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George Entwistle

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George Entwistle was the 15th and shortest-serving Director-General of the BBC, who took over from Mark Thompson on 18 September 2012. However, in the wake of the Jimmy Savile paedophelia scandal, he was forced to resign on 10 November 2012. Even the act of resignation was controversial as he was offered £450,000 severance, which was equivalent to a full year's salary.[1]

Entwistle as he appeared in his "official photo" taken upon accession to the Director-Generalship.
File:George Entwistle's resignation statement in full
Entwistle's resignation statement in full
File:Culture Secretary the only BBC can restore the public's trust
The Culture Secretary's immediate response to the resignation

Entwistle's potential

On acceding to the position, he immediately told his staff that Doctor Who was one of the "major pieces of BBC content" seen around the world.

The main goal he outlined for his administration was a desire to bring "improved levels of collaboration, common values and purpose" between the homegrown, licence fee-paid service of the British Broadcasting Corporation and the "burgeoning success" of the Corporation's commercial arm, BBC Worldwide.[2]

A fan of the way the BBC's coverage of the 2012 Olympic Games had seemingly United the Kingdom, he immediately ordered that all of the BBC — which presumably included the BBC Wales team producing Doctor Who — should use that event as a model for future content.[3]

The Independent quickly reported that his love of television drama derived from watching Doctor Who in his youth. The newspaper quoted him as saying, "Jon Pertwee was my Doctor. I was a bit sceptical about the Tom Baker regeneration."[4]

Downfall

As of November 2012, it was unclear whether Entwistle had been on the job long enough to actually affect anything having to do with the production of Doctor Who.

All that was clear was that he was forced to resign because the BBC's investigative news magazine, Newsnight, had, in the wake of the Savile allegations made by ITV, falsely accused a Thatcher-era Conservative Party politician of child abuse. What was described as "shoddy reporting" left the Corporation liable to the falsely-accused party for substantial sums of money.[5] In the immediate aftermath of Entwistle's departure, the BBC was seen by media journalists to have taken a serious hit, with some conservatives seeing even less value for money in the licence fee.[6]

The impact on scripted drama, and Doctor Who's 2013 anniversary year in particular, wasn't immediately known.

Footnotes

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