News Summary: 23rd March 2010

March 23rd, 2010 - 

Google China

Google’s announcement in January that it was no longer willing to remove sensitive material from search results highlighted the issue of China’s domestic internet controls. But its decision last night to shift its Chinese-language service to servers in Hong Kong looks likely to put the spotlight on the methods Beijing uses to block content that is hosted overseas. The censorship system works because it is twofold: it consists of controls on the content posted inside the country, and the ‘great firewall’, which prevents mainland users from reading material hosted overseas.

While Google may have stopped censoring its results thanks to its move to Hong Kong, the Chinese government has not. That is why, using google.com.hk from the mainland last night, searches for ‘Tiananmen student movement’ in Chinese and ’89 student movement’ in English brought no results – just a message that is all too familiar to internet users in China: ‘The connection was reset.’

The great firewall is implemented by internet police in three ways. The first two are common tactics: blacklisting domain names and IP addresses, for example those belonging to groups such as Amnesty International. Dr Steven Murdoch – a researcher at the computer laboratory of Cambridge University and member of the Tor project, which helps internet users surf the web anonymously – said Chinese authorities have been using such methods with increasing zeal. According to Murdoch, the third technique used by China is ‘close to unique,’; this is the keyword blocking system. Essentially, the government’s system mirrors and searches each packet of data as it passes in and out of the country, looking in URLs and webpages for keywords such as ‘falun’, in reference to the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement. Should it find them, it breaks the connection.

The Chinese government has responded to say: ‘This is totally wrong. We’re uncompromisingly opposed to the politicisation of commercial issues, and express our discontent and indignation to Google for its unreasonable accusations and conducts’. More in The Guardian HERE, HERE and HERE; Independent HERE; Times HERE and HERE; Telegraph HERE and HERE; and FT HERE.

Television

Project Canvas, the joint venture between terrestrial broadcasters and internet service providers to create a new web-connected television platform, will be investigated by the OFT, which has said it will study whether the plans of the venture’s members –which include the BBC, ITV and BT – could amount to a merger and whether that would mean less competition. The project could then be referred to the Competition Commission. The Canvas members said yesterday that they had submitted proposals to the OFT, arguing that these did not constitute a merger and should not be referred to the commission. Richard Halton, project director for the venture, said:

‘The Canvas partners are clear that the joint venture does not qualify as a merger and we welcome the opportunity to clarify this position formally. We are delighted that Arqiva have committed themselves to the project. They have a history of positive and progressive support for Freeview.’ More in The Guardian HERE and Times HERE.

Heritage Crafts

Next month, Sheffield city council’s planning committee will consider an application to turn Portland Works into studio apartments and office space. The structure itself is Grade II* listed, and the development looks sympathetic enough. But if it goes ahead, the small group of present-day Little Mesters who occupy the Portland’s warren of workshops – a knifemaker, a tool forger, a silver plater, an engraver, a die maker – will be gone, probably for good. Robin Wood, chair of a newly formed lobby group, the Heritage Crafts Association, which is being launched today at the V&A has said:

‘I’d estimate that more people in the world today eat with stainless steel knives and forks than speak English… You could argue it’s our biggest cultural export. So it seems quite extraordinary that we can protect the bricks and mortar of a place like this, but not care in the least about the skills and craftsmanship that are so much of this city’s culture and identity… ‘they’re every bit as much a part of our cultural heritage as grand museums, fine buildings and admired works of art or literature.’

There exists a peculiarly British problem; in 2003, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) adopted a Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage, including ‘traditional craftsmanship’, which argued that any effort to safeguard traditional craftsmanship should focus not on preserving craft objects, but on ‘creating conditions that will encourage artisans to continue to produce crafts of all kinds, and to transmit their skills and knowledge to others’. More than 100 countries signed up. Britain did not. More in The Guardian HERE.

News Summary: 2nd March 2010

March 2nd, 2010 - 

BBC review

The latest on the BBC review, as of 10.04am on the BBC News website HERE is confirmation from Mark Thompson that BBC 6 Music and Asian Network will face closure.

Speaking to BBC staff Mr Thompson also announced that there will be 25% less spent on BBC online by 2013. Among the closures will be teen services Switch and Blast, with Mr Thompson admitting Channel 4 should lead the way with these audiences. He has also pledged that in the future 90p of every licence fee £1 will be spent on programming. The morning newspapers’ coverage of the story can be found in The Guardian  HERE, HERE, HERE (where Greg Dyke accuses Thompson of being overpaid and out of touch), and Thompson’s own article acknowledging that the BBC must stop trying to do everything  HERE. The Times’ coverage is HERE; Telegraph’s HERE, HERE and HERE.

Tech

The 80 or 90% market share dominance of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer looks to be nearing the end as users throughout Europe were yesterday shown a ‘ballot screen’ prompting people to choose a browser to use. The move is part of a deal with European Union regulators; last month Brussels dropped anti-trust charges against Microsoft in return for Microsoft agreeing to provide a software update with a pop-up menu of browsers. Dave Heiner, vice president of Microsoft said ‘users who get the choice screen will be free to choose any browser or stick with the browser they have.’

In an effort to take on Internet Explorer, Google launched a major advertising campaign in Britain to promote Chrome. Today Google will release several improvements in its browser including additional privacy controls and a foreign language translator for web pages. Apple Firefox is the other biggest rival. More in The Times HERE and background on the ’10 year web browser war’ in The Guardian HERE and HERE; Independent HERE; Telegraph HERE; and FT HERE.

Theatre

This month sees the long-awaited launch of National Theatre Wales. In Wales, English speakers outnumber Welsh speakers three to one. The idea of an English-language national theatre has been debated for almost 100 years, but it took Dai Smith, who has chaired the Arts Council of Wales since 2006, to cut through the competing reports on how it should be structured – ‘I decided that this pussyfooting around – should we have a national theatre or not? – was ridiculous… I firmly believe in this’. Like Scotland’s national theatre, the company has no permanent home. Its home is all of Wales. More in The Guardian HERE.

News Summary: 26th February 2010

February 26th, 2010 - 

Media

The Home Office-commissioned Sexualisation of Young People Review we mentioned yesterday HERE is today making headlines for the recommendation that music videos featuring “sexually provocative” images or lyrics should be banned until after the 9pm watershed. The report says:

“Music channels and videos across all genres have been found to sexualise and objectify women. Women are often shown in provocative and revealing clothing and are depicted as being in a state of sexual readiness. Males, on the other hand, are shown as hyper-masculine and sexually dominant.”

Other key recommendations of the report include:

  • Launching an online “one-stop-shop” to allow the public to voice their concerns regarding irresponsible marketing which sexualises children;
  • Encouraging the government to support the Advertising Standards Agency to take steps to extend existing regulatory standards to include commercial websites;
  • Ensuring games consoles are sold with parental controls already switched on. Purchasers can then choose to unlock the console if they wish to allow access to adult and online content.

You can read the full report in PDF HERE and coverage in The Guardian HERE and HERE; Independent HERE, HERE and HERE; Times HERE; and Telegraph HERE.

The latest report on the BBC strategic review – to be published next month – is that the Mark Thompson, the Director General, is to admit that the corporation has become too large and must shrink to give its commercial rivals room to operate. It is thought he will announce the closure of the digital radio stations 6 Music and Asian Network and introduce a cap on spending on broadcast rights for sports events of 8.5 per cent of the licence fee, or about £300 million. He will also pledge to close BBC Switch and Blast!, leaving the lucrative teenage market to ITV and Channel 4. But BBC Three, which is aimed at 16 to 35-year-olds will not be touched. More in The Guardian HERE; Times HERE, HERE and HERE; and Telegraph HERE.

Cinema

We’ve been covering the Alice in Wonderland/ Odeon boycott story for a while now; most recently HERE, but today it appears it is to be no more; Britain’s biggest cinema chain, a week before the film is released and, having chastised Disney for threatening the “existence of cinemas”, has decided it will show after all.

The battle over Alice in Wonderland was always a high-stakes game; the film is expected to be one of the highlights of the cinematic year, and the 3-D element makes it likely to remain open for longer and attract higher ticket prices. Neither the studio nor Odeon would comment on the concessions made, but an Odeon spokesman said they had reached an “enduring agreement … encompassing all the different aspects of both companies’ commercial relationship”. More in The Guardian HERE; Independent HERE; and Times HERE.

Art

An art exhibition portraying Jesus as the gay son of a prostitute has been closed after the organisers at Granada University in Spain admitted that furious protests from churchgoers meant that they could no longer guarantee the safety of its creator, Fernando Bayona. More in The Times HERE.

News Summary: 24th February 2010

February 24th, 2010 - 

Media

The Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee’s Press Standards, Privacy and Libel report was published last night and can be read in full HERE. In summary the report:

  • Called for the Government to cut “enormous cost of libel cases” in the UK;
  • Called for the Press Complaints Commission to be renamed and have power to fine;
  • Condemned “collective amnesia” at News International over phone hacking but said the culture of hacking being deemed acceptable had now changed.

More in The Guardian HERE, HERE, HERE and HERE; Independent HERE and HERE; Times HERE; and Telegraph HERE.

Tech

It has been revealed that former children’s laureates Quentin Blake, Anne Fine and Jacqueline Wilson, among others, have opted out of the Google Books settlement. Court documents relating to the case (see HERE) show that more than 6,500 authors, publishers and literary agents have opted out of the settlement. These include the estates of Rudyard Kipling and Roald Dahl. Novelist Marika Cobbold, author of books including Guppies for Tea and Shooting Butterflies, has opted out and said:

“My feelings were, in the end, that I doubted I would lose out by opting out, whereas I might do by opting in. Also there was the principle that copyright is important… It would be like handing over my babies to a babysitter I’d never met, [and] I couldn’t understand what was in it for me. I love Google, and in principle making information accessible is wonderful, but things are moving so fast, and authors are losing so much control over what we’ve done, that my fear was who knows, in five to 10 years’ time, how this information could be used?” More in The Guardian HERE; Independent HERE; and FT HERE.

More bad news for Google as it faces a preliminary anti-monopoly probe by the European Commission into its dominant position in online browsing and digital advertising following allegations that it demotes competing websites to the lower echelons of customers’ search results. The complaints centre on the way in which Google’s search results are compiled and on the terms and conditions the company attaches to deals with advertisers. Although the commission’s investigation is only at a tentative stage, the fact that Brussels is taking the issue seriously is likely to set off alarm bells at Google. More in The Guardian HERE.

Cinema

There’s interesting coverage of the Alice in Wonderland/ Odeon fall-out in today’s Guardian, where it notes that Tim Burton’s film has become an unlikely pawn in a global struggle to ­redefine how, when and where we watch ­movies in the digital age. Disney, which ­produced the movie, wants to shorten the amount of time between some films being released in cinemas and then coming out on DVD. Exhibitors, unsurprisingly, want to preserve the exclusive ­theatrical experience for as long as possible. The studio insists that it’s not trying to enforce a new industry standard: it ­simply wants the ­flexibility to release some films sooner on DVD, when it makes commercial sense to do so. The studio argues that films typically last about two months in cinemas before they disappear off screens; this means a further two-month wait until the official DVD release, a period used by pirates to flog illegal copies. A shorter window, says Disney, will mean less money lost to the pirates.

But exhibitors fear that if they accept a three-month window for Alice, rather than a four, then other studios will ­follow suit, making a further ­contraction inevitable. This, they say, will erode the eagerness of audiences to rush out to the cinema, and tempt them to wait instead for the DVD or online release. More in The Guardian  HERE.

Music

It’s National Sing Up Day today, ‘Sing Up’ works on the basis that every child deserves the chance to sing every day. Singing improves learning, confidence, health and social development; it has the power to change lives and help to build stronger communities. You can read more about Sing Up’s work at their website HERE. There is also news this week that teaching stroke patients to sing can “rewire” their brains, helping them to recover speech. Dr Nina Kraus, a neuroscientist from Northwestern University in Chicago, also studies the effects of music on the brain. She has discovered that musical training seems to enhance the ability to perform other tasks, such as reading; providing yet more evidence that musical training is an important part of children’s education. More in BBC News HERE.

Auction

A rare copy of the first comic book to feature Superman sold for $1m (£640,000) yesterday, smashing the previous record for a comic. The 1938 edition of Action Comics No1 was sold by a private seller to a private buyer. Neither released their name. The issue, which has a cover featuring Superman lifting a car, originally cost 10 cents. More in The Guardian HERE.

Libraries

Miranda McKearney, Directorof the Reading Agency has given an interview to The Guardian, talking about their schemes to promote authors and books to communities, through such means as Summer Reading Challenges and reading groups. More HERE.

News Summary: 16th February 2010

February 16th, 2010 - 

Radio

The BBC Trust has concluded its nine month in-depth study of Radio 2, whose terms of service licence state that it must appeal to audiences over the age of 35. BBC Trustee David Liddiment, who led the review, said:

“We’re aware of concerns about Radio 2 targeting a younger audience. The current average audience age of 50 is well within the station’s target audience, but the Trust is clear that this must not fall any further, and we would like to see Radio 2 work on its appeal to over 65 year-olds.”

Commercial radio companies have complained that the BBC has been unfairly crowding out its competitors by allowing Radio 2 to focus on a younger audience, pointing to research that shows the number of 15 to 34-year-olds tuning into the station has increased by 62 per cent since 1999, while listeners over the age of 65 have fallen. The switch in breakfast show line-up from a 71 year old Terry, to a 43 year old Chris has offered little reassurance that the trend is about to reverse.

Andrew Harrison, chief executive of RadioCentre, which represents commercial stations, has said:

“We welcome the fact that the BBC Trust is calling for a greater contribution from Radio 2 to the delivery of the BBC’s public purposes, especially in peak times… Over the last decade, Radio 2 has shifted its programming policies – nobody has intervened and this has been disastrous for commercial radio’s heartland audience and for the plurality and diversity of the UK’s fragile radio ecology.”

More in The Guardian HERE and HERE; Independent  HERE; Times HERE; and Telegraph HERE. You can read the BBC Trust’s full review HERE.

Tech

Useful analysis of Google Buzz vs Facebook in The Times today HERE, where it’s argued:

‘It’s not that Mr Zuckerberg is still only 25 and naively arrogant that annoys Google, nor that his company has enticed swaths of senior Google talent. It’s that Facebook’s fast-growing dominance of the “social” internet threatens its rival’s entire business model. If it can sell advertisers access not just to what you’re thinking, but to where you are, who you’re with and what you plan to do, Facebook’s revenues from individually targeted “behavioural” advertising could increase exponentially. And it knows it.’

Background to the Google vs Facebook story can be found HERE; HERE; HERE and HERE.

 Art

The first British exhibition of paintings by the Oscar-winning Welsh actor Sir Anthony Hopkins opens in London today. The 50 landscape and abstract paintings by actor, who has exhibited throughout the US, will be displayed at Gallery 27 in Mayfair, central London, until Saturday before moving to The Dome in Edinburgh for four days on 2 March. Hopkins began painting in 2002, paints every day in his Malibu studio and “takes his art very seriously”, according to exhibition promoter Jonathan Poole, who will play host at this evening’s launch as Sir Anthony is away filming. Five limited-edition prints will be available for purchase. More in the Guardian HERE; and Independent HERE.

Architecture

A plan to mark the entry points to Brick Lane with giant arches in the shape of hijabs has been condemned as offensive to Muslim women and a waste of £1.85m of public funds. Locals have said they risk ghettoising a community that considers itself tolerant and diverse. Tracey Emin, who lives just off Brick Lane, is one of a number of residents in the east London area who claim that Tower Hamlets council risks inflaming racial tension by trying to force the “hijab gates” – as they have become known – through without proper consultation. The Spitalfields Trust, which helped to save many of the historic Huguenot silk weavers’ houses that abut Brick Lane, has urged the council to abandon its “misconceived” idea. The council has extended the deadline for complaints to 22 February. More in the Guardian HERE.

News Summary: 2nd February 2010

February 2nd, 2010 - 

Macmillan Publishers seem to be quite successfully capitalising on the bitter rivalry between America’s technology giants, Apple and Amazon, to strike a blow for old media by forcing through price increases on digital versions of its books.

Macmillan is one of five publishers – along with Penguin, HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster and Hachette – to have signed up with Apple to make ebooks available through its online iBookstore. Last weekend, Amazon removed Macmillan books from its US website (more in the Guardian HERE and FT HERE) in protest at the publisher’s demand that they match the $12.99 and $14.99 pricings suggested by Apple. Protestations by the publishing industry then forced Amazon into a U-turn hours later (more in the Telegraph HERE and HERE and in the FT HERE). Amazon told readers:

‘We want you to know that ultimately… we will have to accept Macmillan’s terms because Macmillan has a monopoly over their own titles, and we will want to offer them to you, even at prices we believe to be needlessly high for ebooks’.

Is the use of the term ‘monopoly’ accidental, or a flagging up to regulators potential price-fixing between publishers and Apple, and/ or a gearing-up for a legal battle? More in the Guardian HERE and Independent HERE.

Google Books’ plans to carry ‘substantial extracts’ of books that are out of print but still within copyright, with buyers then paying to download the title in full, continues to be criticised as a ‘massive rights’ grab’. Revenue generated would be split, with 63% going to the rights holder and the rest to Google. Philip Pullman, author of the His Dark Materials trilogy, has said:

‘Just because a book is out of print doesn’t mean it belongs to Google. It belongs to me. And if I want to sell my rights to anybody, why the hell should I have to go and ask Google first?’

American authors, publishing organisations and Google are currently trying to agree the settlement, which has yet to be ratified by a New York court and could be one of the most important agreements in digital publishing. Google insists the proposed settlement ‘is not about acquiring rights to books… It is about creating a new revenue channel for rights holders, and opening up access to these books’. More in the Guardian HERE, with British author’s reactions so far in The Times HERE.

Does Habermas have a Tweet for you?! The German social theorist and philosopher Jürgen Habermas apparently tweeted the following ‘It’s true that the internet has reactivated the grass-roots of an egalitarian public sphere of writers and readers’. But, alas, when asked if he had indeed joined Twitter, the 80 year old Frankfurt School doyen is said to have responded ‘No, no, no…This is a misuse of my name.’ see more HERE. We however like to take this opportunity to happily inform you that Ed’s Twitter Page is bona fide and that he can be found merrily tweeting away every day, and does so like to be followed…

Weekly email: 21/01/2010

January 21st, 2010 - 

Here is this week’s news:
Tory Stuff
Media
Jeremy is speaking at the Oxford Media Convention as we email! Coverage of what he’s saying HERE and full transcript HERE.
In an interview this week with New Media Age, Shadow Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt acknowledged the vital role that the digital media industry plays in the UK economy, and promised a light-touch regulatory approach. HERE
Ed spoke at the Nations and Regions Media conference in Salford Quays on Tuesday. He confirmed our intention to scrap the IFNC pilots should be win the election more HERE and HERE
Arts Policy
Charlotte Higgins has written a helpful and by and large quite nice overview of the themes from Jeremy’s speech to the RSA / ACE State of the Arts conference last week, HERE Lyn Gardner discussed our philanthropy proposals in the Granuiad HERE. The Arts Council have pointed out to us that it was a joint conference, not just the RSA’s. Apologies, credit where it’s due, etc.
Material from the conference is available HERE.
Creative Industries
Digital Economy Bill
The Digital Economy Bill had its third (HERE) and fourth (HERE) days in Committee in the Lords, they have reached Clause 10.
Interesting correspondence this week in the letters page of the Granuiad on clause 17, led by a letter from the Creative Coalition HEREwith a response HERE
Two new pieces of research from both the BPI and Creative Coalition suggest that ISPs are exaggerating the financial hardship they will have to bear under measures proposed by the Digital Economy Bill. More in links via Facebook in some clever way HERE
and HERE.
ITV CRR Decision
The Competition Commission has given its final recommendations on CRR for consultation. The main recommendations are unchanged from its provisional findings and reject ITV’s proposals for more flexibility over its advertising charges. ITV have commented that ‘This decision confirms the urgent need for a thorough and comprehensive review of the cumulative impact of regulation of the independent broadcasting sector.’
We agree (with ITV), more HERE and HERE.
This morning the court of appeal has ordered BSkyB to sell down its stake in ITV from 17.9% to less than 7.5%HERE.
BBC
Maybe it is rocket science: The BBC have announced that throughout 2010 they will be ‘bringing together a range of TV and radio science programmes, online initiatives, regional road shows and learning campaigns to inspire engagement  with  science across the nation more HERE.
Meanwhile CCHQ wants Tory activists to help ‘beat BBC bias’ more HERE.
The BBC Trust has announced it is to conduct a performance review of the BBC’s on-demand offerings, including the iPlayer, simulcast TV and podcast downloads. This is launched today with an eight week public consultation, more HERE.
Video Games
The Video Standards Council has announced a number of high-level staff changes ahead of the implementation of the government’s new video games ratings regime outlined in the Digital Economy Bill more HERE.
The prestigious Ivor Novello Awards are to recognise music from videogames for the first time this year following the introduction of a special game score category, more HERE. Meanwhile, Hugo Chavez clearly is the new Keith Vaz, suggesting that the PlayStation leads children down the capitalist ‘road to hell’, which is of course just one of the reasons we like them more HERE.
Joining us on Chavez’s proverbial road to hell, is the Parliamentary website Parliament.uk which has recently launched a video game where you get to be an MP for Week, as part of their work with schools to support young people’s understanding of Parliament and democracy. Play it for yourself HERE
There’s an interesting post on video games HERE summarising recent political developments relevant to the sector.
Film
2009 production and box office figures from the UKFC show that the industry is weathering the recession well, with record inward investment, record box office, and UK indie films at their most popular in cinemas for a decade. On the downside there has been small drop in independent UK production and spend, and there are ongoing challenges in raising credit for film projects, especially through bank loans. More details in the full reports HERE.
CC Skills
Congratulations to Tom Berwick. He has been appointed as the new Chief Executive of Enterprise UK by Chairman and Dragon (of the Den) Peter Jones CBE. Tom leaves his current post as Chief Executive of Creative & Cultural Skills at the end of March more HERE
Broadband
We have release figures which show that the Government’s proposed broadband tax will hit 3.2 million people who do not have an internet connection and have no interest in having one, more HERE.
News speeds and prices for superfast broadband from BT more for its superfast broadband service HERE.
Awards Season Round Up
A slightly controversial night for Ricky Gervais in an otherwise quiet night for the Brits at the Golden Globes HERE. Congratulations to the BAFTA nominees, especially An Education, neck and neck with Avatar with eight nominations a piece, full list HERE. Further congratulations to the Brits nominees HERE, and nominees and winners at the National Television Awards, HERE where Jedward stole the show, HERE.
Arts and Heritage
Arts Council
Arts Council England have launched Achieving great art for everyone – a consultation on future priorities for the arts.   The results of the consultation will inform a ten-year strategic framework and the Arts Council’s future investment decisions, so get contributing, moreHERE
Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad
It’s been going since 2008 apparently. Did you know that? More HERE.
Heritage
The Historic Houses Association have launched their policy proposals for 2010 onward, titled ‘Inspirational Places – the value of Britain’s historic houses’ more HERE.
Libraries
Good news as interim results from an independent review of Northumberland’s library service show that the closure of six libraries in the county can be put on hold while further talks are held   with communities, with the aim of developing new ways of working. More HERE. Shows what can happen when the MLA gets in on the ground floor.
In Parliament
Prime Minister’s Questions
Excitement this week, as a question was posed to Gordon about rural broadband HERE.
Oral Questions
Oral questions took place on Monday covering everything from the 2018 World Cup bid to product placement HERE
10 Minute Rule Bill
Tom Watson introduced a 10 Minute Rule Bill on Digital Archiving, and got into trouble with the Deputy Speaker for grandstanding on the Digital Economy Bill HERE.
House of Commons
Video recordings bill received royal assent in the Commons today HERE.
Parliamentary Questions
34 external consultants working at the DCMS HERE
Still no indication from the DCMS of how many jobs the Government’s flagship Future Jobs Fund has created HERE
1400 responses to the Government’s consultation on product placement HERE
Over £500 million on free television licenses HERE
The criteria set out for community radio stations to receive a licence HERE
Government spending through the Community Radio Fund HERE
Implementation of the Legal Deposit Libraries Act HERE
Lords
The Video Recordings Bill made its way through the Lords HERE
EDMs
EDM 642 – National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts Big Green Challenge Awards HERE
EDM 617 – Access to Government services via the internet HERE
On the blog
Ed’s chief of staff Helen and Fun Inc author Tom Chatfield discuss whether the high barriers to entry explain why video games aren’t taken seriously by the wider cultural world, and Tom suggests where to start, HERE . An online network for independent filmmakers has a discussion about internships, unpaid / low paid work, and the minimum wage, something which is a live issue across the cultural and creative industries HERE
And Finally
Something to cheer Obama up following this week’s loss of Ted Kennedy’s seat to Republican Scott Brown: Obama the musical has opened in Germany. More HERE
Where we’ve been and who we’ve seen
Arts Council, Ofcom, Digital Radio surgery, Nations and Regions Media conference, Arts and Humanities Research Council, GLA, Wallace Collection, Westminster eForum on video games, Edelman, Mediawatch, digital entrepreneurs at Bootlaw, Moctezuma at the British Museum, Northampton School for Girls (specialist music school), Northampton Music Service Oxford Media Convention, Modern Art Oxford.
Ed Vaizey
Shadow Arts Minister
Jeremy Hunt
Shadow Culture Secretary

News Summary: January 21st 2010

January 21st, 2010 - 

Further to our wonderings (hither forth ‘sure-minded predictions’) yesterday about whether the New York Times is to install an online paywall, the NYTimes.com has today gone official:

‘Starting in early 2011, visitors to NYTimes.com will get a certain number of articles free every month before being asked to pay a flat fee for unlimited access. Subscribers to the newspaper’s print edition will receive full access to the site.’ More in the New York Times HERE and Guardian HERE.

We can only congratulate Arts Council England for its ambition to go ‘politician-proof’. ACE has this week published Achieving Great Art for Everyone, a consultation paper putting forward its priorities for the next ten years. The arts sector is being asked to voice its own views on the plans, which will be taken into account by ACE, before a final strategy framework is published later in 2010, after the general election. Chief Exec Andy Davey said:

‘What we’ve put up is something to be shot down or talked about… We want lots of discussion about it. That takes place over three months, we absorb it and, when there’s a new government, we’ll come back with what people have said and we’ll say what we think [which] we’ll then convert into a framework for the next investment strategy and beyond… If you look at companies in the commercial world who have done well, they’ve thought about ten years ahead and they’ve stuck to it through thick and thin… We in the arts need to think a bit like that. I think we’re capable of doing it, because artists do tend to think long term and I think we need to acknowledge that…’ Davey added that the ten-year plan was intended to be ‘politician-proof so that it doesn’t really matter what the political climate is, we’re clear what we want to do in the arts’. More HERE.

BSkyB will learn today whether it will be forced to sell its controversial stake in ITV. In the fourth ruling since Sky acquired the shareholding in 2006, the Court of Appeal will decide whether to uphold previous orders for Sky to reduce its stake from 17.9% to less than 7.5%. Although it’s thought Sky is likely to appeal if the decision once more goes against it, there is no guarantee that Supreme Court – the only court left for it to apply to – would hear the case.

Sky has been fighting to hang on to the stake since the Competition Commission ruled in 2007 that the acquisition ‘restricts competition’ and ‘may be expected to operate against the public interest’. Sky had argued that the stake was a passive investment and offered to withhold using their voting power. M  ore in the Guardian HERE and Business Week HERE.

In the context of the BBC’s strategy review, chief operating officer, Caroline Thomson, is expected to tell the Oxford Media Convention today that the BBC’s ‘raison d’être is providing programmes and content of real value and quality to licence fee payers, and we must never forget this… we will also explore the potential for spending an even higher proportion of the licence fee on quality content’. More HERE.

Mark Thompson has previously said we should expect out of the review ‘reductions in some kinds of programmes and content’, but speculation that this might mean merging BBCs Two and Four and/ or scrapping BBC Three has been dampened today by reports that, whilst mergers were considered, the corporation is to keep the main television channel structure. More HERE.

Alcohol companies stand accused of ‘cynically manipulating advertising rules’ in order to target under-age drinkers. A report published in the British Medical Journal results from the examination of documents such as alcohol client briefs to agencies, market research reports and media schedules and claims that they show market research date on 15 and 16 year-olds; references to the need to recruit new drinkers; and attempt to push brands as necessary for social success or masculinity – tactics banned in the advertising code.

Alcohol industry body, the Portman Group, has responded that despite having ‘trawled through thousands of pages of internal company marketing documents on behalf of the Health Committee, [there has been a failure] to find any evidence of actual malpractice…’

UK advertiser’s body ISBA, concludes the report ‘deliberately distorts the facts to support [an] agenda… [it fails] to identify a single case of malpractice, which is due to the efficient system of self-regulation within the companies to which [it] refers’. More in the Guardian HERE; Independent HERE and Telegraph HERE.

News Summary: January 18th 2009

January 18th, 2010 - 

Ofcom’s pay-TV review – the final statement from which is due to be published in March – has set rolling predictions that the ‘cost of TV sport set to tumble’. More in the Guardian HERE; Independent HERE and Telegraph HERE.

Google is making the headlines again, this week in response to an action lodged by German news publishers regarding copyright. Germany‘s justice minister has also joined the debate, complaining that the firm is becoming ‘a giant monopoly, similar to Microsoft’. More HERE.

Last week’s big all-change of radio talent - Chris Evans, the new Terry; Simon Mayo the new Chris; Richard Bacon the new Simon… – is under review HERE, whilst television’s Simon vs. Simon is analysed HERE.

The National Youth Jazz Orchestra is facing bankruptcy. Its plight has emerged after the cancellation of this year’s Festival of British Youth Orchestras because of a shortfall of £50,000. The orchestra’s chairman estimates that he needs to raise £105,000 by April to secure the band’s survival:

‘If we fail to raise the money we need, one of two things would happen. Either the NYJO would have to fold more or less instantly, or it might limp along for a bit but still eventually fold. If we don’t raise it, it’s a tragedy: a national cultural jewel down the tubes.’ More HERE.

And finally… ‘You ever heard of this amazing Stravinsky bloke?’

The Roundhouse – famous Camden-cool nurturer of young music and performance talent – looks set to make in-roads in the struggle to get kids into classical. A new series called ‘Reverb at Roundhouse’ features everything from Beethoven to cutting-edge new works, bringing classical music into a venue that has a devoted following among young fans of only the coolest rock and pop gigs. Roundhouse’s Creative Director reports the kids have been ‘absolutely blown away’, asking ‘You ever heard of this amazing Stravinsky bloke?’ More in the Independent HERE and FT HERE.

News Summary: 15th January 2010

January 15th, 2010 - 

Google may have pledged to close Google.cn if censorship is not lifted, but the Chinese authorities don’t seem remotely moved to change. The State Council Information Office has put out a statement filling half a page in the People’s Daily – the official mouthpiece of the Communist Party – signalling a stance that its 360 million internet users will simply have to manage without the search engine. It said:

‘Our country is at a crucial stage of reform and development and this is a period of marked social conflicts. Properly guiding internet opinion is a major measure for protecting internet information security.’ More in the Independent HERE; Times HERE; and Telegraph HERE.

Human rights activists tell of their phished gmail accounts and malware infected computers HERE. Cyber attacks aimed at extracting secret information from defence contractors HERE.

Local media is under the spotlight, with concern expressed about the market impact of local authority publications on commercial regional and local press. A question being asked quite pressingly is why the Government is refusing to say whether or not it will ask the Office of Fair Trading to investigate the competitive impact of council-run newspapers. More HERE.

Online media sees Mecom, the UK-based European newspaper group, set to unveil their strategy on paid-for digital content. CEO David Montgomery has said:

‘The crisis is not to do with print or newspapers, it [has been] a crisis of advertising’, he said, adding that circulation and subscriptions at Mecom had stayed relatively solid throughout the downturn. ‘Advertising [decline] is now clearly moderating. People who have written off newspapers have clearly done so far too soon.’ More in the Guardian HERE and in the FT HERE.

Analysis of the decline of Waterstones is to be found in Guardian Books HERE and HERE, and of the firm’s plans to regroup and succeed as a ‘specialist chain relevant in a Google world’ in the Times HERE.

A new collection of Van Gogh’s letters is thought to reveal the depth of his personal plight and the true influence of madness on his art. All pretty depressing stuff really: His achievement was not to conquer illness, but to drag something out of its isolating darkness.’ In his own words: ‘… every time I try to reason with myself… a terrible horror and terror seizes me’. More HERE.

And finally… Disney , you rebels! In the context of 15 years since the first Toy Story – and 10 successive computer animated Pixar films receiving global critical acclaim and box office hit after hit since – Disney is bucking the world’s obsession with CGI with its latest cartoon to be painstakingly hand-drawn throughout. More HERE.