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.

Weekend News Summary 27th-28th February 2010

March 1st, 2010 - 

Education

An influential group of leading academics and cultural figures has issued a stark warning that they fear for the future of the arts and humanities in British universities. A letter to the Observer (see HERE) signed by the directors of major arts institutions and a number of university vice-chancellors, claims that funding cuts and a decision to focus on the sciences have left subjects such as philosophy, literature, history, languages and art facing “worrying times”. Without urgent action the country’s intellectual heritage is in danger of being diminished, they conclude, and, with reference to Labour’s decision to run tertiary education from the Business department:

“There is more to citizenship than business and skills… People’s complexity comes from their language, identities, histories, faiths and cultures.” More in The Observer HERE and HERE.

Broadcasting

BBC chiefs effectively wrote off £150m of licence-payers’ money spent on an online education service, BBC Jam, after it was axed, and officials decided efforts to recoup the cash by selling off the material “wasn’t worth the candle” reports The Independent on Sunday HERE.

It has also emerged that leaked proposals by Mark Thompson to axe the digital radio station 6Music have set the BBC’s director-general on a collision course with the BBC Trust. Two weeks ago, the trust published a report into 6Music which concluded the music station was “well liked by its listeners” and its audience had “grown faster than any other BBC digital radio-only service”. It emerged last week that Thompson’s proposals, to be published next month, recommend closing the station down. Other proposals include shutting the Asian Network, slashing the website’s staff by 25 per cent, selling off magazines such as Radio Times and Top Gear and capping sports rights at 8 per cent of budget, or £300m. The news that 6Music is in danger has met with vocal opposition, despite an audience of fewer than 700,000, according to the latest Rajar figures. More in The Observer HERE, HERE and HERE; Independent on Sunday HERE and HERE; FT HERE.

This Wednesday’s full-year results presentation from ITV will be the platform for Archie Norman (Adam Crozier’s start date is yet to be confirmed) to present his plan for the broadcaster’s future – including a roadmap away from the Michael Grade era. The results will be far from woeful; analysts predict pre-tax profits doubling from £34.7m to around £67m-£88m. Numis Securities has forecast a pre-tax profit of around £75m based on the belief that advertising recovered dramatically in the last few months of 2009. The Sunday Times HERE; Telegraph HERE.

Funding

A host of internationally flavoured arts events in London in the coming months are being supported by companies that intend to use cultural links to support their business interests in emerging markets. HSBC, which promotes itself as the bank that best appreciates the world’s diversity, is emphasising that message by sponsoring this summer’s Brazil festival on the South Bank, about which we’ve blogged HERE. Marah Winn-Moon, HSBC’s head of cultural sponsorship, said:

“It is a great opportunity to bring clients in with a cultural hook, and then to start talking to them about doing business in those countries too”.

Overseas companies are also exploiting London’s vibrant arts scene to promote their business in an international context. Nigeria’s Guaranty Trust became the first African corporation to support art in Britain when it sponsored Tate Britain’s current exhibition of paintings by Chris Ofili, a painter of Nigerian heritage. The bank also sponsors the next installation at Trafalgar Square’s Fourth Plinth, the British-Nigerian artist Yinka Shonibare’s “Nelson’s Ship in a Bottle”, a reproduction of HMS Victory bedecked with sails decorated with African patterns. The work will be unveiled on May 24. Segun Agbaje, the bank’s deputy chief executive officer, said that arts sponsorship was an opportunity:

“… to give people another perspective on Africa, to talk about its heritage instead of droughts all the time”. More in The FT HERE.

Theatre

Sir David Hare, an associate director of the National Theatre, has said theatre lags behind other creative art forms, such as the novel, when it came to women and equality of expression. Theatres should realise that women’s writing for the theatre had reached a “tipping point”, he says:

“I don’t think the repertory of most theatres at the moment is reflecting what seems to be happening in terms of the most interesting new theatre…We would hope to see management of theatres reflecting where we think the creativity in playwriting is coming from… There’s no doubt that the structure of the theatre is plainly male… The rough and tumble of the theatre is like politics to a degree – it’s a macho business.” More in The Telegraph HERE.

Art

Some of the world’s most important paintings may be lost to the nation because there are no funds available to keep them here following the purchase of two works by Titian for £100m. The latest artwork poised to join the exodus of masterpieces is St John the Evangelist by the Italian Old Master Domenichino. Despite being in the UK for the past 100 years, the painting is likely to leave the country. Professor David Ekserdijian, of the Government’s Reviewing Committee has said:

“It is the best work by the artist remaining in private hands and its departure from the UK would be lamentable.”

Works to be lost from the country include:

Raphael’s Head of a Muse The “exquisite” drawing from 1510 – a preparation for a commission by Pope Julius II – looks likely to be on its way to America after being bought for a record £29.2m, even though “every possible effort should be made to raise enough money to keep it in the country”.

Turner’s Pope’s Villa at Twickenham One of Turner’s most important works is already in America after an export ban last year failed to find any institutions willing or able to pay the £5.4m the 1808 painting was worth.

Domenichino’s St John the Evangelist It will be “lamentable” if this £9.2m work from 1621-29 left the country after more than 100 years, according to the Reviewing Committee. Lamentable, but likely.

Works saved include:

Titian’s Diana and Actaeon A six-month campaign persuaded the public, the Scottish government and the Heritage Lottery Fund to part with £50m to buy the Old Master’s work from the Duke of Sutherland last year. Fundraising is due to start shortly to raise the same sum for the companion painting, Diana and Callisto, by 2012. Both were created between 1556 and 1559.

Turner’s Blue Rigi One of the finest watercolours by one of Britain’s greatest painters, an 1842 view of a Swiss mountain, was saved in 2007 after the Tate raised £4.95m. More in The Independent on Sunday HERE.

Banksy’s undoubted knack for exploiting the feverish interest his anonymity provokes has certainly created a lot of hype around the documentary Exit. The point is, says Andrew Johnson in The Independent on Sunday HERE, it isn’t really about him. It’s more about the creation of another street artist, Mr Brainwash, and an exposé of the art market and “suckers” with too much money who want to be part of the latest thing.

Tech

In August 2009, it was hard to move around Beijing without seeing an advert for Google. China was awash with the logo of a company whose motto is “Don’t Be Evil”, and the scale of the investment was a palpable endorsement of China’s vital importance to the economics of any global company. Skip forward to January this year, and an official blogpost announced summarily that the censored results that China demanded from Google were no longer compatible with the company’s philosophy. Off the record, employees said the company would pull out of China imminently.

So did the search giant really decide to eschew profits in favour of a defence of free speech? Or did it realise it would never be the biggest search engine in China and simply cut its losses? The question that matters is simple: what does Google stand for? More in The Telegraph HERE. And the FT asks, having acquired power over those it freed, is Google now a monopoly HERE and how ethically is its power used HERE.

In the week when three Google execs have been convicted and awarded six-month suspended sentences for allowing a clip of an autistic boy being bullied to play on Google Video (see more HERE), The Observer asks HERE, When anyone can have their say, what use is the stuff that comes out the other end? What can be done with it, and who is going to be in charge of quality control when things go wrong? And Microsoft has attacked ‘aggressive’ Google, as covered in The Sunday Telegraph HERE.

Opera

The people of Thurrock are being promised a piece of Covent Garden, complete with the sparkling glamour of its greatest operatic divas and prima ballerinas. On Tuesday, the Royal Opera House will officially take over the centre of an empty 14-acre site near the Thames in Essex. Tony Hall, Royal Opera’s chief executive has said:

“I love the fact Covent Garden is going to do something in a place that is half an hour away from London by train, but could be miles and miles away in every other way… It is a place that is relatively deprived, for the south-east, and that has a history of manufacturing that makes it the right place for us.” More in The Observer HERE.

Design
The Independent on Sunday has picked up two top honours in the prestigious Best of News Design awards. Organised by the Society for News Design, the professional organisation for the world’s graphic designers who work in the industry, the awards recognise the best from around the world in newspaper production. More in The Independent on Sunday HERE.

News Summary: 23rd February 2010

February 23rd, 2010 - 

Art

Tate Britain’s important retrospective of Henry Moore’s work, opens today to reveal, say curators, his demons; that this is a man much darker, edgier and more complex than has been realised hitherto. It also reveals an unexpected twist to Moore’s career pattern; he is unusual in that even when his best work was behind him, in every subsequent decade he continued to make individual pieces of sculpture as original and powerful as any he had done; The “five-to-10 good years” phenomenon, appears not quite to apply, as noted in The Telegraph HERE. More in The Guardian HERE; Independent HERE; and Times HERE.

Literature

Michael Morpurgo, the former children’s laureate, is spearheading a writing award for children that launches today. The award is a reincarnation of the much-loved WH Smith’s Young Writers’ competition, which more than a million children entered until it was discontinued 20 years ago. Previous winners included the biographer Hermione Lee, the playwright Neil Bartlett and the actresses Helena Bonham Carter and Kate Beckinsale, who won twice, for poetry and a short story.

Morpurgo said that the new award was aimed at children whose parents “do not go to literary festivals” and offers them a creative antidote to the culture of testing prevalent in schools:

“I know this sounds just like any other campaign, but it’s not… It’s about saying that children matter on a national scale. They make art and poetry just like anybody else does.” More in The Times HERE.

Advertising

In response to Ofcom’s ruling that the Curry’s sponsorship of The Simpsons on Sky1 breached broadcasting regulations, Sky has said it had sought Ofcom’s informal guidance on the campaign and was of the view that “Ofcom had confirmed the credits were compliant”. Ofcom has rejected Sky’s response, issuing a note to broadcasters reminding them that:

“Ofcom does not accept Sky’s view that, in advance of transmission, Ofcom had ‘confirmed that the credits were compliant’… Ofcom is a post-transmission regulator and has always made clear to its licensees that it does not offer pre-transmission clearance or compliance approval… Ofcom does not and cannot clear material prior to broadcast… Any [pre-broadcast] advice is given on the strict understanding that it will not affect Ofcom’s discretion to judge cases and complaints after transmission and will not affect the exercise of Ofcom’s regulatory responsibilities. More in The Guardian HERE.

Theatre

High praise indeed for the British theatre from the theatre editor of Time Out New York who writes of how the excitement over the transfer to Broadway from the West End of Enron, is mitigated by the shame that no one stateside had thought of it first. He argues “American artistic directors are shockingly unimaginative.” More in the Guardian HERE.

Librarians

As Marilyn Johnson explains in This Book is Overdue!: How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All HERE, a new generation of young, hip and occasionally tattooed librarians, calling themselves “guybrarians”, “cybrarians” and “information specialists”, and to be found blogging at sites like The Free Range Librarian HERE and The Lipstick Librarian HERE. Who else is going to help us formulate the questions Google doesn’t understand, or show non-English speakers how to apply for jobs online, or sympathize with your need to research the ancient origins of cockfighting? There’s a great Salon article HERE, finding answers to questions such as Aren’t libraries and librarians obsolete in the age of Google?/ What does a librarian look like today?/ and, perhaps most interestingly of all; is the library the last place, other than your home, where information comes free of charge and you don’t have to be ‘on guard’ against the big sell?

Journalism

The Pulitzer committee have decided that the National Enquirer will be eligible to be considered for their investigative reporting and national news reporting awards. The magazine’s executive editor, Barry Levine, who just a few days previously had been telling Pulitzer committee-members that they needed “to get their heads out of the sand”, is jubilant:

“That persistence, that old-fashioned shoe-leather reporting that we exhibited on [the John Edwards affair] story, at the end of the day, is what the Pulitzer committee recognised”

Washington politics blogger, Emily Miller led a grassroots campaign to lobby the Pulitzer committee and says:

“The National Enquirer is a supermarket tabloid, but the time has come for the media elite to admit that it has an excellent investigative reporting team, which broke the biggest political scandal of 2009.”

The Guardian notes that some serious caveats are in order HERE; and a Guardian journalist tells of how the Statesman:

“… shaped my journalistic ambitions. It teaches one to be cynical (yup), sarcastic (tick), and to believe that anyone who is a celebrity is definitely an idiot and probably full-on doolally” HERE.

Weekly email: 28/01/2010

February 2nd, 2010 - 

Here’s this week’s news…

 

Tory Stuff

Ed spoke this week on cultural education at the Yehudi Menuhin school. He warned that: ‘We are losing sight of the key aims of cultural education in a blizzard of initiatives. What I would like to do is bring some coherence, stability and long-term strategy to the sector.

 

I want to be able to answer easily questions like: can my child learn a musical instrument, learn art, learn to dance, regardless of my income; if my child is talented, can I guarantee that they will be able to sustain their talent; will my child leave school with a solid cultural education, and therefore feel comfortable in engaging in the arts in all its forms?

 

In short, we need strategy and coherence from the centre, so that the considerable funds that are spent on music and dance education – more than £95 million annually – are spent efficiently and effectively.’ Full speech HERE. We are very interested to hear your contributions, so please do post them in the comments section, identifying who you are and which organisation you are from. There is a nice comment about the speech on LinkedIn HERE.

Jeremy is on Facebook, add him as a friend HERE We are resisting all obvious jokes

Creative Industries

Digital Economy Bill Day 5

Clauses 10 -18 were considered, full transcript on Hansard HERE A sixth day is scheduled for 3rd February. With discussions of the eagerly anticipated Clause 17 starting HERE Lord Howard spoke for our side, and pointed out HERE that the Government haven’t said what they want this power for, which makes it rather difficult for us to decide whether to support it or not. He also expressed our serious concerns about broad nature of the power and the use of a super affirmative resolution (that’s a super duper SI) and said that in its current form, we don’t support it. We would like to see the Government come back narrower definition of the power, and continue to discuss this with them.

Online Piracy

At the Oxford Media Convention, Stephen Timms, the ‘Digital Britain’ Minister, criticised rights holders for not moving fast enough to bring new business models to market. He said: ‘The space the legislation provides to develop those models will be important. But rights holders must get a move on. Legislation is not the whole solution to the problems. Rights holders need to develop new ways to make content available to people in formats that they want and at a fair price – reducing the incentive to break the law. Progress has been much too slow. We also need initiatives to educate people about why creativity deserves to be fairly rewarded.’ Er, we agree, more HERE

ITV

ITV have appointed Adam Crozier, the head of Royal Mail and former boss of the FA as its new chief executive. More HERE congratulations all round.

Congratulations to ITV and Sony Pictures TV, as analysis suggests Who Wants to Be A Millionaire? A TV format created in the UK is the most popular gameshow in the world more HERE.

BSkyB

Continue their downturn-defying financial performance: For the six months to the end of December, they have reported a revenue rise of 10% year on year to £2.9 billion. More HERE.

Video Games

The House of Lords Communications Committee has effectively backed TIGA’s campaign for Games Tax Relief in their report into The British Film and Television Industries published this week. The report says: “We recognise the claims of the videogames industry for support in the face of foreign government-subsidised competition, and recommend that the Government consider providing tax incentives for videogames production.” More HERE.

Speaking at the Westminster eForum on video games Ian Livingstone criticised the national news media’s tendency to stir up more panic surrounding violent content more

HERE Ed also spoke at this event, more HERE.

TIGA have said it is ludicrous to suggest that playing video games was responsible for an apparent increase in cases of rickets more HERE and HERE.

Technology

Derek Wyatt MP has created a ‘My MP’ App for the iPhone, yes really, a Beta version is available HERE

Local News

The CEO Trinity Mirror’s CEO called for the abolition of council newspapers at the Oxford Media Convention last week, HERE. Meanwhile, the Audit Commission wrote to Stephen Timms last week with their conclusions from research into this area. They say that ‘the money being spent by councils is not unreasonable, though they should always consider whether it provides good value. Few council publications are published sufficiently frequently to be viable media for most local advertising.’ The letter and the appendix are published HERE.

Newspapers

Congratulations to the Guardian.co.uk which has attracted nearly 37m users and breaks the record for a UK newspaper website according to their latest ABC stats. We don’t know where we’d be without it, frankly. More HERE.

Music

Congratulations to UK indie label XL, part of the Beggars group, on reaching a number 1 in the US album chart with Vampire Weekend’s second album Contra, more HERE.

iPad

Bringer of the eBooks revolution, possible saviour of the newspaper business, or an oversized iPhone? Views on this, and an explanation of the term ‘goldilocks device’ HERE

Arts and Heritage

Culture and Education

Ofsted have published a report into culture and education: ‘Learning: Creative approaches that raise standards’ more HERE which recognises the work of Creative Partnerships and the impact of creative learning practices in schools in improving standards and pupils’ personal development.

Creativity, Culture and Education have welcomed Ofsted’s recognition that using arts and culture across in learning raise attainment levels, improve attendance and increase pupil motivation  – particularly for schools in challenging circumstances, more HERE

New Deal of the Mind

£1.45 million announced for 223 jobs, 167 of which will be arts jobs across 14 London boroughs in a project run by new Deal of the Mind. There include design assistants, marketing and press assistants and fundraisers at organisations including The British Library, the Lyric Hammersmith, the Young Vic and the Royal Court, more HERE

Libraries

A new research report conducted by the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA) highlights the crucial role public libraries play in supporting the delivery of the national digital priorities set out by the Government and Digital Inclusion Champion, Martha Lane Fox. More HERE and HERE.

Meanwhile, a commission to examine the future of school library provision in England is being launched by the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA) and the National Literacy Trust (NLT) it will be chaired by Estelle Morris, more HERE

New funding opportunity for libraries to support digital inclusion has been announced in December’s Smarter Government report. Library services have their chance to bid for new funding, thanks to a new £30 million government investment in UK online centres. More information about the funding, different models, criteria and obligations HERE.

The Charted Institute of Library and Information Professionals has responded to the Government’s (latest) libraries review, HERE.

Heritage

English Heritage is suggesting that refurbishing old school buildings is often the best use of resources and the most sustainable way of modernising them and have published two new papers that highlight the value and potential of older schools. We think this is an interesting idea, well worth exploring, more HERE and HERE.

New grants from HLF have just been announced, Including a £3m grant to the Giant’s Causeway World Heritage Site in Northern Ireland and £3.7m for Liverpool’s pioneering Florence Institute for Boys, more HERE.

Theatre

Great news for theatre: total box office receipts for 2009 were up to £504,765,690; marking the seventh record-breaking year in a row. What’s more, while in previous years it has been musicals that have driven increases in box office takings, in 2009 the rise was almost entirely accounted for by the performance of drama at the box office. Led by the success of shows such as War Horse, Waiting for Godot and Calendar Girls, plays were 26% up on 2008 levels, while opera, dance and entertainments were up 7%. Musicals were 2% down over the year more. Congratulations all round, more HERE.

In Parliament

Parliamentary Questions

Just 77% of the Scottish population can currently access DAB HERE

DCMS considering proposals from Camelot to enter the commercial market for bill payments HERE

The largest proportion of the general public view the Arts Council ‘neither favourably nor unfavourably’ HERE

Digital Economy Bill

The Digital Economy Bill has reached Clause 9 in the Committee Stage of the Lords HERE

EDMs

EDM 689 – Licensing Act 2003 HERE

EDM 671 – Publication of salaries and remuneration packages of BBC executives HERE

EDM 666 – Live Music Bill HERE

Where we’ve been and who we’ve seen

The Stephen Lawrence Centre, the RSC education team, Battersea Power station, English Heritage, Asian Music Circuit, Southbank Sinfonia Every Good Boy Deserves Favour at the National Theatre, UK Music, Enron at the Noel Coward Theatre, The Yehudi Menuhin School, the Performer Alliance APPG were everybody supported an exemption to the Licensing Act for small venues HERE, the Globe, Clore Duffield Foundation, the Sainsbury Family Charitable Trusts, Paul Hamlyn Foundation, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Foyle Foundation, Fidelity UK Foundation, Michael Van der Ham, Christopher Kane, Erdem, the London College of Fashion MA show at the V&A, Clare Delmar, Channel 4, ITV, STV, Johnson Press, Google, Yahoo, Ebay, Facebook, OFT.

 

Weekend News Summary: 30th/ 31st January 2010

February 1st, 2010 - 

Poetry

Ruth PadelOxford’s first female Professor of Poetry until a dirty-tricks scandal led her to resign only 9 days in – talks about sex, lies, poetry, and her ‘moment of lunacy’, in the The Times’ Saturday Review HERE. The Padel interview formed part of Saturday Review’s Poetry Special, which also ran pieces by The Poet Laureate, Carol Ann Duffy, on reading for Haiti and ‘the music of being human’ HERE; Christopher Reid, on his surprise Costa win for an ‘intimate expression of love and grief’ HERE; and former Laureate, Andrew Motion on disproving the contention that there is no audience for poetry; stimulating its teaching in schools and generally extending audience reach HERE. Motion talks of the success of The Poetry Archive (www.poetryarchive.org), which enjoys a regular monthly audience of a quarter of a million people, listening to about 1.25 million pages of poetry.

Theatre

The news just keeps getting better and better for the West End. Further to last week’s announcement of a record-breaking box for 2009 (see our coverage at the time HERE), Sir Cameron Mackintosh has announced his plans to use some of his £635m fortune to endow each of his seven London theatres with enough cash to ensure that their lifespans outlast his own. The lucky theatres now safely tucked under this super-sheltering wing are the Prince Edward; Prince of Wales; Novello; Queen’s; Gielgud; Wyndham’s and Noel Coward. More in The Sunday Times HERE.

Heritage

 

English Heritage received a last-minute appeal on Friday to save The Foundry – a bar, community radio station, and performance venue. The building has played a key part in the contemporary arts boom and features graffiti and murals by the likes of Banksy, Jake and Dino Chapman and Damian Hirst. Despite the protestations of the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment, developers plan to replace the building with a hotel. More HERE.

Following the bulldozing of the 1936 Art Deco Regal cinema in King’s Street, and fears that more that 20 others of Britain’s 1930’s cinemas could face a similar fate, David Trevor-Jones, chairman of the Cinema Theatre Association, has said:

‘We’re losing swathes and it’s a tragedy. We live in a world of corporations and cheap architecture, but these buildings take you to another place. They’re all about grandeur and supreme fantasy… I think cinemas are still undervalued; no town would willingly lose its Victorian theatre, but the same isn’t the case for iconic cinema buildings… They’re part of our social and cultural history, but they have no protection.’ More in the Independent on Sunday HERE.

 

Television

David Lister writes about this week’s recording of the South Bank Show Awards (which we covered at the time HERE) at which consensus set around accusing ITV of philistinism for axing The South Bank Show. ‘But if ITV now seems a lost cause on serious arts programming, I can’t say I always get a warm glow from the approach of the BBC or Channel 4’ voices The Independent HERE.

‘Godless liberals’ are beside themselves with horror as a result of an opinion poll suggesting Fox News is the most trusted news operation in America; 49% of Americans trust Fox. Great analysis of the success of ‘news-o-tainment’ in the Guardian HERE.

Rock films look set to take on TV talent shows, and what Peter Hook is calling their ‘singing prostitutes’. Ten films chronicling the lives of musicians have been released or gone into production in recent months, to include the stories of John Lennon, Ian Dury and Joe Meek so far. This week sees the release of Oil City Confidential, an account of Canvey Island pub-rockers, Dr Feelgood. The film’s director, Julien Temple, says ‘We want film to provoke questions… Why can’t we come up with this kind of passion anymore? Now it’s the blandest of the bland who reach whole new audiences on shows like the X-factor’. More in The Observer HERE.

Adam Crozier could get £15m if he successfully turns around the fortunes of ITV. He will get a basic salary just below the £800,000 of his predecessor, but his annual bonus has the potential to reach more than double that. The biggest incentive though takes the form of a parcel of shares he will be awarded on arrival, but will only be allowed to collect after two years at the helm, making 2014 and 2015 the key years in the plan. More in The Observer HERE and The Sunday Times HERE. Assessment of Crozier’s chances of success can be found in the Observer HERE and Sunday Times HERE; The option of an ITV pay-per-view in The Sunday Telegraph HERE; And The Observer cites the latest threat of an ITV break-up bid, posed by rebel shareholders HERE.

TalkTalk is to launch television and mobile services, informed not least by the rapid maturation trend in the fixed-line broadband market and the fact that TalkTalk’s rivals in the broadband market already have TV services; BT, Virgin Media and BSkyB all sell broadband and phone services in discounted bundles. TalkTalk is involved in Project Canvass, a BBC-led consortium preparing to launch an internet-connected TV set-top box before the end of the year. More in the FT Weekend HERE.

Film

Highlights include Pulp Fiction; The English Patient; Good Will Hunting; and The Queen – could it really now be the end for Miramax? The studio is credited with bringing arthouse to huge audiences, but now reports have it that it is to scrapped by Disney. Disney claims it is not closing the business entirely; it is still in possession of six unreleased films, including The Tempest, with Helen Mirren as Prospero. Co-founder Harvey Weinstein has responded by saying he and his brother would ‘love the opportunity’ to buy back the name – an amalgam of their parents, Miriam and Max. More HERE.

The first black Disney heroine is greeted as ‘an opportunity missed’ by The Observer HERE.

Digital media

We covered immediate reaction to the hyper-hyped launch of the iPad HERE. Come Saturday calm, and the latest tablet is in receipt of a positive, if somewhat muted, review in the FT Weekend, which concludes that it will find some degree of success, and help define the emerging media tablet market HERE. Elsewhere in the FT ‘charismatic returnee’ Steve Jobs is observed, to the deduction ‘if his record is anything to go by, consumers could yet find it hard to live without their iPads’ HERE. The potential trickle-down effect for apps companies is covered in The Sunday Times HERE.

With the iPad still two months away though, there remain many unanswered questions. For example, in relation to digital rights management (DRM), it is unclear whether Apple intends to add software which could render consumers unable to transfer content across devices; critics of DRM argue such restrictions prevent consumers ever really owning their books HERE. Yet might it be the case that as Apple usurp not only other major companies, but also consumer choice, their legions of fans will grow only more loyal still? Yes, says The Telegraph, which supposes Apple is taking over the world HERE, The Observer agrees, but fears this will be the realisation of an Orwellian nightmare HERE.

But can the iPad rescue newspapers from ‘oblivion’, in the words of the Guardian Editor in Chief? Absolutely not, responds The Observer HERE, citing the fact that, against industry losses of about $10bn last year, the newspaper US subscription and advertising revenue across all existing e-readers and ‘at a mighty optimistic stretch’, reached new circulation funds of only $325m a year, plus $150m in ads. The Observer is however much more optimistic about the potential of ‘a paywall nobody will notice’; which comes bundled with pay-tv packages HERE.

Media freedom

Standing against the ‘creeping’ culture of secrecy in Britain’s courts, Mr Justice Tugendhat revoked a privacy injunction obtained by John Terry, the England football captain, ruling that there were no grounds for a gagging order preventing the disclosure of an extramarital affair with a former team-mate’s girlfriend. The ‘super-injunction’ had been granted last week after Terry’s legal team used Human Rights Act legislation to argue the public had no right to know about his private life. The injunction has been criticised as the latest example of courts bringing in a backdoor privacy law at the expense of freedom of expression in the media. This weekend Lord Woolf, the former lord chief justice, said he hoped Terry’s case would discourage celebrities from making spurious attempts to gag the press. More in the Guardian HERE; Sunday Times HERE and HERE; and Telegraph HERE.

News Summary: 28th January 2010

January 28th, 2010 - 

Congratulations West End, for a £500m-mark –topping; record-breaking; recession-defying 2009!

The Society of London Theatre has announced that the total receipts for 2009 added up to £504,765,690; marking the seventh record-breaking year in a row. What’s more, while in previous years it has been musicals that have driven increases in box office takings, in 2009 the rise was almost entirely accounted for by the performance of drama at the box office. Led by the success of shows such as War Horse, Waiting for Godot and Calendar Girls, plays were 26% up on 2008 levels, while opera, dance and entertainments were up 7%. Musicals were 2% down over the year. More in The Stage HERE and the FT HERE.

So, after much, much speculation and hype, the iPad was finally presented, in all its ‘truly magical and revolutionary’ glory, by Steve Jobs yesterday. The innovation of chief interest to us has to be its e-reading capabilities and the co-launch of the iBookstore; a new way to buy books and newspapers. The New York Times was among the companies called to the stage to promote a dedicated iPad app yesterday, saying it would offer a more newspaper-like experience than anything that has been created for a smartphone and that ‘We’re pioneering the next version of digital journalism.’ Latest consideration of the saleability of digital journalism can be found in MediaGuardian HERE.

With millions of people now used to downloading apps, music and movies from its online stores, Apple now has the chance to dominate the digital books market as it has with music. John Makinson, chairman and CEO of the Penguin Group, represented publishers’ excitement (Simon & Schuster; Rupert Murdoch’s Harper Collins; and Macmillan were among those immediately committing to sell books for the iPad) thus:

‘[The iPad] represents an important step in the development of a digital audience for books. Penguin already maintains a close partnership with several digital platforms and channels, and is delighted to extend our approach with Apple. The iPad and iBookstore will, we believe, appeal to existing Penguin customers and also attract millions of new readers.’

Notably, not everyone agrees with this. A Cowen & Co analyst concluded ‘This is not an e-reader – this is a device that can be used to read books… This doesn’t change the game. At the same time, Apple is a formidable competitor and our view is that over time, Apple and Amazon will emerge as the two largest players in e-books.’ Further responses in the Guardian HERE; Independent HERE; Times HERE and Telegraph HERE.

Culture and Education

January 27th, 2010 - 

Ed spoke at the Yehudi Menuhin school today, to the members of the Music and Dance scheme, setting out our thoughts on this important area. You can read the full transcript below, comments welcome:

Music, Culture and Education speech at the Yehudi Menuhin School

27th January 2010

The Yehudi Menuhin School is a wonderful school which, since its foundation in 1964, has  offered an excellent musical and cultural education, in the widest sense.  It focuses not only on nurturing exceptional talent, but also on offering a high quality, broad based academic education.  It’s great to see that the school also works in the local community to widen access and engagement with music.

May I take this opportunity to congratulate you on securing Daniel Barenboim as your President – I was lucky enough to see him play at the South Bank a couple of years ago, and his appointment is a great illustration of your continued pre-eminence.

I want to set out today some of our preliminary ideas about music and cultural education.  We have already had a report from our music task force, and I continue to discuss policy ideas with some of the leading figures in this area, with a view to finalising our approach in time for the election.

At the outset, it seems to me that the key to providing a successful framework for music and cultural education is to know from the outset what it is that you want to achieve.

It seems to me that good cultural education should do four things:

First, it should introduce every child to the arts – to dance, music, theatre, art – in other words, our cultural world.

Second, it should give every child the chance to learn and master some parts of it for themselves – to sing, dance, paint, play an instrument, both for the sheer enjoyment and for the skill and discipline it teaches.

Third, it should help us find and nurture the exceptional talent in the next generation, who are destined to go on to be performers and artists, but also teachers and mentors.

And finally, it should play a part in transforming the lives and aspirations of those children who are struggling at home, in formal education or both.

It would be churlish not to acknowledge that the Government has tried to make a difference in this area.  But in my view, there is still much more that can be done.  And it does not involve simply more money.

The real problem, it seems to me, is that we are losing sight of the key aims of cultural education in a blizzard of initiatives.

In music and dance, we have the Assisted Instrument Purchase Scheme run by the Arts Council; the Music and Dance Scheme, In Harmony; the Standards Fund; Youth Music, the Music Manifesto and Sing Up; the Dance and Drama awards; Youth Dance England; Centres for Advanced Training (CATs).  Then there are the wider cultural programmes – Arts Awards, Arts Mark, Find Your Talent, Creative partnerships, these last two both run by Creative Culture Education (CCE).  And then of course there are literally thousands of charities working in this area as well.

I have no doubt at all that many of these initiatives are very successful.  Sing Up has been a transformative programme.  We are already hearing great things about In Harmony.  One senior figure from the music world told me that the In Harmony programme in Liverpool was the best thing in music education he had ever seen.  So what’s not to like?

Two things: first, the plethora of initiatives can be confusing, and its provision can be patchy.  Second, there is always a question about effectiveness and sustainability.

What I would like to do is bring some coherence, stability and long-term strategy to the sector.

I want to be able to answer easily questions like: can my child learn a musical instrument, learn art, learn to dance, regardless of my income; if my child is talented, can I guarantee that they will be able to sustain their talent; will my child leave school with a solid cultural education, and therefore feel comfortable in engaging in the arts in all its forms?

In short, we need strategy and coherence from the centre, so that the considerable funds that are spent on music and dance education – more than £95 million annually – are spent efficiently and effectively.

Why, for example, does Youth Music and other members of the Sing Up consortium get millions every year from DCSF to work in schools, while Youth Dance England’s schools work is funded by DCMS via the Arts Council on a three year settlement of £5.5 million?  From where I am standing, it seems the budget of each of these many schemes, and the department it is attached to, depends mostly on how influential the person lobbying for it was, and at what point during the boom years they managed to get their project signed off, and by whom.  This confusion and duplication might have been ok when times were good. Now government spending is coming under ever increasing pressure and scrutiny, it is both unacceptable and unsustainable.

The cultural education sector is increasingly diverse and at grass roots level consists of thousands of statutory and non-statutory organisations offering all kinds of engagement with all kinds of culture.  The key challenge for central government is to balance the enthusiasm and local nature of this bottom up activity with an overarching national strategy to ensure a much more coherent local offer. We don’t want to lose an initiative like the Yehudi Menhuin School or In Harmony.  But we do want to ensure that they fit into the overall strategy and play an effective part within it.

How can we do this?

Ensure is that all our spending on cultural education is brought together and made subject to a single coherent national strategy. There is a clear role for central government here to act as a co-ordinator, resource, and funding organisation for these plans and strategies. In terms of music, this can be done by an existing body such as Youth Music – there is no need to re-invent the wheel and certainly no need for a new quango.

I would expect the lead national body to work with similar national organisations. Indeed, I am open to the idea of, at a national level, merging some of the plethora of cultural education initiatives and quangos into one coherent, national, agenda-setting funding body.

This would enable us to bear down on administration costs, create a coherent national programme and streamline funding. More importantly the body could become a strong and clear voice for cultural education.  For example, I would like a national cultural education body to share and celebrate best practice. So often, something is developed in one place which is already being done in another, creating unnecessary duplication. This is not a sensible use of resources.

The big challenge I am putting to the whole cultural education world here – all of you in this room, and many more who are not, is this: I am asking you to have honest discussions about what in each of your areas really works and is worth enhancing, prioritising or replicating; and what could either done more effectively or efficiently by another organisation… or even not at all.

There are a large of number small bodies involved in the sector, and it is brilliant to see this flowering of enthusiasm. The question, however, is whether they are able to see the bigger picture, and operate within a larger framework.

The second challenge is to develop, alongside a national body, an effective local delivery mechanism which is linked to the national strategy. I would like to give local authorities the responsibility to survey, co-ordinate and provide a local database of schemes and projects in their area.  In an ideal world this information would feed into a searchable national database.

Local authorities should work with local schools and informal and non-formal providers to respond to the local need to deliver programmes, as well as to develop a strategy for co-ordination and transfer between them.

Nurturing exceptional talent, for example, is an area where it makes sense to co-ordinate at a national level, although the ways to access this should be clearly signposted locally.

Finally, I would like to emphasize my own personal commitment to taking charge and bringing coherence to this area: I passionately believe in the importance of a wide ranging and robust cultural education.  For some, the opportunities we create will help them to find and develop remarkable talent, and we need straightforward programmes which can nurture this talent for the long term.

I think it is equally important that we are honest with our children and young people: To make them aware of just how rare it is to have both the talent and drive to make a career as an artist or performer.   And to emphasize that while this dream is an admirable one; music, culture and the arts are a worthwhile pursuits even if you are not destined to be the next Yehudi Menuhin, Wayne MacGregor or Paul McCartney.

Alongside this realism, there are some other goals and ambitions we should look at:

First, the value and power of teaching. As David Cameron said recently, Conservatives would like to restore teaching to a ‘noble profession’. This is true in the cultural sector too. Whether in formal or informal settings I would like a national cultural body to nurture a better relationship between professional artists, teachers, and enthusiastic amateur participants of any age.

Staying with this point for a moment, we need to ensure that teachers are equipped to deliver what is required of them. The music and dance conservatoires train up excellent musicians and dancers, many of whom end up being full or part time teachers, but whose degrees do not actually confer Qualified Teacher Status upon them. This mis-match between the tertiary training offered, employment opportunities, and needs of the sector must be addressed.

Second, we need to better harness the effect that music, dance and culture can have on a school’s life and on developing “rounded” human beings. This could be especially beneficial in struggling schools, working in tandem with a renewed emphasis on discipline and academic attainment.

Third, we want to ensure that the transition between primary and secondary schools is better managed.

Fourth, we need to look at  developing a structure for recognising / grading attainment that is delivered in non-formal environments.  We should also be considering the need for equivalence of graded exams to GCSE/A level.

Fifth, we need ensure there is music provision for the most disadvantaged children.  For instance, there is little or no music provision in hospital schools.

Finally, and most important of all is that we remember the sheer joy a good cultural education can bring. Learning how to create and enjoy art for art’s sake, if you will. I believe this is a vital part of growing into a happy, functional citizen in adult life.

In a world where we’re going to have to increasingly put a financial price on things in the year ahead, a society which truly values people who are creative and appreciate creativity will be a better place to be.

News Summary: January 14th 2010

January 14th, 2010 - 

Google’s announcement yesterday that it would no longer censor its Chinese service was sparked by a cyber attack it believes to be aimed at political surveillance of Chinese human rights activists. China responded this morning by claiming to be resolutely opposed to hacking and itself a victim of cyber-attacks. In the statement posted on the state council information office website, cabinet spokesman Wang Chen also stubbornly reminded companies of their need to abide by internet controls, citing their ‘social responsibilities’ to ‘guide’ opinion. The remarks did not mention Google directly. More in the Guardian HERE; Independent HERE; Times HERE; Telegraph HERE and FT HERE.

In a report on public service broadcasting, published by Policy Exchange today, there are calls to abolish the BBC Trust and to privatise Channel 4. The report says the BBC has an ‘obsession’ with chasing ratings, and spends a ‘disproportionately high amount’ on pursuing the favour of the 16-35 age group. Money spent on imported US television shows and sports rights at the expense of investment in quality home-grown content also came under criticism. As for Channel 4, this should be privately owned and given an enhanced public service role, its PSB commitment to be monitored by the new Public Service Content (PSC) Trust, which would also monitor the BBC. ITV and Five should be allowed to opt out of PSB commitments completely by 2012 says the report. More in the Guardian HERE; Independent HERE; Telegraph HERE; and FT HERE.

Analysis of the relative performance in the ratings war of the BBC, ITV, Channel 4 and Five in 2009 can be found HERE.

Ruth Mackenzie, currently an adviser on cultural policy to the DCMS, is to become Director of the Cultural Olympiad. More HERE.

The late Harold Pinter is back under the spotlight as Antonia Fraser’s memoir of her life with him focuses on their marriage, but is thought to paints a revealing portrait of the dramatist too. More HERE.

Alain de Botton writes about ‘the enlightening bridge between art and work’, calling for ‘an art that can proclaim the intelligence, peculiarity, beauty and horror of the modern workplace and, not least, its extraordinary claim to be able to provide us… with the principal source of life’s meaning.’ More HERE

And finally… ‘Yes we can!’ - The Musical! A musical about Barack Obama’s presidential campaign is to premier in Berlin this weekend, to include love songs by the president to his wife Michelle and duets with Hillary Clinton. More HERE

News Summary: January 13th 2010

January 13th, 2010 - 

Google has announced it is no longer willing to censor search results on its Chinese service. The decision marks Google’s readiness to risk being thrown out of the world’s most populous internet market; after all, in order to launch Google.cn in the first place,  the company had to agree to censor ‘sensitive’ material – such as details of human rights groups and references to Tiananmen Square.

There have been significant increases in Chinese censorship over the course of the last year, and Google’s response seems to be in united front with the US Government. A State department spokesman has confirmed that ‘Google was in contact with us prior to the announcement’; an announcement which is to be followed next week by the launching of a new US technology policy to help citizens in other countries gain access to an uncensored internet. More in the Guardian HERE; Independent HERE; Times HERE; Telegraph HERE and FT HERE.

John Riley, of Sky News, has hit back against Lord Manelson’s claims that the Sun newspaper has thrown its weight behind the Conservative Party  because of a tacit agreement to legislate to protect Sky in the pay-TV sector. Lord Mandelson began this course in response to James Murdoch’s speech last year on the future of tv.

Riley said last night ‘Lord Mandelson is smart enough and experienced enough to know that there is no such link [between editorial decisions at the Sun, and Sky], but you can see why it might suit him to create a different impression…’ He attacked Mandelson for ‘question[ing] Sky’s impartiality … by trying to whip up concern about the fact that BSkyB’s largest shareholder, News Corporation, also owns some of the UK’s most widely read newspapers… At Sky News, we provide impartial and independent news… not because Ofcom tells us to but because it’s what our audience expects of us. In simple terms, it’s good business for us to be impartial.’ More HERE.

Concerns about theatre funding and the fact that the theatre economy is saddled with too much debt and over-reliant on increasingly unreliable revenue streams is blogged about HERE. And discussion of the cycling of stage actors and the lure of new generations of talent to the British stage can be found in the New York Times HERE.

And finally… Hail 2010: The Year of the Legwarmer, in response to reports that five million Brits are now attending dance clubs and classes every week.  Even the Department of Health has cottoned on and this month launches its Let’s Dance campaign, part of the Change4Life initiative to tackle obesity. Caroline Miller, of Dance UK, says the seeds for dance’s newfound popularity were sown in the mid-1990s, after their injection of National Lottery funding. More HERE

Weekly email 19-11-09

November 19th, 2009 - 

Here’s this weeks news:

See Ed’s latest LinkedIn question about the BBC and post a response, HERE. And join up to our group, post news and participate in discussions, HERE.

Digital Economy Bill

We hope you are as excited as we are for more news on the much vaunted Digital Economy Bill. We would have loved to bring you details of the bill itself, alas it’s not out yet, and we like you are waiting for Lord Mandelson’s press conference tomorrow.

Tory Stuff

Jeremy outlined the Conservative vision for the future of the National Lottery in a speech in Leeds on Monday. He unveiled a package of measures to increase the returns to the Lottery good causes by £186 million a year, including abolishing the National Lottery Commission and giving its regulatory functions to the Gambling Commission; banning all Lottery Distributors from having press, public relations and communications departments; introducing a cap of 5% on administration costs. Most importantly we will return the National Lottery to its original good causes of sport, arts, heritage and charities, significantly increasing the returns to arts and heritage.

Jeremy said: “Last year, the 7 main distributors spent £120m on admin costs – a staggering 11.4% of the £1.05bn they distributed. That is grotesque when charities, community groups and voluntary organisations are under such intense scrutiny from those very same lottery distributorsto get every penny possible out of administration and into delivery.” More HERE full speech HERE

Speaking at the LSE this week, Jeremy talked about our plans to help the private sector roll out broadband across the country and our opposition to the unfair broadband tax HERE.

A Bon Jovi quoting (Plan your future but do it in pencil) Jeremy also spoke at the Manchester Media Festival today, setting out our plans to transform the current bleak outlook for media, more HERE and HERE and further faint praise from Roy Greenslade HERE Jeremy is worth watching, according to the Daily Telegraph HERE. We agree, obviously.

Ed spoke at the NextGen09 conference on broadband, dark fibre and how our localism agenda will help local governments to get their area online. More HERE

Ed gave an interview to the Standard HERE

Creative Industries

Top-slicing

The Government’s plans for top-slicing are now as confusing as all their other plans. The Times reported that the BBC has seen off the plan HERE, while the ‘Government’ (in the shape of DCMS) reaffirmed to the FT that the proposals would go ahead (after the election) HERE.  The DCMS has issued a response to consultation on IFNCs indicating top-slicing will be delayed until 2012, HERE. Hilariously, they hid it away on their website HERE

Video Games

Tom Watson MP has been interviewed by Critical Gamer, where he talks about the games he likes, his Gamers’ Voice campaign, and Keith Vaz, more HERE

Modern Warfare 2 sales reach record levels, pulling in $310 million in the US and UK alone HERE outselling the entire music and video markets combined, although as commentators have pointed out, high earnings are generated by the high price of games on average (£37.85 was the average UK price for MW2) as opposed to around £8 for CDs and £10 for DVDs more has been posted on our LinkedIn group news page, HERE

It’s a landmark game: ‘a first-person shooter that plays as a tragedy, not a power fantasy’ according to this review in influential on-line journal Slate HERE

Film

The UK Film Council launched a public consultation on proposals to merge its Premiere, New Cinema and Development funds to create a £15million Film Production Fund with an emphasis on first and second time directors, as part of a major overhaul of the organisation following a £25million budget cut to help fund the Olympics. A new Innovation Fund will promote new business models and aims to ensure UK film’s transition into the digital age, more HERE

Please note the word “cut”, as in a “cut imposed by Labour”.

Architecture

John Sorrell the outgoing CABE chair singles out Asda and Tesco in an impassioned speech calling for high architectural standards in midst of recession. In his valedictory speech he hit out at the ‘poor’ quality of supermarket development, singling out planning proposals by both Asda and Tesco in Barnet and proposals for a Tesco in St Helens in Merseyside ‘for its lousy public space’. He called on supermarkets ‘to come up with an alternative development model’ more HERE . We are big fans of John, which is why we are bigging up his speech.

Broadband

Conservative-run Swindon Council is set to become the first town in the UK to offer completely free wi-fi access. In the first project of its kind it will provide a wireless network for business, residents and visitors to the borough. We wholeheartedly welcome this ground -breaking initiative more HERE

Meanwhile, Nordicity are working on a Digital Britain/Technology Strategy Board feasibility study to deliver high speed broadband to remote and rural communities around Lancashire using ‘white space’ technologies. This week Ofcom published a discussion document to explore the potential of this new technology to wirelessly link up different devices and offer enhanced broadband access in rural areas. It works by searching for unoccupied radio waves called white spaces between TV channels to transmit and receive wireless signals. HERE

BBC

The BBC Trust think Thought for the Day is fine as it is, more HERE

Meanwhile Jeremy talked about the future of the BBC, including salaries and bureaucratic waste in an interview in The Sunday Times HERE . This follows the revelations last week that 46 BBC managers receive salaries higher than that of the Prime Minister.

The Times reports today that the BBC will reveal the salaries that it pays to its star presenters for the first time, but will still withhold their names. The corporation will disclose in January that it pays a small group of its ‘top talent’ including presenters such as Jonathan Ross and Graham Norton, a total of more than £70 million a year. More HERE. We think this is a further step in the right direction, but still not far enough.

Jeremy has also completely dismisses the suggestion that any “deal” has been done with Rupert Murdoch, reminding Lord Mandelson that Labour had the support of the Sun at the last three general elections HERE

Lord Sugar doesn’t seem to have the best grasp of this politics lark as he suggests that Jeremy has bullied the BBC HERE.

ITV

The Board of ITV has announced the appointment of Archie Norman as Non Executive Chairman. He will take up the role in January 2010, when Michael Grade, Executive Chairman, stands down from the company and John Cresswell will become Interim Chief Executive. We think this is great news (obviously – Archie used to be a Tory MP) more HERE No doubt Ben Bradshaw would veto the appointment if he could.

Local Television

United for Local Television (ULTV) a coalition of local TV campaigners has attacked Ofcom’s proposal to appoint a band manager to control spectrum suitable for local TV, sending an open letter to chair Collette Bowman. ‘It is undeniable that asking prospective local TV service providers to attempt to negotiate spectrum access with an unregulated dominant band manager is the equivalent of asking David to wear a straightjacket to fight Goliath.’ More HERE

Google Books

Google Books is forced to ease its ironclad hold on copyright-protected books, HERE.

Listed Events

David Davies has published his review of free to air listed events, more HERE and the full report HERE and Government consultation on this here HERE

Arts and Heritage

Visual Art

Art Historian, former director of the National Gallery and current Chief Executive of the Royal Academy of Arts has given this year’s Colin Matthew Memorial Lecture for the Public Understanding of History at Gresham College. It’s on the ‘The Institutionalisation of Art In Early Victorian England’ and you can read it HERE

The Holocaust (Stolen Art) Restitution Act, supported by the Shadow DCMS team, which allows museums to return art stolen during the World Wars comes into effect, HERE.

Charles Saatchi advises against becoming an artist, HERE.

More BoJo

For specific news on arts and culture in London and monthly updates on what the Mayor is doing in this area sign up here: HERE

Boris Johnson presented the Marsh Award for Public Sculpture at the Whitechapel Gallery this week HERE. This year’s award is shared between three new works and one restoration project. The main winner, Dream, is the creation of a Catalan artist Jaume Plensa and is constructed on the site of the disused Sutton Manor Colliery at St Helens, commissioned by former miners and St Helens Council as part of Channel 4’s Big Art Project more HERE

Boris’s office is also supporting the London Jazz Festival which runs until Sunday 22nd in venues across London more HERE

Aesthetics Row

Its is commonly know fact among philosophy students that philosophers like nothing better than a good slanging match, something that is equally true of critics. So we bring you a humdinger as Sunday Times art critic, Waldemar Januszczak, HERE attacks the latest book by philosopher Roger Scruton, Beauty, more HERE which examines the disappearance of the idea of beauty in modern art. Peter Whittle of the New Culture Forum says ‘in its sheer vileness [Januszczak’s review] manages to make you physically recoil from the paper in your hand.’ All of it makes Peter wonder: ‘Does he fear Scruton might have a point?

Theatre

Alan Bennett’s gift for ringing up box-office success has the critics feeling giddy as The Habit of Art opens at the National HERE.

Leaner funding times could be good for the theatre argues Patrick Marmion HERE.

Stay sober, stay conscious and stay to the end – are these the only obligations theatre critics have? HERE and HERE

Arts and Business

Congratulations to the awards winners HERE The big news from the awards had nothing to do with any of the winners, it was the sudden announcement by the lady herself of the chair’s resignation. Helena Kennedy is leaving with immediate effect, one year into her second three year term, the rumour as reported in Simon Tait’s TaitMail: ‘she wanted to clear her decks for another big job, either with this government or the next one, but she keeps her own counsel and no-one has any idea what it is’.

In Parliament

The Queen’s speech, featuring the much vaunted Digital Economy Bill, HERE and a list of the thirteen bills, HERE

Where we’ve been and who we’ve seen

Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Royal Armouries Leeds, Tate Modern, Google, Akram Khan in a remarkable evening, more HERE at Sadlers Wells, Beyonce at the O2, POLIS at the LSE, Manchester Media Festival, Roundhay Park in Leeds, Five Live tour, Erik Huggers.

Ed Vaizey

Shadow Arts Minister

Jeremy Hunt

Shadow Culture Secretary