Director-General of the BBC: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
m (Robot: Cosmetic changes)
Tag: apiedit
m (Cosmetic changes)
Tag: apiedit
Line 1: Line 1:
{{real world}}
{{real world}}
[[File:MarkThompsonUnderBBC.jpg|[[Mark Thompson]], the Director-General for much of the life of the [[BBC Wales]] version of ''[[Doctor Who]]''|thumb]]
[[File:MarkThompsonUnderBBC.jpg|[[Mark Thompson]], the Director-General for much of the life of the [[BBC Wales]] version of ''[[Doctor Who]]''|thumb]]
The '''{{PAGENAME}}''' is the highest-ranking executive at the [[British Broadcasting Corporation]].  Their impact on the day-to-day production of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' was generally quite indirect. They tended to set the tone that the ''Doctor Who'' production office then had to follow.  However, there were some occasions on which the Director-General had a noticeably more profound impact, such as when [[Hugh Greene]] directly hired [[Sydney Newman]], or when [[Charles Curran]] apologised to [[Mary Whitehouse]] for the content of ''[[The Deadly Assassin (TV story)|The Deadly Assassin]]'', then had [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] transferred to another programme.
The '''{{PAGENAME}}''' is the highest-ranking executive at the [[British Broadcasting Corporation]].  Their impact on the day-to-day production of ''[[Doctor Who]]'' was generally quite indirect. They tended to set the tone that the ''Doctor Who'' production office then had to follow.  However, there were some occasions on which the Director-General had a noticeably more profound impact, such as when [[Hugh Greene]] directly hired [[Sydney Newman]], or when [[Charles Curran]] apologised to [[Mary Whitehouse]] for the content of ''[[The Deadly Assassin (TV story)|The Deadly Assassin]]'', then had [[Philip Hinchcliffe]] transferred to another programme.  


Public support of ''Doctor Who'' from the Director-General has traditionally been rare.  However, in [[September]] [[2012]], the newly-installed Director-General [[George Entwistle]] made a number of conspicuous and positive remarks about ''Doctor Who'', and even told {{wi|The Independent}} that he had gotten into television because of watching [[Jon Pertwee]]'s ''[[Doctor Who]]''.{{D-G}}
Public support of ''Doctor Who'' from the Director-General has traditionally been rare.  However, in [[September]] [[2012]], the newly-installed Director-General [[George Entwistle]] made a number of conspicuous and positive remarks about ''Doctor Who'', and even told {{wi|The Independent}} that he had gotten into television because of watching [[Jon Pertwee]]'s ''[[Doctor Who]]''.{{D-G}}


[[Category:Production team titles]]
[[Category:Production team titles]]

Revision as of 02:48, 9 July 2017

RealWorld.png
Mark Thompson, the Director-General for much of the life of the BBC Wales version of Doctor Who

The Director-General of the BBC is the highest-ranking executive at the British Broadcasting Corporation. Their impact on the day-to-day production of Doctor Who was generally quite indirect. They tended to set the tone that the Doctor Who production office then had to follow. However, there were some occasions on which the Director-General had a noticeably more profound impact, such as when Hugh Greene directly hired Sydney Newman, or when Charles Curran apologised to Mary Whitehouse for the content of The Deadly Assassin, then had Philip Hinchcliffe transferred to another programme.

Public support of Doctor Who from the Director-General has traditionally been rare. However, in September 2012, the newly-installed Director-General George Entwistle made a number of conspicuous and positive remarks about Doctor Who, and even told The Independent that he had gotten into television because of watching Jon Pertwee's Doctor Who.