Showing posts with label Margaret Thatcher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Margaret Thatcher. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 December 2013

News 2013 - Worldwide tragedies and a Royal arrival

By Simon Wright – Follow me on Twitter @Siwri88

2013 in news was another dramatic year and sadly another one where human tragedy was at the forefront. Civil conflicts in countries, mixed in with one of the worst tropical cyclones in history, international terrorism and the deaths of some huge historical figures meant it was a year of distressing stories.

However the worldwide economy seems to be making some form of recovery and along with the end of a long British sporting drought, a fine summer of weather in the UK and the arrival of a Royal baby, there were some happy and positive stories to come out of this calendar year.

Here is Viewing Perspectives’ round-up of the news review of 2013.

The Federal Government shutdown made Barack Obama's year difficult
The year started well enough for American president Barack Obama as he had his second inauguration ceremony in Washington after being elected for a second term at the backend of 2012. If only Obama knew that this was to be the high point of a tough year at the helm. In October, the US government shutdown for the first time since 1995 and lasted for 16 days. This was after the Democratic and Republic parties were unable to agree on measures to keep the government operating. This led to some historic landmarks across the States such as the Grand Canyon (notice pictured) being closed to tourists and leaving Obama completely powerless. 

Obama wasn’t the only worldwide leader to either be re-elected or come into power for the first time. Merkel won a historic third term in German office as Chancellor, though not by an overall majority for her party to take full control of the country. In Zimbabwe, President Robert Mugabe swept back into office once again after another landslide success. China’s parliament formally elected Xi Jinping as their new president in March whilst presidential elections were held in Iran in June – a crucial election for both the country and the world given their stance on the use of nuclear power. With 51 per cent of the vote, Hassan Rouhani from the Combatant Clergy Association party emerged triumphant.

Other political powers didn’t see out the year though. In Venezuela, Hugo Chavez died in March. The capital of Caracas stood at a standstill on the day of his funeral. Chavez had strained relations with world countries but was dearly loved and adored in his native homeland. Over 30 world leaders paid their respects at the state funeral. There were more protests over government rulings in Arab countries. Fighting broke out once again in Egypt this summer as Hosni Mubarak’s successor Mohamed Morsi was overthrown in a military coup, just over two years after arriving in office. The Egyptian people were angry that little had changed since the first uprising in 2011. Violence followed for days in the capital Cairo. It was a similar story in the Central African Republic. Their president Francois Bozize fled to the Democratic Republic of Congo after rebel forces managed to take control of the capital Bangui. The biggest political change though came in the Catholic Church. On February 28, Benedict XVI resigned as pope, becoming the first to do so in nearly 600 years. Ill health was stated as the official reason for his sudden departure. After two weeks of guessing, the 266th pope was revealed as Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina, taking on the name Pope Francis. He is the first from the Southern Hemisphere to take the role as head of the Catholic Church and led to great scenes in the Vatican City afterwards.

Back home and it was a quieter year for the major political parties with no serious scandals that divided parliament. Party conference season in the autumn came and went, with Labour making promises about freezing gas and energy prices if they get into power at the 2015 General Election. David Cameron’s response was to pledge for taxes to be cut for working class people. Chancellor George Osbourne, who was on rocky ground 12 months ago had a better year as the economy started to show signs of a slow but steady recovery. This was backed up by the autumn statement with fuel duty axed, although the retirement age did rise to 70. One of the biggest reactions in Downing Street was the introduction of the titled ‘bedroom tax’ in April which would see people being taxed more for having bedrooms that were not being used. Online campaigns were set-up and peaceful demonstrations made outside the Royal Courts of Justice. The government would later state that the changes to the housing benefit scheme were required but special dispensation cases would be made for those suffering from ill health or other exceptional circumstances.

The big political story in the UK was that of the death of a former power in the 20th century. After suffering another stroke in the Ritz hotel in April, Margaret Thatcher died aged 87. The reaction to the death of Britain’s longest-serving PM of the last century was mixed with some burning effigies and celebrating her passing. Others were left to mourn Thatcher’s death with dignity. She had left her mark on this country. Her ruthlessness had led to some great success such as the Falklands War victory in 1982 and was ultimately her biggest downfall with the Poll Tax policy that led to riots eight years later. Thatcher has a legacy that shouldn’t be tarnished, though it is understandable why some like the mining industry didn’t share a tear on hearing of her passing. The ‘Iron Lady’ was no more.

Thatcher wasn’t the only huge name to pass away. Other shock deaths including Hollywood actor Paul Walker, singer Bernie Nolan, broadcaster Sir David Frost and South African model and TV personality Reeva Steenkamp – found dead after being shot by her boyfriend Oscar Pretorius on Valentine’s Day at the Pretoria home of the ‘Blade Runner.’ The Paralympic competitor is believed to have fired shots through a door, mistaking Steenkamp for an intruder in his home. The events were tragic and the episode a mystery. The trial will begin early next year in South Africa. By the end of the year though, South Africa was paying its respects to its greatest human-being and for the world, one of its most influential figures.

Nelson Mandela had endeared himself to so many on this planet. He did so much for his country and the world as a whole. South Africa’s first black president died on December 5, aged 95 after spending much of the year fighting a lung infection. He was admitted to hospital three times as his health started to decline rapidly. In June, his condition was described as ‘serious’ by doctors and he returned home to spend the final months of his life with his family. The tributes that flowed in worldwide were overwhelming and show the appreciation so many had for Nelson Mandela. He was laid to rest 10 days later after several days of national mourning and a memorial service in the Soccer City stadium in Johannesburg, the setting of his last public appearance three years ago. He will be dearly missed by so many people.

International terrorism remains sadly a forefront of our news. In April, everyone was stunned by the attacks carried out by Islamic forces on the finishing straight of the Boston Marathon. Two bombs went off in quick succession as many were completing the marathon. 264 people were injured and three people were killed. Five months later, it was Kenya’s time to be in the spotlight for the wrong reasons as the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi came under fire from Islamic militants. The three-day siege saw some harrowing pictures on our television screens as 170 people were wounded and 62 people killed. The Islamic group Al-Shabaab claimed responsibility for the attack.

There was plenty of tragedy throughout the year worldwide on a human and Mother Nature scale. In January, a deadly fire at a Kiss nightclub in Santa Maria, Brazil killed 241 people. Brazilian police confirmed two months later that 16 people were to be prosecuted for the disaster, started when the member of a band lit a firework that caught fire on the ceiling and spread in a matter of seconds. In the Russian city of Chelyabinsk, 1,491 were injured as a meteor exploded over their town with many buildings destroyed. It was the most powerful meteor to strike the atmosphere of the Earth in over a century. April brought the building collapse of a commercial building in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. The accident was the third worst industrial disaster in history, leaving 2,500 injured and 1,129 people dead as the eight-story building came down. Many stores on the high street here like Primark and Mango paid out compensation to the families of the victims. Oklahoma City in the United States was hit by a severe tornado in May, the country’s worst in two years. 237 were left injured as a suburb was virtually wiped out. At least 24 died, including nine children. A supermarket roof collapsed in the Latvian capital Riga following the carrying out of structural work. 54 people died and the incident was so distressing to the PM Valdis Dombrovskis, he tendered his resignation with immediate effect. Lastly the people of Spain were left in mourning in July as a high-speed train crashed in the North West region of Santiago de Compostela. 79 passengers lost their lives as CCTV cameras showed the moment the train left the tracks, caused by the driver going too fast on a track not designed for the speeds he was travelling at.

However there were three other incidents that were gruesome, shocking and left either outrage or heartfelt donations. In May the town of Woolwich made the headlines after the absolutely horrific killing of soldier Lee Rigby. The pictures of his dead body lying in the road were broadcast to millions, leaving many people absolutely sickened by this act carried out on the 25-year-old. It was a knife attack while he made his way through south east London. 29-year-old Michael Adebolajo and 22-year-old Michael Adebowale are currently on trial for his murder. Meanwhile events in Syria continued to dominate many of the front pages of the newspapers and TV bulletins as the year progressed. The world was appalled to hear about an alleged chemical attack carried out by the Assad regime on August 21 in Damascus. The world condemned the attacks. A month later, inspectors from the United Nations confirmed the use of chemical weapons after some intense investigations. The civil war in the country claimed many more lives throughout the year and many natives have fled in a desperate attempt to either start again and in many cases to survive. November saw Mother Nature show her true force once again. One of the most powerful storms in history was recorded as the Philippines was battered by Typhoon Haiyan. Small towns were literally wiped out and thousands died in this tropical cyclone which was a reminder to many of this force following the earthquake that left Haiti in ruins three years ago and the tsunami in Japan in 2011. At least 5,700 were confirmed to have died and many more have had their livelihoods completely shattered. Aid started arriving from all areas across the globe as the planet came together to try and help the Philippine people. The US has already pledged over $100m to help those now trying to fend off the severe threats of contracting diseases.

In Britain, January brought terror to morning commuters in London as a helicopter crashed into a crane on top of one of Europe’s tallest residential blocks in Vauxhall. On a foggy Wednesday morning as many were making their way to work for a normal day, that aspect changed when debris ploughed down onto the nearby roads and wreckage spread across the area. Nine were injured and two lost their lives. There was a more tragic loss of life in Glasgow at the end of November as 10 people were killed when a police helicopter crashed into a pub on a busy Friday evening. In both instances, community spirit was shown in abundance to come to terms with these shocking events. The incident in London was down to the weather conditions and pilot error. The cause of the Glasgow crash is still unknown.

Findus' Beef Lasagne was one product caught up in the horsemeat scandal
One issue totally unexpected in this country but caused plenty of concern was the horsemeat scandal throughout January and into February. It started when food inspectors in the Republic of Ireland claimed they had found horsemeat in frozen beefburgers which had been sold by a number of supermarket chains over here, including Iceland, Tesco and Aldi. In the weeks that followed, more cases came out of detected horsemeat in ingredients with major suppliers including Nestle and Findus (Beef Lasagne product pictured) being forced to recall products as tests confirmed traces of horse DNA. Some brushed it off, others cried foul and it certainly damaged the trust relationship between the consumer and the main supermarkets. Some 2,501 tests were conducted in the aftermath of all this - health experts saying the cases were down to negligence in food production rather than the safety of customers eating the products. In total, there were 29 positive results in seven products – all withdrawn as soon as news broke. Then it all blew away like a storm in a teacup. However it would leave a mark on the food industry for the remainder of the year. The phone hacking trial began towards the end of the year. Eight journalists including former senior editors of the News of the World Andy Coulson and Rebekah Brooks are among those on trial. One of the early reveals of the evidence given was a love letter that confirmed that Coulson and Brooks had an affair for at least six years from the late 1990s. The trial will continue well into next year.

While the UK’s economy started to settle down again with unemployment levels dropping to their lowest level since the spring of 2009, it wasn’t so good for Cyprus. In March the EU agreed to a bailout of €10 billion after a banking crisis hit the island on the Mediterranean which left people with restricted access to bank accounts. The EU also got a new member in July as Croatia became the 28th member of the organisation.

Other news stories to make the headlines saw the end of British sport’s longest drought without a winner. Andy Murray ended the 77 years of hurt when he defeated Novak Djokovic of Serbia in straight sets to become the Wimbledon Men’s Singles champion. There was a summer success for England’s cricketers against Australia in the Ashes before surrendering the urn meekly before Christmas Down Under. Chris Froome became the second Brit in a row to win the Tour de France and football’s greatest manager retired at the top as Sir Alex Ferguson stood aside as Manchester United manager after leading the Red Devils in May to a 13th Premier League title. The city of Hull was named as the next UK City of Culture in November. It held off competition from Leicester, Dundee and Swansea to take the coveted prize for the year 2017. Tokyo was announced as the host of the 2020 Olympic Games at an IOC meeting in Buenos Aires in the summer and a new appeal was launched to find missing Madeleine McCann following 100 calls and e-mails to the BBC’s Crimewatch programme after a reconstruction of events was broadcasted. She was taken from a holiday apartment in Portugal six years ago.

William and Kate pose with their bundle of joy, Prince George of Cambridge
There was no competition though for what was the happiest news story of the year and that came in July as the country welcomed Prince George of Cambridge. Ever since the announcement of Kate Middleton’s pregnancy, there had been plenty of talk about baby's sex and potential names. The baby boy was born at St Mary’s Hospital to their proud parents, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge (all three pictured) on the evening of Monday, 22 July. As predicted, a media scrum waited outside for the first shots of the new arrival to the Royal Family and with it, the future King of England. George received a private Christening in October and baby and parents are still doing well nearly six months on. It is stories like this that remind us that while the year in news is often controlled by bad headlines, it sometimes is the good and happy stories that can leave the biggest mark and best memories of a calendar year.

This man will NOT be the UK's Prime Minister in 2014!
With that in mind, that is the news review of 2013. It had plenty to lookback on and now, we wait what 2014 will bring. There is bound to be another scandal in the country somewhere, the Commonwealth Games arrive in Glasgow, Scotland votes for independence and I can guarantee you all that this man (Ed Miliband pictured) will NOT be prime minister by this time next year. Other than that, who knows what will happen but happier times wouldn’t go amiss. 

Thursday, 28 February 2013

ITV - Better or worse for not having regional identity?


It might have made huge pre-tax profits recently, but back in January of this year, the largest commercial network for Freeview subscribers, ITV decided to have a change of rebrand.

The new ITV logo has received a mixed response
The logo (pictured) was given a makeover, as were the idents into our favourite shows.  There was also a relaunch of the news systems – both of regional outputs and the national picture.

It is around six weeks since the change and it is difficult to see ITV in the position it currently is.  Some of the idents make no sense whatsoever, and if you see your favourite ITV programme – whether that be The Chase, Dancing on Ice, This Morning or Coronation Street – the credits are now in black!  Not all programmes have to have this background, and I for one find it slightly off-putting.

A change was needed, as it had been six years since the last makeover but in my opinion, it is a change for the worst.

It all started to go wrong for ITV in 1991.  The 1990 Broadcasting Act is often overlooked by other key statues that have passed law, such as the Human Rights Act and the Data Protection Act – but it made the corporation into one main channel.

The ITV regions are largely no more, a real shame and a concept I wish we still had on today’s screens.

The aims of the act
The aims of the act were to reform British broadcasting.  It had just been a year after Sky Television had opened up the choice of viewer to the consumer.

Changes included the abolition of the IBA (Independent Broadcasting Authority), the creation of a fifth British terrestrial television channel (Channel 5 in 1997), and the BBC being forced to have 25 per cent of their programming being produced by other companies rather than through their in-house production content.

It also saw the changes in the ITV regional franchises.  Previously, franchises ran for 10-20 years in each ITV region across the UK.  Changes were not frequently made, and when they were, it was on the basis of the quality of programme content.

The ITC made some controversial decisions
Margaret Thatcher, who was prime minister at the time, wanted these new franchises to go solely on the amount of the highest bidder in a 'blind auction.'  After some resistance from senior cabinet members, it was decided that the quality of programme threshold would be included in the ITC’s (Independent Television Commission's) final decision.

This confused many of the regions when it came to auctioning for the rights.  Some put in high bids, others much lower bids knowing they weren’t to be challenged, or felt the programming quality was going to be the ultimate final decision.

The license award
For example, Central Television put in a bid of just £2,000 to keep the popular Midlands region, whilst Scottish Television (knowing they were unopposed), put in a similar bid to guarantee themselves the license north of the border.

In October 1991, the ITC announced which ITV regions would have the commercial licenses to begin on 1 January 1993.

12 of the 16 ITV networks at the time, including Granada, Yorkshire, Anglia and LWT kept their licenses.  Some were challenged, others weren’t.  However, four networks weren’t so lucky.

The biggest loser was Thames Television, who serviced London on weekdays.  They were outbid by CPV-TV (led by Richard Branson) and Carlton Television.  As Carlton were the highest bidder, and Branson’s organisation were disqualified on quality grounds – Carlton got the license.

Thames had it since the late 1960s, and had been the brainchild of quality drama at the time such as The Bill and Minder.  Over 1,000 jobs went as a result of this decision.  Although Thames remained as an independent production company – the ITC’s decision to hand Carlton the license was a total disaster.  In my opinion, it spelt the death of ITV as a regional output.


Gone was the classic Thames jingle, and in came random faces from around London just saying ‘You are watching Carlton’ with some music that to be honest, a baby could do better with! 

800 people lost their jobs at TVS, who had been the holder of the South and South East license for 10 years.  Their bid of £59.8m was deemed too high, as the business plan was deemed not to be suitable.  The smaller Meridian network came in here.  However, it had greater success than TVS, and is probably the only change most agreed with.

That didn’t help the people employed at TVS.  The company was eventually sold to International Family Entertainment a year later.  An independent production company now owns the logo and the abbreviation. 

Like TVS, TSW lost its franchise due to poor business planning.  The South West franchise of Plymouth, Devon and Cornwall went to Westcountry Television, despite them bidding £9m less. 

It didn’t make much difference to the area.  Westcountry’s idents were more catchy and colourful, but the programming quality was limited at best.  As for TSW, they entered a reverse takeover and ultimately entered receivership.

The offices of TV-AM became rather empty after their demise
Breakfast television also got a major change.  TV-AM, who had served the network well in its 10-year existence despite a famous unions strike and early teething problems – lost the national breakfast franchise to Sunrise Television.

The Sunrise Television consortium bid £20m more and got the license on being the highest bidder, leaving TV-AM staff mortified.  The late presenter Mike Morris said he was ‘gutted,’ while owner Bruce Gyngell launched a vicious attack on Sunrise’s business plan.

He said: “I do not believe that Sunrise will have a profitable business plan.  In fact, I predict Sunrise will go bankrupt in 1994.  It is an extraordinary decision.”

Sunrise Television would eventually change its name to GMTV after a dispute with Sky over the use of the Sunrise name.

Whilst GMTV actually went on to do a decent job, many loyal TV-AM audience members were lost because of this decision, and frankly – commercial breakfast television hasn’t been the same since they disappeared from our screens.

Mergers start to emerge
The 1990 Broadcasting Act also relaxed the effect of mergers, and two major players started to come together and totally destroy the ITV regional network.  To Granada and Carlton, all I have to say is congratulations.

The writing was on the wall in 1994 when Carlton took over Central, having been a long-time investor.  Meanwhile Granada became the new owners of LWT.  With the two most popular regional networks bought out by two robotic machines, the domino pattern had been set.

Meridan bought Anglia in the same year, consequently moving the Anglia presentation to Southampton.  This was a strange move considering Anglia outputted areas such as Cambridge, Northampton, Norwich, Luton and Milton Keynes – none of them anywhere near Meridan headquarters. 

Two years later, Carlton killed off Westcountry Television by buying them out and increased their growing stake in Central.  In 1997, Granada’s response was to acquire the Yorkshire-Tyne Tees element.  Although we still had regional news bulletins and regional idents – ITV was swiftly becoming a one network system – and this was killing off its earlier unique identity. 

By 1999, only three ITV regions were now independent, with Granada and Carlton, together with Scottish and United News and Media (owners of Anglia, HTV and Meridan), owning the rest between them.  A new corporate look was identified and launched in 1999 and with it, we waved bye-bye to regional identity.

Three years later, all regions disappeared as ITV became a single network.  The 1990 Broadcasting Act had done its job, and lost channel number three it’s regional identity.

Settling down
Downton Abbey is arguably ITV's biggest hit nowadays
Nowadays, ITV is still home to many top programmes.  The worldwide success of Downton Abbey and emergence of Mr. Selfridge in recent weeks has won critical acclaim. 

The Only Way Is Essex is somehow winning over a large audience following from youngsters, whilst Coronation Street and Emmerdale still attract massive figures.

ITV is also the home for live terrestrial football, and do a solid if unspectacular job of giving the footy lover live FA Cup, UEFA Champions League and England internationals for free.

And there are other mainstay programmes still going strong such as This Morning, but others haven’t been so lucky.

The Bill faded and faced demise, classic entertainment like Catchphrase, Gladiators, You Bet, Blind Date and Stars in Their Eyes were ditched for much of the reality content we have on today.

News at Ten has been fluctuating in the on/off position for the past two decades.  The way ITV have fiddled around with its news content is baffling at best, considering the BBC has only made one main change (moving the late news to 10 o’clock from 9) in the past 30 years.

Athletics, Formula One and Boxing were eliminated, meaning ITV Sport should be renamed ITV Football (oh wait, they tried that and nearly left the Football League in financial ruin).

And other programmes went without a fight.  Home & Away was passed off to Channel Five without any consideration, Who Wants to Be A Millionaire got so predictable that it has sadly been forgotten about far too easily, and there is no place at all for other cracking shows in the mid-80s/90s like World of Sport, Through the Keyhole, Blockbusters, Crossroads, Peak Practice, Spitting Image, Bullseye, The Krypton Factor, Heartbeat and World in Action.

Is ITV in a stronger place than it was back in the 1990s?  That is open to debate.  I don’t think it is to be honest.  Advertising revenues are down and I reckon it has lost its unique identity.
Some of the changes in the 1990 Broadcasting Act were made for the better of British television, but the demise of the ITV regions is something that is missed.

I will finish with a reminder of some of those cracking regional idents from TV’s real heyday of the 1990s.