Tony Hall: Difference between revisions
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'''Tony Hall''' — formally '''Lord Hall''' or '''Baron Hall of Birkenhead''' — was appointed [[Director-General of the BBC]] on [[22 November]] [[2012]], although he did not formally accede to the position until March 2013. Hall had previously been on the short list of candidates for the position in [[1999]], when it went instead to [[Greg Dyke]]. He had ben director of BBC News in the [[1990s]], before leaving the BBC for most of the [[2000s]] to lead the Royal Opera House. His news background as well as his distance from the current BBC structures was cited as a reason for the success of his candidature in the wake of the [[Jimmy Savile]] and related {{wi|Newsnight}} scandals that brought down [[George Entwistle]] a few weeks prior to Hall's appointment.<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/nov/22/bbc-tony-hall-appointed-new-director-general Sabbagh, Dan. "BBC appoints Tony Hall as new director general". ''The Guardian''. 22 November 2012.]</ref> | '''Tony Hall''' — formally '''Lord Hall''' or '''Baron Hall of Birkenhead''' — was appointed [[Director-General of the BBC]] on [[22 November]] [[2012]], although he did not formally accede to the position until March 2013. Hall had previously been on the short list of candidates for the position in [[1999]], when it went instead to [[Greg Dyke]]. He had ben director of BBC News in the [[1990s]], before leaving the BBC for most of the [[2000s]] to lead the Royal Opera House. His news background as well as his distance from the current BBC structures was cited as a reason for the success of his candidature in the wake of the [[Jimmy Savile]] and related {{wi|Newsnight}} scandals that brought down [[George Entwistle]] a few weeks prior to Hall's appointment.<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/nov/22/bbc-tony-hall-appointed-new-director-general Sabbagh, Dan. "BBC appoints Tony Hall as new director general". ''The Guardian''. 22 November 2012.]</ref> | ||
[[Alan Yentob]], most notable to ''[[Doctor Who]]'' fans as the [[Controller of BBC One]] responsible for commissioning the [[Doctor Who (1996)|1996 tele-movie]], greeted the announcement with praise, saying that Hall ahd "thrived and blossomed at the Royal Opera. He can understand news, but he also has the real belief that it is creative flair that will make the BBC great."<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/nov/22/hall-boss-bbc-crisis?intcmp=239 | [[Alan Yentob]], most notable to ''[[Doctor Who]]'' fans as the [[Controller of BBC One]] responsible for commissioning the [[Doctor Who (1996)|1996 tele-movie]], greeted the announcement with praise, saying that Hall ahd "thrived and blossomed at the Royal Opera. He can understand news, but he also has the real belief that it is creative flair that will make the BBC great."<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/nov/22/hall-boss-bbc-crisis?intcmp=239 Higgins, Charlotte. "Hall in this together: a new boss at the BBC to 'lead us out of a crisis'". ''The Guardian''. 22 November 2012.]</ref> | ||
Higgins, Charlotte. "Hall in this together: a new boss at the BBC to 'lead us out of a crisis'". ''The Guardian''. 22 November 2012.]</ref> | |||
== Footnotes == | == Footnotes == | ||
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Revision as of 19:19, 23 November 2012
Tony Hall — formally Lord Hall or Baron Hall of Birkenhead — was appointed Director-General of the BBC on 22 November 2012, although he did not formally accede to the position until March 2013. Hall had previously been on the short list of candidates for the position in 1999, when it went instead to Greg Dyke. He had ben director of BBC News in the 1990s, before leaving the BBC for most of the 2000s to lead the Royal Opera House. His news background as well as his distance from the current BBC structures was cited as a reason for the success of his candidature in the wake of the Jimmy Savile and related Newsnight scandals that brought down George Entwistle a few weeks prior to Hall's appointment.[1]
Alan Yentob, most notable to Doctor Who fans as the Controller of BBC One responsible for commissioning the 1996 tele-movie, greeted the announcement with praise, saying that Hall ahd "thrived and blossomed at the Royal Opera. He can understand news, but he also has the real belief that it is creative flair that will make the BBC great."[2]
Footnotes
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