Broadcast 10th January 2014

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www.broadcastnow.co.uk

10 January 2014

COMMENT

INTERVIEW

PRODUCTION

Pages 18-19

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Addison Cresswell and Storyville’s execs are Allan McKeown tributes shaking things up

How can young writers break through?

Pact: BBC quotas will change Trade body says fresh stance from BBC points to overhaul of the WoCC and guarantees BY JAKE KANTER

Pact believes a shake-up of BBC commissioning quotas is now inevitable as the corporation reshapes itself for charter renewal. Over the festive period, the BBC formally declared for the first time that commissioning guarantees need to be examined, as part of a BBC Trust submission to the Culture, Media and Sport Committee. The Trust said it did not have a “firm view” over whether current supply arrangements “continue to be necessary”, and Pact chief executive John McVay is certain the existing quotas will be changed. Current arrangements guarantee in-house 50% of output, hand the indie sector 25%, and ask the two to compete for the remaining 25% in the Window of Creative Competition (WoCC). McVay stressed that Pact was doing “a lot of work” on its charter renewal submissions and said the BBC must address some significant questions if it is going to continue to deliver value for licence-fee payers. He said: “Under the commissioning structure of the WoCC, the BBC is having a problem, because if the market is supplying close to 50% of all BBC programmes, why should in-house get any more protection? Why not just open up all BBC commissioning to the market? Because if the market supplies a great programme at a great price, then that is all the BBC should care about.” The BBC is highly unlikely to take the radical step of dropping BBC Productions’ guarantees, but

Sherlock: indies are guaranteed 25% under current BBC quotas; below: C4 nations commissions to be tripled

If the market is supplying close to 50% of all productions, why should BBC inhouse get any more protection? John McVay, Pact

there is a clear change in position from the Trust, which in March 2013 said the WoCC “works well”. The Trust added that quotas need “careful consideration and analysis” in the approach to charter renewal in 2016. It follows BBC creative director Alan

Yentob’s off-the-cuff intervention at last year’s Edinburgh International Television Festival, where he said production guarantees “will change” in an evolving market. In its Culture, Media and Sport Committee submission to the Future of the BBC inquiry, the Trust made a pointed reference to the growth of “very large” indies, particularly those owned by other broadcasters or multinationals. But McVay said this was a “red herring”, arguing: “Why does that matter to the BBC? It has never had a problem

spending millions of pounds on movies from US studios.” ■ Separately, this week Ofcom revealed Channel 4’s nations commissioning quotas are set to be tripled, resulting in a £12m boost for Scottish, Welsh and Northern Irish indies. The media regulator intends to award C4 a new 10-year licence, with the only major change being to increase the broadcaster’s minimum volume of spend and hours in the nations from 3% to 9% by 2020.


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