Today news
Ricky Gervais
Ricky Dene Gervais (born 25 June 1961) is an English stand-up comedian, actor, writer, film producer, director and musician. He is perhaps best known for creating, writing and acting in the British television series The Office (2001–2003). He has won seven BAFTA Awards, five British Comedy Awards, two Emmy Awards, three Golden Globe Awards and the Rose d'Or twice (2006 and 2019), as well as a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination. In 2007, he was placed at No. 11 on Channel 4's 100 Greatest Stand-Ups and at No. 3 on the updated 2010 list. In 2010, he was named on the Time 100 list of the world's most influential people.
Related News
Tim Davie Ricky Gervais David Mitchell Jon Petrie Michelle De-Swarte Britain BBC show stars google Waters Enterprise Tim Davie Ricky Gervais David Mitchell Jon Petrie Michelle De-Swarte Britain

BBC Comedy Boss Calls For Tax Credit Plus “Package Of Measures To Safeguard Future”

Reading now: 425
deadline.com

BBC comedy boss Jon Petrie is to spend the year identifying a “package of measures that industry, government and regulators can come together on to safeguard comedy’s future,” while calling for a comedy tax credit.

Petrie used a set-piece speech to declare that the cost of half-hour TV comedy has “risen enormously,” while stressing his new-look commissioning team is “working hard to raise [program funding] as much as we can whilst retaining the breadth of comedy on the BBC.” “Despite the TV industry receiving the welcome news that a form of high-end TV tax credit will be retained, I know that comedy producers remain concerned about the rising costs of making comedy for television,” he said at the BBC Comedy Festival in Cardiff, where he unveiled shows from David Mitchell, Ricky Gervais and The Duchess star Michelle de Swarte. “It goes without saying that we do too, and we feel equally concerned that [UK regulator] Ofcom has deemed comedy ‘at risk’.” Due to difficulties with attracting third-party funding, Petrie pointed out that comedy is one of the worst hit genres.

Of the five-strong slate he unveiled at the Comedy Festival, only one show, Hulu co-pro Dinosaur, is co-produced with a major network. “As the chief corporate clown in television comedy,” Petrie added, “I feel a huge sense of responsibility to help try and protect our incredible genre.” He appeared to contradict BBC Director General Tim Davie by stating he will not raise budgets simply by putting more money into fewer titles.

Since taking on the role two years ago, Davie has championed a ‘fewer, bigger, better’ approach, with a focus on high-impact content rather than spreading budgets too thin, but Petrie said this would have a “negative effect on our

Read more on deadline.com
The website celebsbar.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

DMCA