 2013, when the BBC closed TV Centre, Schofield appeared in a show celebrating its history, Goodbye Television Centre. But that was not the end of the story. In 2018, he returned to a renovated, but smaller, TV Centre, when it became home to ITVâs This Morning. âIt was such a perfect full circle⌠going back was sublime.â TVC 60: Birthday of a Building premiered on 29 June. Watch it at: rts.org.uk/event/tvc-60. Matthew Bell
general manager of inventory and partnerships at global tech company The Trade Desk, talked to students. He said there was value in specialism â honing oneâs knowledge in a particular field â but also in bridging the gap between the creative and technical sides of TV. âDonât view the role of a runner as simply being a runner,â he said. âThink of all the experience and conversations you can have â assisting that exec producer, talking to that camera operator.â Castell advised students to talk to people working in roles they aspire to and work their hardest to get there: âItâs all about having courage, optimism and little bit of creative licence.â He put a positive spin on the pandemic, arguing that now was the time to explore opportunities: âRead those books. Do that research. Start that podcast.â Megan Fellows
RTS Thames Valley
Tony Orme tunes in to two webinars looking at new ways of making TV
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Who Wants To Be a Millionaire?
ITV
ocial-distancing restrictions have had an enormous impact on productions with studio audiences, explained an RTS Thames Valley Zoom event in late June. The audience is an integral part of hit ITV quiz Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? âThe production has to be so sharp now without the audience giving it that extra lift,â said comedy and entertainment producer Adeel Amini, who has worked on the show. âSometimes, the studio can feel a bit cavernous without the audience.â âThere are few art forms that rely on that live audience aspect as much as comedy,â said Mark OâSullivan, who co-wrote and starred in Channel 4 comedy series Lee and Dean. âWhat this has demonstrated is how adaptable and flexible the existing comedy formats are and just how much innovation there is. âItâs been fascinating watching shows such as The Last Leg, The Mash Report, The Ranganation and Have I Got News For You making these
TV without an audience lockdown versions and, mostly, to my mind, quite successfully.â TV psychologist Honey Langcaster-James, who has worked on the Channel 4 version of Big Brother, said: âWhat we have to think about is that the audience hasnât gone away; theyâre still there, just not in the room. âWhat is key is that the relationship between the production and the audience is going to change.â BT Sport COO Jamie
Hindhaugh said the broadcaster had completely deconstructed its studio operations so that people could work from home: âThe gallery operations are driven from peopleâs homes â the gallery is still there, but the physical interfaces are all across the UK in peopleâs houses.â Michael Geissler, founder of Mo-Sys Engineering, which specialises in camera robotics and virtual technology, argued: âItâs a creative and exciting time.
âWhat I observe [with] our technology is that, before, it was niche, very complex and expensive. But it is suddenly becoming more mainstream and a more affordable way of adding virtual and augmen ted reality elements to images.â n Report by Tony Orme. The webinar âThe future of the TV studio audienceâ was held on 25 June and chaired by Professor Lyndsay Duthie from the University for the Creative Arts.
How to make news with your phone n The BBC Academyâs Marc Settle showed the RTS how to turn a smartphone into a complete newsgathering solution. Mobile phones are designed largely for the consumer market, so they donât have some of the features professionals take for granted on broadcast kit. Settle said: âYou can never
have enough memory space or battery capacity. Filming is one of the most battery-draining things you can do, so always make sure you have your batteries charged or take a battery pack with you.â He demonstrated the difference between using external and built-in microphones. Both
Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
quality and clarity are greatly improved when lapel mics with windshields are used. One other tip â keep the lens clean! Settle reviewed apps to edit video and audio, as well as teleprompters, and automated subtitle and graphics generators: âYou can stay simple and use the apps installed on your
iPhone or you can have many different apps. Or, as I recommend, have a few apps, learn how to use them and get good at those.â Report by Tony Orme. The RTS Thames Valley webinar âGet your mojo working!â was held on 28 May.
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RTS NEWS
How to create sound for drama
The
UPSIDE Zoom it again, but with more feeling For most of us, the lockdown may be easing but the inventiveness of TV to respond to those long days of quarantine continues to delight audiences. The standout iPlayer comedy-Â drama Staged, starring Michael Sheen and David Tennant, is innovative and hilarious. The two actors play inflated and occasionally exasperated versions of themselves as they try to rehearse a stage play via Zoom. The six episodes of Staged are short â between 15 and 20 minutes long â but the script fizzes as the two actors struggle with domestic interruptions. If you enjoyed Sky Oneâs The Trip, starring Rob Brydon and Steve Coogan, Staged is certain to bring a smile to your face.
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Normal People: Connell and Marianne The first â Marianne and Connellâs first romantic encounter in the formerâs family home â was recorded by OâSullivan with two boom microphones. âThereâs such
life to this scene â itâs really beautiful,â he said. âMy job is to capture the acoustic integrity of a performance. This is the perfect example. âIt was such a lovely
And for a real belly laugh, donât miss Michael McIntyreâs YouTube fortune teller: bit.ly/ YT-McIntyre
industry in a Covid-19 worldâ, panellist Pact CEO John McVayâs Zoom feed started misbehaving. Weâre used to freezes and audio delays but, in mid-session, Johnâs Zoom link unaccountably started playing funk classic Dream On Dreamer by the Brand New Heavies in his earphones. Another unexpected benefit of working from home, perhaps â though the Upside prefers Steely Dan to the Brand New Heavies.
The lads give their all at lawn footie Premier League football is very much back with us, thanks to Project Restart. But there is consensus that the action is better watched augmented by pre-recorded crowd noise than with no crowd noise at all. Itâs an odd experience minus the sound of fans â however fake â as audiences hear the real, though muffled, voices of players and their managers. Indeed, play in deserted stadiums sounds more like a tennis match than a game of football.
Video conference in your dreams Back to Zoom. During a recent RTS webinar, âBack in production â unlocking the TV production
Graphics say it louder than words The Upside is no stranger to lengthy acceptance speeches given at awards ceremonies. But at the live-streamed RTS Student Television Awards, the winners not only kept their thank yous crisp and to the point, two of the students enhanced their gratitude by adding some very creative on-screen graphics. Once again, lockdown is the mother of invention.
BBC
Republic of Ireland
BBC Oneâs adaptation of Sally Rooneyâs book Normal People was a huge hit during lockdown. In a late-June webinar, RTS Republic of Ireland put the spotlight on the sound of the drama, made by Dublin indie Element Pictures. Niall OâSullivan recorded the location sound, which Steve Fanagan mixed in postproduction â along with added dialogue, Foley sounds, music and sound effects â to create the final sound. Fanagan described his task as one of âcreating a world, soundwise, that feels truthful to the world portrayed on screenâ. Two clips illustrated the work of the sound specialists.
location. There was no bad acoustics in the room â [it was] carpeted and warm.â Fanaganâs job was to âfollow the picture. The closeness and intimacy established by the performances, direction, shooting and editing all suggest that weâre in that room with them. The sound had to reflect that we feel weâre right up close with them.â A clip of a party offered a contrasting challenge. âPart of my job was to build up the sound,â recalled Fanagan. This involved using the chatter of the extras recorded on set, crowd sounds recorded by actors at a later date and sound from an effects library. Matthew Bell
Indie shoots doc in a day n âWe made it on Zoom and WhatsApp â we were never in the same room as a production team, thinking and talking about what we were going to do.â Candour Productions creative director Anna Hall was talking about making Channel 4 film A Day in the Life of Coronavirus Britain at an RTS Yorkshire webinar in June. The team planned the doc in two and a half weeks â and shot and edited it in just three days. It was a âflying by the seat of your pants experienceâ, recalled Hall. âWe had nine people shooting across the country and⌠people sitting in their pyjamas at their kitchen tables producing.â There was an army watching the footage sent in by the public and six editors piecing it together: âIt was an incredible collaborative experience.â Matthew Bell
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Television www.rts.org.uk July/August 2020
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