[Community Media Association] Re: [Community Television] Ofcom
Television Production Sector Review
Dave Rushton
local.tv at virgin.net
Mon May 16 11:24:37 BST 2005
Diane & TV Colleagues,
It may not be too late to intervene on the terms of reference on this -
CMA members should write to Khalid Hayatt at Ofcom -
khalid.hayat at ofcom.org.uk
For info ......
Date: Wed May 11, 2005 1:41:24 PM Europe/London
Subject: Review of television production sector: Project terms of
reference
Dear Khalid,
With reference to the above Review. It seems appropriate to consider in
the terms of reference of this forward-looking review the role of three
sectors adjacent to the mainstream TV production sector: these are the
community TV, educational TV and local TV production sectors. The role
of these sectors is not represented in the 25% quota or in independent
sector organisations like PACT because they are not primarily
addressing programme making for mainstream TV.
Take the community TV sector in Scotland - represented through Media
Access Projects Scotland (MAPS) which has some 10 or more member
organisations producing programming in one or more of three ways; as
the by product of social or confidence building education (often with
young or socially disadvantaged people), as short programming for
community use and representation and/or occasional mainstream TV use
and as the product of video and TV training initiatives of comparable
standard to FE and HE video courses.
The TV production sector in post-school education in the UK is also a
large contributor of 'productions'. As an external examiner to one TV
production course at University of Teesside I'm probably looking at a
sample of programmes amounting to two to three hours drawn from a total
of perhaps fifteen-twenty hours of original production made by students
in the final year of the media course. In colleges and universities
where TV production is at the core throughout the curriculum the
production quota is probably higher. Taken across the FE and HE sector
as a whole you'd anticipate - very roughly - 500-1000 hours of new
production per year from the final year and post-graduate year students
of the FE and HE sector. This is production - a portion of which is of
high value - which is not seen on current television and the relevance
of much of which is highly localised, stories shot in and around the
community served by the college or from the home town of the student.
Between Edinburgh Television and Channel Six Dundee - two of Scotland's
three RSLs - two to three hours of original programmes were produced
each week. Lanarkshire TV probably produced more - while between the
three RSLs in Scotland there were some thirty-thirty five staff. The
staffing estimate for 1000 DTT stations currently being rolled out in
Spain is some 10-15,000 staff.
In short - your Review of the television production sector is
restricted by the current limitations of the large scale,
over-centralisation of the 'national' television sector. As jobs are to
go in regional TV some assessment would be valuable as to how these can
be replaced through a local TV sector, which will provide an outlet and
a spur to quality for producers in the FE and HE educational as well as
community TV sectors. And finally - the web broadcasting sector has
barely begun and is largely off the organisational map too ......
A Review of the independent and in-house sector should not be confused
with a snap-shot of production potential in the television sector.
With best wishes,
Dave Rushton
Institute of Local Television
Following
On Monday, May 16, 2005, at 09:39 AM, Diane Reid wrote:
> Ofcom is beginning a review of the television production sector and
> today
> sets out the terms of reference for the review. This process is
> expected to
> be completed by April 2006. The review covers issues such as quotas
> for PSB
> broadcasters, intervention in the independent production sector,
> relationships between independent producers and broadcasters,
> production
> quotas, production outside the M25, new media rights concerning
> programmes
> originally commissioned for TV broadcast. The review does not
> specifically
> cover local TV services. For more detail see
> http://www.ofcom.org.uk/research/tv/tpsr/
>
> Diane
>
> Diane Reid
> Director
> Community Media Association
> Access to the media for people and communities
> http://www.commedia.org.uk/
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