Difference between revisions of "TV-am"

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'''TV-am''' was an ITV breakfast television franchise that broadcast to from February 1983 to December 1992.
 
'''TV-am''' was an ITV breakfast television franchise that broadcast to from February 1983 to December 1992.
  
It was intially headed by [[Peter Jay]], a prominent neoliberal ideologue who was close to the future [[BBC]] Director-General [[John Birt]]. Together [[Peter Jay|Jay]] and [[John Birt|Birt]] had developed a critique of television which came to be known as the ‘mission to explain’ which became the philosophy of the new company. In 1983 [[Peter Jay|Jay]] was forced to resign amid criticisms of his management style <ref>Moving Image Communications Ltd, [http://www.milibrary.com/html/tv-am_timeline.html TV-am Timeline] [Accessed 22 October 2009]</ref> after which another future [[BBC]] Director-General [[Greg Dyke]] is often credited with saving the company. <ref>Peter Jay, ‘[http://www.guardian.co.uk/theobserver/2000/jun/18/life1.lifemagazine6 Jay talking]’, ''Observer'', 18 June 2000</ref>
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It was intially headed by [[Peter Jay]], a prominent neoliberal ideologue who was close to the future [[BBC]] Director-General [[John Birt]]. Together [[Peter Jay|Jay]] and [[John Birt|Birt]] had developed a critique of television which came to be known as the ‘mission to explain’ which became the philosophy of the new company. In 1983 [[Peter Jay|Jay]] was forced to resign amid criticisms of his management style <ref>Moving Image Communications Ltd, [http://www.milibrary.com/html/tv-am_timeline.html TV-am Timeline] [Accessed 22 October 2009]</ref>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Revision as of 15:59, 18 December 2009

TV-am was an ITV breakfast television franchise that broadcast to from February 1983 to December 1992.

It was intially headed by Peter Jay, a prominent neoliberal ideologue who was close to the future BBC Director-General John Birt. Together Jay and Birt had developed a critique of television which came to be known as the ‘mission to explain’ which became the philosophy of the new company. In 1983 Jay was forced to resign amid criticisms of his management style [1]

Notes

  1. Moving Image Communications Ltd, TV-am Timeline [Accessed 22 October 2009]