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PostPosted: 09 Oct 07, 16:07 
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Kershaw Gets Suspended Jail Sentence

DJ Andy Kershaw has been handed a suspended jail term after admitting harassing his former partner.

The BBC Radio 3 presenter claimed he had been left "heartbroken" after Juliette Banner, his partner of 17 years and the mother of his two children, started another relationship.

High Bailiff Michael Moyle, sitting at The Isle of Man Courts of Justice, sentenced Kershaw to three months in jail, suspended for 18 months, and told him he was not prepared to make him a "martyr".

The 48-year-old was also banned from driving for 16 months after pleading guilty to drink-driving.
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Kershaw's lawyer Nigel Cordwell said the troubled DJ was "struggling to come to terms with personal tragedy".

He had been arrested by police and spent six days in the cells after trying to enter Ms Banner's home on August 29.

She secured a 12-month restraining order in court earlier last month which banned him from approaching her or her new partner, Jim Imrie.

Kershaw and Ms Banner had moved from London to the Isle of Man in April last year to set up home in the picturesque coastal town of Peel.

But Ms Banner soon left the former Radio 1 presenter with their children, Sonny, nine, and Dolly, eight, to live with Mr Imrie.
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PostPosted: 09 Oct 07, 16:17 
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BBC Two's Sound


BBC Two's new weekly music show - Sound - makes its debut on Saturday, October 20.

The show will be co-hosted by BBC Radio 1 DJ Annie Mac and new BBC signing Nick Grimshaw.

Sound focuses on UK music and, with no studio base, it is filmed at outside locations across the UK.

The BBC said the show is a "fast-paced programme showcasing the most exciting new music, as well as the hottest established artists from the UK and overseas".

The shows will feature live performances and interviews focusing on the world of teens.

Artists for the first show are still under wraps.

waveguide.co.uk


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New BBC Two Drama


BBC Drama today announced the commission of Burn Up, set in the real-life context of climate change.

For transmission on BBC Two, Burn Up is written by Simon Beaufoy and produced by Kudos Film and Television, who produced Spooks and Life on Mars.

The cast is headed by Emmy Award-winner Bradley Whitford, best known for his role as Josh on The West Wing.

Whitford is joined by Neve Campbell and Rupert Penry-Jones.

This topical thriller sees oil company executives, environmental activists and politicians collide in the battle between economic success and ecological responsibility.




Norman Wisdom Documentary


Norman Wisdom’s last stage appearance is to be shown in a BBC Two documentary looking at the 92-year-old performer and his life today.

The 40-minute documentary will be part of a strand called Wonderland, which will also feature a programme looking at Britain’s oldest entertainers.

Wisdom has been followed by a camera crew for the last five months in an attempt to convey what his life is like now he is more dependent on his family for support.

He was recently moved him to a nursing home in the Isle of Man because he is suffering from the early stages of Alzheimer’s.

The documentary, which does not yet have a title, will feature Wisdom, who made his stage debut in 1946, performing his signature song Don’t Laugh At Me at the Encore Theatre Awards earlier this year.

His agent for 27 years, Johnny Mans, said the performance was poignant because it was expected to be his last stage appearance and claimed fans of the star would be surprised by the documentary.





World Service - More Funding


BBC World Service will receive £70million of extra funding from the UK Government for the three-year period from 2008/2009 to 2010/2011.

The announcement was made by Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling during his Comprehensive Spending Review announcement in Parliament today.

The announcement formally confirmed £15m per annum funding for a BBC news and information television channel in the Farsi (Persian) language for Iran which will be launched next year.

The go-ahead for the service was announced in October 2006 by then Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown.

BBC World Service also received funding to enhance its forthcoming Arabic language television news and information channel.

The services in Arabic and Farsi will be the first television news services to be launched by the BBC in a decade. They will be the first television services to be publicly-funded by Grant-in-aid from the UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office.

The new BBC Arabic Television Service is due to launch around the turn of the year, initially as a 12-hour a day news and information service, at a cost of £19m per annum.

This initial service was funded through reprioritisation of the BBC World Service's language portfolio and self-help efficiencies.

The extra funding announced today means the new channel would be able to broadcast 24 hours a day from an appropriate point during the next financial year. A full year's operational cost of the additional 12 hours of television broadcasting in Arabic will be an extra £6m per annum.

The overall settlement also includes £1m per annum from 2009/10 to enhance BBC World Service's multi-media operations in languages relevant to ethnic communities resident in the UK.

BBC World Service Director Nigel Chapman said: "As we mark the 75th birthday of the BBC's service to the world this December, this settlement strengthens BBC World Service's future as a multi-media provider of high quality independent and impartial news and information around the world.



Hollywood Strike May Cripple TV

US TV networks and studios have started planning for a strike by Hollywood writers next month which could cripple the television industry.

The Writers' Guild of America (WGA) and studios represented by the Alliance of Motion Picture & Television Producers (AMPTP) returned to the negotiation table for a seventh day of talks to avert strike action, which could begin on November 1.

The two sides have been talking since July but on Friday each side accused the other of inflexibility and expressed frustration at the sluggish pace of negotiations.

The last strike, in 1988, lasted 22 weeks, and losses to the industry were estimated at £250 million.



Casualty Actor To Leave


Simon MacCorkindale is to leave the BBC's medical drama Casualty at the end of the year.

The actor, who plays consultant Harry Harper, will still be seen into next year.

Speaking on GMTV, MacCorkindale revealed he will finish filming at Christmas, before embarking on rehearsals for a 16-week tour of Sleuth, which starts in Windsor in January next year.

The veteran star, who joined Casualty in 2002, has seen his alter ego go through many ups and downs.




EastEnders Football Phone-in


BBC Five Live EastEnders actor Phil Daniels and Joe Swash join host Tim Lovejoy for a special 606 phone-in on BBC Radio 5 Live tomorrow at 22:00.

Chelsea fan Daniels and Arsenal fan Swash will vent their spleen on the footballing issues of the day, argue over who will win the Premier League and chat to callers.

Phil Daniels said: "I've made it on to the greatest football phone-in in the UK. I'd better clue myself up for it!"



Andy Kersaw Suspended Jail Sentence

BBC radio presenter Andy Kershaw was given a suspended prison sentence today for breaching a restraining order that banned him from approaching his former partner.

Kershaw, 48, was jailed for three months, suspended for 18 months, after admitting the offence at the Isle of Man Courts of Justice, a court official said.

He also received a 16-month driving ban after pleading guilty to drink driving on the island in August.

The former BBC Radio 1 DJ moved to the seaside town of Peel with his former partner Juliette Banner in 2006.

After the couple split, Kershaw was convicted of harassing her and was ordered to stop going near her. In August, he broke the order by trying to enter her house, the court heard.

At a hearing last month, he told reporters outside court: "I've lost my kids, I've lost the woman I love, I've lost everything. It is a very difficult time for me. I just want peace and quiet."

Kershaw is currently not presenting his weekly BBC Radio 3 show. A BBC spokeswoman said: "Andy Kershaw is on a break from BBC Radio 3 at the moment. We will talk with him about his future in due course."

The Rochdale-born broadcaster joined Radio 1 in 1985 after working for singer Billie Bragg as a driver and roadie.

He switched to Radio 3 in 2001 to present a show featuring world music, rock, country and blues.

Kershaw moved permanently from London to the Isle of Man last year. He had previously visited many times on holiday and for the annual TT motorbike races.

waveguide.co.uk


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PostPosted: 10 Oct 07, 17:06 
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Barbara Windsor Won't Carry On

Barbara Windsor, who plays Peggy Mitchell in EastEnders, has turned down a chance to appear in a new Carry On film insisting it is doomed to fail.

The 70-year-old made her name in the comedy franchise - alongside other British stars Sid James, Kenneth Williams and Joan Sims. But she turned down the chance to appear in the planned Carry On London.

Windsor said: "There's no way I'd do it. The Carry Ons were wonderful but very much of their time. I don't think it's possible to recreate them today. I think, would Sid James have done it? Would Kenneth Williams? And the answer is no."


Barbara Windsor, who plays Peggy Mitchell in EastEnders, has turned down a chance to appear in a new Carry On film insisting it is doomed to fail.

The 70-year-old made her name in the comedy franchise - alongside other British stars Sid James, Kenneth Williams and Joan Sims. But she turned down the chance to appear in the planned Carry On London.

Windsor said: "There's no way I'd do it. The Carry Ons were wonderful but very much of their time. I don't think it's possible to recreate them today. I think, would Sid James have done it? Would Kenneth Williams? And the answer is no."







Red Dwarf On Your Mobile


Fans of the cult sci-fi comedy series Red Dwarf, will soon be able to watch exclusively created ‘mobisodes’ of the show on their mobile phone from tomorrow via Pitch, the international mobile entertainment company.

Animated episodes made up from classic moments in the show, will be available from on a weekly basis.

Charles Armitage at Red Dwarf said: “Pitch Entertainment has created amazing, ground breaking technology that gives our fans the chance to access and enjoy Red Dwarf whilst on the move. The weekly animated ‘mobisodes’, the social networking functionality and the exclusive content will enhance the Red Dwarf experience for everyone.”

Pitch is available to mobile users in thirteen territories, as far-flung as Malaysia and Singapore, as well as across Europe with plans to launch a new territory every month over the next year.

Martin Bowley chief executive at Pitch, said: “Red Dwarf is iconic with millions of die-hard fans across the world. Combining such comic genius with the latest in mobile entertainment technology creates an exciting and dynamic environment that will move the cult of Red Dwarf into another dimension. Established fans can access new episodes, interact with each other and share their passions for Red Dwarf, whilst a new generation of fans will also be able to discover Red Dwarf for the first time. This is the future of entertainment.”

It will cost subscribers £3 a week for each mobisode.






Jail For Kiefer Sutherland

Waveguide - Kiefer SutherlandActor Kiefer Sutherland, star of the television thriller 24, has pleaded no contest to drink-driving in a deal with prosecutors that will land him in jail for 48 days.

Sutherland, 40, whose plea in Los Angeles Superior Court was entered on his behalf by his lawyer, was arrested last month while still on probation for a 2004 drunken driving offence.

In the latest case, he was charged with two misdemeanour counts - driving under the influence and driving with a blood alcohol level over the legal limit - that each carried a maximum sentence of six months in jail and a $500.

He also faced up to six extra months behind bars for violating his probation.

Under the agreement with the City Attorney's Office, Sutherland pleaded no contest - the equivalent of guilty - to a single count of driving with blood alcohol level above the legal limit.

Prosecutors have recommended that he serve 30 days for that charge plus 18 days for violating his probation in the 2004 case. But the final sentence is up to a judge to decide.

Sutherland was ordered to appear December 21 for sentencing. He was not in court at the time his plea was entered, according to Frank Mateljan, a spokesman for the city attorney.




Kylie Minogue In TV Special


Kylie Minogue is to feature in an ITV1 special, it has been announced.

The Kylie Show will feature classic hits and tracks from her new album.

Rather than a concert-style performance, the singer and her long-time creative director William Baker have devised a “visual experience” to accompany each track.

The hour-long show will air on ITV1 this autumn.

Minogue said: “Working with ITV on this special has been an incredibly exciting experience.

“My creative team and I are preparing a fabulous evening with a mixture of old songs, new songs and lots of surprises thrown into the mix as well.”

The 39-year-old star releases her new album, X, on November 26.

The single 2 Hearts is out on November 12.

An ITV spokesman said: “We are delighted to be bringing Kylie to ITV1 in what will become the must-see TV event of the autumn.

“Working in close collaboration, Kylie, her creative team and the show’s producers are pushing the boundaries to create an original and visually breathtaking piece of entertainment.”



ITV Divas Show


A one off entertainment special celebrating the world's vest female singers is to be broadcast by ITV.

Presented by Mylene Klass, Saturday Night Divas is expected to include Celine Dion, Jennifer Lopez, Alicia Keys, Jameilia and Natasha Beddingfield.

The programme will mark the culmination of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

Meanwhile, Celine Dion is to feature in the occasional ITV series An Audience With...

waveguide.co.uk


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PostPosted: 11 Oct 07, 17:04 
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Hollywood writers in contract showdown USATODAY


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Classic FM signs 25-concert deal



Classic FM has struck its biggest live music deal with a series of 25 concerts featuring the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, to be presented by Katie Derham.

The GCap Media station has signed a five-year partnership with the Liverpool Philharmonic and will broadcast a series of special programmes featuring the orchestra throughout 2008.

The deal represents Classic FM's single biggest investment in live orchestral music.

New programming will include a six-part history of the orchestra, a monthly programme broadcast from Liverpool on a Sunday night, and weekly reports on the city's cultural life throughout 2008 fronted by the Liverpool Echo arts editor, Joe Riley.

Classic FM will also move its entire output to Liverpool for a 24-hour period at the beginning of next year, with presenters including Simon Bates, Jane Jones, Jamie Crick and Mark Forrest broadcasting live from the city.

"This marks a major new investment in our broadcasting of live orchestral concerts, " said the Classic FM managing director, Darren Henley.

"We're delighted to be able to showcase the music-making of the Liverpool Phil to our UK-wide audience.

"This is an orchestra which has undergone a major transformation with the arrival of its new chief conductor, Vasily Petrenko.

"The people of Liverpool know just how great the orchestra has become - now we're going to make sure the rest of the UK hears all about it."

Classic FM's series of 25 live concerts will be recorded for broadcast at the Liverpool Philharmonic Hall and will be heard on air in Live at the Liverpool Phil on Sunday afternoons at 5pm from the beginning of January.

The station will also bring the Liverpool orchestra to the Royal Albert Hall for two special concerts next year, the first of which will feature the world-renowned pianist Lang Lang.

The Liverpool Philharmonic was Classic FM's first arts partner in 2001.

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PostPosted: 12 Oct 07, 20:00 
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News Flash: Vince Vaughn gets attacked by dwarves!

Orlando Bloom in car crash

YOUR questions answered by Take That

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PostPosted: 12 Oct 07, 20:14 
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Former Lost Actress And Jail


Former lost actress Michelle Rodriguez will start her six-month jail sentence on Christmas Eve - after she has finished work on her new film.

The actress was given the jail sentence after admitting violating her probation for driving under the influence.

She was told December 24 was the latest date she could hand herself in at a Los Angeles County jail - and a message on her MySpace page reveals she will do just that, after she had flown to New Zealand to shoot a new film alongside Sigourney Weaver, provided her visa is not withdrawn by the New Zealand authorities.

The message reads: "Michelle will still be leaving for New Zealand to film James Cameron's Avatar and will then report back to turn herself in to serve her sentence on Christmas Eve.

"Michelle is a survivor and is always growing from her experiences, and this will be no different. Nothing will bring her down, especially not something like this."



Jonathan Ross v Jeremy Kyle

Jeremy Kyle is to host a new Saturday morning radio show for GCap media which will go out at the same time as Jonathan Ross on BBC Radio 2.

Kyle, whose ITV1 talk show was described as "trash" by a judge last month, will present a weekly two-hour programme on GCap's 42 commercial stations.

Starting on October 20,Kyle's show, like Ross's, will be a mix of music and celebrity guests.

Pete Simmons of GCap Media, which runs the stations in The One Network in England and Wales, said he was "delighted" to have Kyle on board.

"Jeremy is a captivating personality," he said. "His show will provide a strong offering for our listeners on a Saturday morning."

Kyle hosted a confessions show on Virgin Radio before presenting the late-night show on Capital FM. He moved into television in 2005.

Jonathan Ross regularly attracts audiences of 3.25 million.





BBC Documentary About Silbury Hill


Neil Oliver, presenter of the BBC's coast series, is to explore the interior of the largest man-made mound in Europe for a new BBC Four documentary.

Produced by Lion Television, Silbury Hill will feature the archaeologist attempting to discover why the Wiltshire mound was built.

The location was previously the subject of an axed documentary made in the late Sixties by archaeologist Richard Atkinson.

The new 60-minute, one-off programme will be broadcast next year.




Archers Podcast


The BBC is to launch a daily podcast of BBC Radio 4's The Archers as part of a new service offering more than a hundred titles to download.

The everyday podcast of country folk – containing the latest episode in full – will be available from Sunday.

The programme already has a sizeable following online, where it regularly receives a million "listen again" requests per month on the BBC Radio Player.

The addition of a podcast will allow fans to transfer The Archers onto an MP3 player and listen to it on the move.

Mark Friend, Controller, Multiplatform & Interactive, BBC Audio & Music, said: "Podcasting gives listeners more control over where and when they listen to our programmes.

"Our podcasting trial has been extremely popular and I'm delighted that we can now begin to offer our audiences a much wider range of great content to download."




GCap Wins Northampton Digital Licence


GCap Media has been awarded the new local digital radio multiplex licence for Northampton, Ofcom has announced.

Operating as NOWdigital, the company will provide nine local digital radio services in addition to BBC radio Northampton.

It is expected the service will cover and area with around 500,000 adults.

It is expected the service will cover and area with around 500,000 adults.

Contemporary and Chart - Northants 96 - GCap Media plc
Gold Gold - GCap Media plc
Modern Rock - XFM - GCap Media plc
Adult Contemporary and Classic Hits - Connect FM - Forward Media Limited
Adult Contemporary - To be confirmed
Religious - UCB UK - United Christian Broadcasters Ltd
Variety pop & rock - Jack FM - Absolute Radio International Ltd.
Local Traffic and Travel - Traffic Radio - Highways Agency
Asian Sabras Radio - Sabras Sound Ltd


waveguide.co.uk


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PostPosted: 13 Oct 07, 14:42 
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Bo In The USA

If last year's Celebrity Big Brother taught us anything, it's that Dirk Benedict is still a star, Shilpa Shetty can remain dignified even in the midst of an argument about stock cubes and Jade Goody is quite awful. Actually, I think even those with the Goody autobiographies sitting lonely on their bookshelf, a bottle of Shhh! in their bathroom and an envelope of unclaimed sponsorship money from Goody's failure to complete the London Marathon - a diet of Chinese takeaways might have been what failed her - could have told you that Jade Goody was unpleasant but it was a good to have it clarified by the woman herself.

However, it did teach me one other thing, that of the influence of John Noel. As unpleasant as it was to watch Jade Goody, it was equally unpleasant to watch Russel Brand expand upon his one joke - ballbags or some such - with a limp defence of Jade Goody along the lines of, "It's a difficult one..." Same goes for Dermot O'Leary defending Goody on Big Brother's Little Brother and his being left speechless as Nina Wadia and Dave Gorman both accused her of racism. Finally, Davina McCall interrogated Jade Goody after her eviction with all the steeliness of a feather pillow, proving that, whatever else she has been ill-advised to do she should not ever front Newsnight. And who would the agent behind Brand, Goody, O'Leary and McCall happen to be? John Noel as it happens, which might go some way to explain why the dreadful Goody got a much easier post-eviction interview from McCall than did Jo O'Meara.

So to Bo In The USA, a show that in its Bo Selecta guise always used to have an unhealthy preoccupation with Davina McCall. A visit to the John Noel website shows up Leigh Francis, the comedian behind Bo Selecta. One would seem to explain the other. With this having been produced before the Celebrity Big Brother fracas, John Noel (who executive produces) makes sure that Goody appears for no apparent reason as well as another client of his, Cleo Rocos. One suspects that this kind of thing goes on all the time but to see it all so clearly leaves a sour taste in the mouth. Was Bo In The USA crippled by the need keep the roster of John Noel clients in work? Or was it just not funny to begin with? Either way, calling this a comedy is like shaping a large turd to look like a turkey and serving it for Christmas dinner.

Speaking of Christmas, remember those seasonal specials in which Terry And June, Victor Meldrew and the cast of 'Allo 'Allo would leave their normal environs and head for pastures new. Terry And June would leave suburbia for France, Victor Meldrew to the Algarve and 'Allo 'Allo to the Russian Front in search of the Madonna with ze big boobies. Bo In The USA carries on this tradition by relocating Avid Merrion (Leigh Francis) and his wife and sister Sacha (Barunka O'Shaughnessy) to a hotel in Los Angeles. A hotel that seems to be the favourite home-away-from-home of Craig David, Simon Cowell, Ozzy Osbourne, Michael Jackson and Mel B. Same people, same gags, same tired look of having seen it all on my face.

The show opens with Avid and Sacha inviting us into their hotel. Holly Valance is lazing by the pool, the Mexican Wolf-Boys are cleaning up the driveway and Craig David is taking Kes for a swim. The Bear interviews Jenny McCarthy and Cleo Rocos nurses Stallone and Schwarzenegger at the Last Action Hospice. Things continue in this vein for a further five episodes. Craig David eventually works his way out of the pool and onto the same lounger as Valance. Keith Lemon, arriving stateside from Manchester, goes in search of Fabio to front the advertising campaign for Securipole, Avid searches out Shannon Doherty for roller-blading and the Bear eventually gets his own show. Michael Jackson hosts Pimp My Bride, Titty Tennis and makes a few calls to Martin Bashir ("Hello, is that Martin Bashir?" / "Yes..." / "****! Chamone!" etc.) while Keith Lemon learns about the end of the world from a giant bunny rabbit with the face of Craig David.

In writing about Star Stories, Channel 4's celebrity-fueled comedy, I said that all of the writers' best jokes come in the first minute or so. And as funny as that is, there isn't very much more after that first gag wears off. Alex Ferguson is on full hairdryer fury every minute of the day while Kirk Douglas is still dressed like Spartacus but they have mere minutes of screen time and do not drift between episodes. It's very best gags come and go in seconds - "Michael Winner: "I've made some **** - but Swept Away is total bollocks!" is a perfect example. Happily, Star Stories works because it doesn't hang about.

Bo In The USA is the very opposite of that with this telling exactly the same jokes as did Bo Selecta five years ago. It isn't that I don't find, or have never found, Bo Selecta funny. Back in the opening minutes of the very first episode of the first series, I was crying at the sight of Michael Jackson giving us a tour of his home, including an introduction to his neighbour Ozzy Osbourne, the bowl full of bent spoons left by Uri Geller and the truth about Bubbles. "Y'all didn't think she was a monkey? Chamone!" Same goes for Craig David. However, five years on and with the same characters and jokes, is there anyone still laughing at this? Actually, it's worth asking if there was anyone the first time around who thought the Mel B character funny? And if they did, are they still laughing now?

Bo In The USA has the very slimmest of reasons to explain it being produced, taking something that must have some size of audience and bringing it to a new location in the hope of wringing laughs out of a very familiar situation. However, it's just as welcome as those Christmas specials, which means it isn't very welcome at all.
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Television has been given a morality bypass Mail


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Pete Doherty meets Paul McCartney



Just who would Paul McCartney choose for a chat about fashion, favourite bands and the cost of infamy?





The idea has been put to Sir Paul McCartney and out of everyone he could have picked to interview him, he's chosen the Babyshambles singer and tabloid fixture Peter Doherty. Only trouble is, Pete is currently in rehab, but after some tactful negotiations, he is allowed out of his clinic for the afternoon. So it is, with only OMM otherwise present in the hotel suite, that the two sit down to talk one recent Thursday afternoon. But first, Pete wants to give Sir Paul a present ...


Sir Paul: Wow! I'm terrible like that. People are really sort of nice at bringing me things. So someone said: 'Would you like to do an interview? And who would you like to do, and I said: 'Pete'. 'Cause otherwise it's just some real boring person who you're not interested in.

We've met briefly once before, backstage at a Little Britain show, and I'd seen you on the Jonathan Ross Show, which I thought was very cool. To me, there was all the newspaper stuff saying, 'He's out, he's out of it,' so I was like, 'He's going to miss a few notes here,' but you were spot-on; really nailed the piece you were playing.

Pete: Yeah, I remember asking you on the stairs at Little Britain about [the Beatles song] 'I Will'. I just love that. A minor, D minor.

Sir Paul: That's great. I do a lot of Beatles stuff now, and revisiting it is really interesting - just looking at what chords you were using and revisiting the lyrics, you know, 'cause some of them back then you thought, 'Well you're just writing a song of straight love lyrics maybe.' But playing them now, some of them have a different significance for me, you know, they just seem a bit deeper. I was just some young guy and, you know, pretty hot, pretty on the ball. It's nice to do the songs for that reason. 'That was good, did I say that? Yes, you did.'

Pete: I wanted to ask about some of your old clobber ...

Sir Paul: My what?

Pete: Your clothes ...

Sir Paul: Well, we started off in Hamburg. Before that it was, like, teddy boys, you know. Then Hamburg, it was leathers. That was after Gene Vincent really, we were just mini Gene Vincents. That was one of the great things about Hamburg, you would get these guys coming through - Little Richard, Gene - and you'd be hanging with them, instead of just buying their records. That was cool. Gene was a nutter. A beautiful nutter.

Pete: I heard you wrote 'Michelle' to pull girls ...

Sir Paul: Yeah, we used to go to these art school parties because John was at art school and me and George were at the school next door, which is now a performing arts school. John was that little bit older than us, which at that age is impressive. He was a year-and-a-half older than me and you really look up to people like that. But it's funny because I don't think I had that same feeling with Ringo, who I think was a few months older than John.

John was a pretty impressive cat - being a year-and-a-half older and going to art school, all that was a pretty cool combination for us. So we'd tag along to these parties, and it was at the time of people like Juliette Greco, the French bohemian thing. They'd all wear black turtleneck sweaters, it's kind of where we got all that from, and we fancied Juliette like mad. Have you ever seen her? Dark hair, real chanteuse, really happening. So I used to pretend to be French, and I had this song that turned out later to be 'Michelle'. It was just an instrumental, but years later John said: 'You remember that thing you wrote about the French?' I said: 'Yeah.' He said: 'That wasn't a bad song, that. You should do that, y'know.'

Pete: When I first met Carl [Barat, co-founder of the Libertines], I was 17 and he was about a year-and-a-half older than me. We had this song called 'France', a jazzy little number. I couldn't really play guitar then, not properly. I was convinced I was going to be the singer and he was going to be the guitarist, like Morrissey and Marr, but a few years in, he was convinced that he was going to sing as well so I had to learn the guitar.

Sir Paul: Like me being a bass player. Which now I'm very proud of, it's my role and I'm happy with it. But at first it was the loser role in the group. It's usually the fat guy who stands at the back. So I was a bit unhappy when I got that job, I wanted to be up front with the guitar. But I had such a crappy little guitar, a Rosetti Lucky 7, and it was cheap. My Dad was very against the never-never hire purchase, and was like, 'Pay your way, lad. Never be under an obligation to anyone.' Which was good advice. But the others - John's Auntie Mimi and George's Dad - didn't have that problem - so they would get their guitars. I had this crappy thing which was really just a piece of wood with a pick-up on it. It looked quite glamorous, but we took it over to Hamburg and I think someone smashed it - like early Pete Townshend. ****!

Pete: I had this guitar which was £20. It was a big old thing, and I think it came from India. The make was the same font as Gibson, so I doctored it with a little bit of marker pen.

OMM: How did you both handle, at different points, the adjustment from writing with a partner to writing on your own?

Sir Paul: The good thing for me was that we hadn't always written as a partnership. I mean, we were a partnership on the road, when we had twin beds. But then when we actually got houses, I would write something on a day when I wouldn't see him. I had kind of done 'Penny Lane' and 'Yesterday', when he'd done 'Strawberry Fields' at his place. We'd get together and polish them, but we had established this thing of writing separately. It took the edge off it when we had to completely write separately I still miss not having someone to check things with, though.

Pete: Well, I'm probably more in a writer partnership now than at the Libertines stage. Writing with Mick Whitnall on the latest Babyshambles album was pretty much 50-50, or 40-60 maybe. We were bouncing off each other.

Carl was always quite tight with quality control, like I had this line in my head for years that I always wanted to put it in a song, and he used to go cold when I said it. I can't remember the name of the poet now, but he became resident poet of Barnsley football club [it was Ian McMillan, poet, playwright and regular Newsnight Review contributor] ... [Pete sings] 'It's a charmed life, double as a poet for your favourite team' and every song we would write I would try and get that in.

Sir Paul: ...and always get blown out. Have you got it in anything yet?

Pete: No. Maybe next time.

Sir Paul: Our first little cool bit of collaboration came when ... I'd met John and he said: 'What do you do?' And I said: 'I play guitar and I really like rock'n'roll and Eddie Cochran.' And he said: 'Ah, well, I've written a couple of songs.' And I said: 'So have I.' They weren't really anything, but we had independently tried to write. So we used to go to my house, when my dad was at work. I can see us in the front living room and in the parlour - this little house that is now national bloody heritage [Sir Paul's boyhood home was acquired by the National Trust in 1998] - just standing there, singing. I mean those early days were really cool, just sussing each other out, and realising that we were good. You just realise from what he was feeding back. Often it was your song or his song, it didn't always just start from nothing. Someone would always have a little germ of an idea. So I'd start off with [singing] 'She was just 17, she'd never been a beauty queen' and he'd be like, 'Oh no, that's useless' and 'You're right, that's bad, we've got to change that.' Then changing it into a really cool line: 'You know what I mean.' 'Yeah, that works.' We'd have individual bits of paper. I have fond flashbacks of John writing - he'd scribble it down real quick, desperate to get back to the guitar. But I knew at that moment that this was going to be a good collaboration. Like when I did 'Hey Jude'. I was going through it for him and Yoko when I was living in London. I had a music room at the top of the house and I was playing 'Hey Jude' when I got to the line 'the movement you need is on your shoulder' and I turned round to John and said: 'I'll fix that if you want.' And he said: 'You won't, you know, that's a ******* great line, that's the best line in it.' Now that's the other side of a great collaborator - don't touch it, man, that's OK.

Pete: Did you see they were giving out these supplements of great interviews with the Guardian over the past couple of months - Fidel Castro and Mae West, people like that. And they had an interview with John Lennon [with Jann Wenner, editor of Rolling Stone, from December 1970]. I'd never seen it before but it struck me as quite interesting, him saying that your tours had been like Satyricon.

Sir Paul: Like what?

Pete: Like Fellini's [1969 film] Satyricon.

Sir Paul: Not really. I mean, it's a bit of an exaggeration. It was definitely quite decadent. The whole thing about getting into a band was to get girls, basically. Money and girls. Probably girls first. So when you are on the road, and there was time for a party, we had a bunch of those. There was an element of Satyricon, although that overstates the case a bit. But there were certainly some elements that you wouldn't talk about in the newspapers. Privately, I could tell a tale or two [laughs]. The funny thing is when later the rumour came out that John was gay, I said: 'I don't think so.' I mean, I don't know what he did when he went to New York, but certainly not in any of my experiences. We used to sleep together, top and tail it, you know. I always used to say: 'Come on, I would have spotted something here.' But what I spotted was completely the opposite. It was just chicks, chicks, chicks.

OMM: It must have been very different to today, when everywhere you go someone has a camera phone, and you can't even go out of the house without someone reporting what you are doing.

Sir Paul: Yeah, that's a bit of a hassle, isn't it? No there was none of that really, no cameras. There was no reportage or paparazzi.

Pete: Really? If you look on YouTube there's something called the 'Egg of Kerbibble'. I filmed my mate getting hold of a paparazzi through some railings and he's got an egg cracked right on his head, and if you look closely you'll see another couple of eggs come flying across and catch him. Small compensation, do you know what I mean?

This bloke in Rome once took his camera off and cracked me round the head with it, and I'm bleeding. He was a bit bigger than me, the Italian photographer, but I thought I can't back down now, so I sort of squared up to him. Luckily my mate jumped round and bit him on the neck.

Sir Paul: [looking mildly taken aback] And all you're trying to do is ...

Pete: Get into your hotel.

Sir Paul: Just trying to, you know, write some songs, and sing, and all this stuff comes with it. In truth, thinking back, it really didn't exist like that. It was much easier to get around. I used to go to gigs on the tube, all those Odeons that were out in Walthamstow or wherever. I'd just go and walk into the gig, even at the height of the Beatles thing. It was just cool. You knew you could control it. All these girls going 'Heeyy Paul! We love you!' 'All right, we'll walk slowly towards the gig and I'll do the autographs, but any shouting and I'm not going in.' I kind of liked it then, me and my harem.

Pete: How old were you when you first had kids?

Sir Paul: 28.

Pete: That must have settled you down?

Sir Paul: We were quite sort of hippie about it though, me and Linda. We had a laid-back attitude. There's a picture that I could not imagine being involved in now, but it was a real summery day and we were coming through Dublin airport and I'm carrying my daughter, Mary - who's now got two of her own kids - and she's completely naked.

Pete: Where were you when punk kicked off?

Sir Paul: At first, it was a bit of a shock. Heather [McCartney, Paul's stepdaughter and Linda's daughter from her previous marriage] was a punk, so she sort of brought it home and me and Linda were like, 'You've cut all your hair off, darling.' She used to have this long blonde hair and then suddenly it was spikey; tartan, pins, plastic bags and everything. And it was like, 'Whoa!' But she took us through it, and educated us. Played us the Damned and the Clash and the Sex Pistols and stuff, and so you gradually got it. Realised it was time for a shake-up. It was good. Like a mirror they put on you: 'Oh yeah, we're pretty boring, and these kids aren't.' The other thing is that it looked quite aggressive but it was a lot of image, which it had been for us. We were pussycats in leather, it's not like we were big hard guys, and it was the same for a lot of our friends. Heather had dyed her hair and I remember one of her boyfriends had an 'A' on his jacket [the 'A' indicated 'anarchy']. And I was like, 'What's that stand for?', and he said: 'I don't know.' It's a look, you know, and it looks good [laughs]. I remember being in traffic, in London, and when you're famous you try really hard not to get noticed so much, especially if you're in a traffic jam, and suddenly there was a bunch of punk kids, and I'm like, 'Oh no, how is this going to work out? What's the attitude going to be?' and you're vaguely apprehensive, and they were great, they came up: 'Paul!' 'Love that "Mull of Kintyre", Paul!' So you realised it wasn't as one-sided as you thought everything was. It was a shake-up.

Pete: What about the Smiths?

Sir Paul: Yeah, I like them. Linda was into Morrissey; they wrote to each other a lot. Big fans. I played with Johnny [Marr] a bit. It was original.

Pete: Falling guitar lines where there's no chords and you spend three weeks trying to work out what he's really playing.

Sir Paul: You could tell it was Morrissey. It was like his paint palette ... [Pete starts singing the Smiths song 'Still Ill'.]

Sir Paul: [appreciatively] Have you ever covered that?

Pete: No.

Sir Paul: It's obviously a song you love. It's in your blood.

Pete: I got it as a seven-inch from a second-hand shop in Nuneaton. It was on the wall, and I thought I was being clever, 'cause I nicked it - but I'd only nicked the sleeve. So I had to go back and pay for the record. As soon as the guitar started, I didn't even listen to the rest of it, I just wanted to play it again and again. I didn't want it to end ...

Sir Paul: The nice thing about having kids is that you get a lot of that through them. You get the next wave of musical education coming off them. Heather particularly - she's a big music buff, she went to all the shows. But for me, someone like Ray Davies and the Kinks would be like that for my generation.

Pete: I've got this image of you coming to London to live for the first time, going up some wooden stairs, into a room with a typewriter on the top floor of a Victorian house. Is that right?

Sir Paul: Well, I used to live in Wimpole Street, in Jane Asher's house, which has great, great memories. In the early days we used to come down to London and then drive back up to Liverpool, but then we were working in London too much to just go back, so Brian Epstein, our manager, arranged for us to rent a flat in Mayfair, on Green Street.

Pete: Did you ever bump into Tony Hancock?

Sir Paul: Once, at Twickenham Film Studios. We'd finished the day and he'd finished. So it was: 'We're big fans of yours, Tone. We think you're great.' You could never think of anything else to say.

Pete: Have you read Hancock's biography, When the Wind Changed? It's got a really awful photo on the front of him! He's all bloated at the bottom of these stairs. I don't know if it's supposed to be symbolic or something. How about Wilfred Bramble [Steptoe actor who appeared in A Hard day's Night]?

Sir Paul: Dear old Wilfred. Later you start to realise he's an actor, but to us he's like a magic person. Now I can see that he actually got up in the morning, shaved and did stuff, but then he was just this magic guy. Wilfred was a fantastic actor but he would forget his lines sometimes. To us he was a God, and it was sort of embarrassing for him, but in a way it was fascinating.

We'd be in a lot of shows, but we'd be the only rock'n'roll band in them. Dances, comedians ... it was a nice world for me.

Pete: In the early days of the Libertines we used to put on Arcadian cabaret nights. There'd be some girl climbing out of an egg, we'd try and get a couple of mates to tell a few jokes, performance poets, and then we'd play in the middle of it all. More people were on stage than in the crowd.

· Listen to an extract from Doherty and McCartney's conversation here

Peter Doherty: livin' doll

1. In April a toy company named Fishy Toyz brought out a Peter Doherty doll with a mini crack-pipe that lights up when it touches his lips. Anti-drugs campaigners were not amused.

2. He is a big fan of Oscar Wilde. But his favourite books are Orwell's 1984; Greene's Brighton Rock and Baudelaire's Flowers of Evil.

3. In 2005, Vogue placed him second in their list of best-dressed male celebrities - Kate Moss was top of the women's section.

4. His father, also called Peter, was a major in the army. This meant young Peter, his mother Jacqueline and his sisters Amy Jo and Emily moved around a lot between Britain and Germany when he was growing up.

5. He once said of his ex: 'A lot of people basically are obsessed with the missus and I don't know why really ... she's just a bird from South London.'

Paul McCartney: tall and effortless

1. He never learnt to read music; instead he writes and plays all his songs by ear.

2. Beating George Harrison by roughly half an inch, he was the tallest Beatle.

3. He is probably the richest rock star in the world. His personal wealth in 2006 was estimated to exceed £500m. 'Let's write a swimming pool,' he once said to John Lennon.

4. He reportedly turned down a part in Franco Zefferelli's 1968 film of Romeo and Juliet. McCartney didn't believe he would be good enough and the Beatles were recording Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band at the time.

5. One of his greatest admirers is Bob Dylan. While he heaped praise on Lennon and Harrison in a 2007 interview with Rolling Stone, the best was saved for Paul. 'I'm in awe of McCartney. He's about the only one that I am in awe of. He can do it all. And he's never let up ... He's just so damn effortless.'

· Paul McCartney plays the Roundhouse, Camden as part of the BBC Electric Proms on 25 October. A retrospective DVD, The McCartney Years, is out on 12 November. Babyshambles' new album, Shotter's Nation, is out now.
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60 SECONDS with Michelle Pfeiffer


Michelle Pfeiffer, 49, made her Hollywood debut in Grease 2 but didn't make her mark until starring with Al Pacino in Scarface. One of the biggest movie stars of the 1990s, she spent the past few years away from the silver screen before making her comeback this year with Hairspray and now Stardust, in which she plays an evil witch.

You wear ageing make-up in this film. How did you feel when you saw it?

It was liberating. When [director] Matthew Vaughn came to me to do this part, he explained he wanted to poke fun at the obsession with youth and the degrees that women go to in order to retain it. I was excited by that and a little bit anxious, too. There’s one point when I’m 5,000 years old. I’m the oldest thing you’ve ever seen and that was the freakiest part for me because I could really see me at 100 years old. That was disturbing.

How was the process to get the prosthetic make-up on?

Hell. I don’t like to be a whiner and I could go on about it but I won’t.

Did you really once say you felt like an ugly duckling when you were growing up?

It’s interesting that the older you get, the more everyone seems beautiful to you. When I look at youth I see hope and innocence but when you’re younger you’re not able to see yourself or other people that way. So that’s one good thing about getting older. For all kids, all people, no matter how beautiful or secure you are, defining who you are is a process.

Has being so good-looking ever been a disadvantage?
There’s a myth that beautiful people lead perfect lives but there’s another set of issues that come along with that package, so we all have the hand we’re dealt.

Is it more fun playing a baddie?
Evil is more fun, yeah, because we don’t get permission to be bad in life. Generally, the parts most removed from who I am are the most fun. The closer the part is to my own personality then the harder it is for me. It’s easier to immerse myself and lose myself in something that is a real departure. I just dive into the deep end whatever I do. I have this weird naivety where I can do anything and then I get in there and I’m drowning and go: ‘Oh boy, how did I get here?’ I’ve always managed to swim, though.

There’s a myth that beautiful people lead perfect lives but there’s another set of issues that come along with that…

Is it a coincidence that your two recent roles have been quite villainous women?
I can’t really explain that. It was a combination of the projects themselves and working with interesting directors. I just really wanted to be a part of those films and it just so happened that I’m the villain this year.

Does having children make you less ambitious?

There is a definite shift but I don’t have the hindsight or the objectivity to know what it is fully. I started working at the age of 14 and always loved working from the day I started. I pretty much worked continuously and, when I wasn’t working, I felt unbalanced. That changed when I had a family because I had another source to feed me emotionally. Now I have a plethora of riches.

Why have we seen so little of you lately?

It wasn’t a choice. I was reading scripts and just having a life. Time went by and there was just nothing in the scripts that prompted me to say: ‘I want to do this film and go there and do this.’

How has your life changed since you left LA?

incremental but it adds up – a little bit less stress, a little bit slower, just different. I was happy living in Los Angeles but it’s got very congested now and I just wanted more space around me. I lived a pretty normal life in LA and I wouldn’t say our lifestyle now is any different.

You’ll be 50 next year. Will that be a big deal?

Yeah! Who wants to turn 50? Not me! That’s the big one, isn’t it? The big 5-0.

Do you have anything special planned?

I’m not thinking about it, which is a good thing.
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60 SECONDS: Tom Fletcher


Tom Fletcher is one of the chirpy frontmen with lovable pop goons McFly. He went to the Sylvia Young Theatre School before failing to join Busted and forming McFly instead. McFly's Greatest Hits is out next month and the new single, The Heart Never Lies, is out on Monday. McFly present the Nickelodeon awards on October 27 on Nickelodeon.

You’re presenting a children’s awards show. Don’t you want to do more grown-up stuff?

It’s not like a so-called cool awards show, more about having a laugh. They do it in America and no one cares that it’s for children. They just do it for fun. Most of our fans are aged 16 to 20, anyway.

Charlie left Busted to do something more credible. Will you do the same thing to McFly?

No, we’re all happy in McFly. I just don’t think he was very happy in Busted. We don’t have people writing songs for us or telling us we have to do pop stuff. If we want to change, it’s in our power to do so.

What’s the weirdest thing a fan’s done to meet you?

It’s always a shock when they come all the way from somewhere like Japan. They spend all their money on plane tickets and hotels just to see us on tour. That’s nuts. We used to get girls climbing up the drainpipe as well when we used to live together. We all lived in the same house for the first two years and you’d get girls trying to climb in the windows.

Was it a nuisance?

Yes, it was a pain in the arse when we were trying to watch TV. We got rid of them by shooting them with paintball guns.

You could have had someone’s eye out.
No, they were only the spring-loaded ones. It was a good way of getting them out. We were good shots.

The girls used to try to climb in the window... we got rid of them by shooting them with paintball guns

What’s been your most extravagant purchase?

My house.

How many toilets do you have?

Quite a few. Not more than ten though. I think I’ve got five. Not too many. I’ve got quite a few guitars, it’s part of the job. I just buy guitars when I feel like having a new one. I bought quite a few when we first started but now I’m down to one a year. My favourite is my wine-red Les Paul. It’s the nicest one to play.

What is the strangest gig you’ve done?
Getting our clothes off at GAY. It was a bet with Jeremy, who runs it. He said if we were number one we’d have to take our clothes off and it turned out we were number one that week. We didn’t really have a choice. He supplied us with plenty of alcohol in advance. It went down quite well with the crowd.

What was your last dream about?
I woke up singing That’s The Way I Like It. I thought I was hearing it on the TV but I woke up singing it. That was weird. I’ve never woken up singing before.

Have you ever done a really loud fart in public?
All the time. I’ve got no problem with it. We all try to pop them out whenever we can if we’re in company and then blame it on the others. If we’re being interviewed, it’s funny. Or in a lift.

What are the highs and lows of going to stage school?
There aren’t any lows. I had an amazing time. I had the best time of my life there. It was better than going to the s***ty school round the corner from me. Only having to do maths three days a week was good. We sang and acted on the other two. There were only 150 kids in my school, so you know everyone. It’s like a big family and the teachers were really nice.

You were in the film Just My Luck with Lindsay Lohan. Why haven’t you gone mad like she has?

We keep each other grounded. That was our first experience of being around someone really famous. That whole Hollywood It-girl lifestyle is insane. We’re not really into the whole celeb thing either. We like chilling out at home and going to our local pubs rather than the clubs in London. Doing the film was an amazing experience, though – we couldn’t say no.

Did you send any get well cards to her in rehab?

No, we haven’t seen her since the film premiere. I don’t know if we did anything to upset her.
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Ant and Dec under fire in Deloitte report



MediaGuardian.co.uk



The Deloitte report into call-TV deception on ITV shows has highlighted "serious editorial issues" with Soapstar Superstar, Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway and Ant and Dec's Gameshow Marathon.

ITV admitted it would cost £18m to sort out the problems with its premium-rate phone and interactive services, as the true extent of the scandal was revealed in the Deloitte report, published today.

More than 60 ITV series were reviewed by Deloitte, with "serious editorial issues" identified in this year's Soapstar Superstar, Ant and Dec's Saturday Night Takeaway in 2005 and 2006 and Ant and Dec's Gameshow Marathon in 2005.

The review also identified "serious technical issues" around red-button voting and the "late arrival" of SMS votes affecting two ITV shows, including The X Factor final in 2005.

Deloitte pointed the finger at programme producers and staff, third-party suppliers and a "lack of consistently applied procedures".

However, there were no initial resignations from ITV today as Deloitte's damning report was published.

The ITV executive chairman, Michael Grade, defended the broadcaster's position.

He said: "I am also on the record as saying that I take a zero-tolerance stance, and that means not tolerating a culture that condones audiences being deliberately misled, or not getting the service they have been offered.

"In some instances there has been disciplinary action, but I don't intend to take a couple of token scalps in expiation. That would not solve the problem."

The broadcaster is suspending all SMS and red-button voting in live programmes and bringing telephony services in-house for programmes made by ITV Productions, with an intention to extend that to independently produced shows.

ITV is working with BT to bring premium-rate phone services in-house.

The broadcaster is also toughening its compliance procedures with a dedicated interactive governance unit and "relevant and targeted" training for staff.

ITV said it expected its participation TV clean-up to cost £18m, a figure that includes up to £7.8m in refunds to viewers who had no chance of winning competitions.

The broadcaster has also incurred £2m in costs while investigating its participation TV problems and will bear the lion's share of costs relating to the GMTV phone-in scandal.

ITV owns 75% of GMTV, which was hit with a £2m Ofcom fine last month.

The broadcaster may face further Ofcom fines once the regulator has digested the Deloitte report.

Mr Grade lambasted the company he joined earlier this year, saying: "My overall conclusion from the review is that there was a serious cultural failure within ITV."

Outlining concerns with the editorial structures surrounding programming, the Deloitte report outlined that "programme producers, staff and supporting companies did not always recognise or respect the impact of editorial actions on the integrity of interactive elements".

Mr Grade admitted he had expected the report, details of which outline a jaw-dropping array of editorial and procedural errors and lax judgment, to "make for deeply uncomfortable reading".

"While the company saw interactivity as attractive to viewers, and PRS (premium-rate services) revenues as valuable additional revenue, it missed the fact that with it came obligations as well as opportunities," he said.

As part of a package of measures to tighten procedures among staff, Mr Grade added that all production employees will receive "broad compliance training" and will be required to attend "refresher" training on a regular basis.

"It was not understood that when the audience is invited to make choices within programmes, the producer is effectively ceding part of his/her sovereignty over editorial decisions," Mr Grade said.

However, he added that that the failings unearthed by Deloitte were not "venal". "In all cases individuals were motivated by their professional instinct to produce the best show, but they failed to understand that this could come at the expense of keeping faith with participating viewers," he said.
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60 SECONDS: Reese Witherspoon


Reese Witherspoon made her first film, The Man In The Moon, aged 14. Last year, she won an Oscar for her portrayal of June Carter Cash in Walk The Line and later separated from her husband Ryan Phillippe. Her new film Rendition is about the transfer and harsh interrogation of US non-citizens in countries where they are suspected of terrorism.

Did Meryl Streep’s involvement in this film help attract you to the project?

Of course. I was nervous the day I had to work with her. I wasn’t sure I was going to be able to do it but she was wonderful. She’s completely intimidating, completely professional and had a thousand ideas – but as soon as you cut, she’s the nicest, warmest, funniest person.

Who else has intimidated you on set?

Matthew Broderick when I did Election. I’d grown up watching his films and always thought he was so funny. He had that wonderful wry comic wit. I was more scared to meet Matthew than anyone I’ve ever worked with. He was an icon and I had a crush on him when I was little. I used to think he was so cute.

Did you tell him?
Of course not! And I certainly never told his wife.

Have you ever felt prejudice in your own life, as you and your husband do in Rendition?
Yes, when I went to Stanford University when I was 19. I’d already done several films and I really felt this prejudice against me because I was an actress. Some of the students thought I’d only got in there because I was an actress but I applied the same way as everyone else under my real name, which is not the same as my acting name.

Were you a good student?
I was pretty good. I was always on some sort of tangent thinking about things other than what was at hand. I was a very last-minute kind of person but I loved writing papers and doing my research in the library. I was studying English Literature but I was only there for a year.

There’s definitely a grand design – otherwise I wouldn’t be a little girl from Tennessee in Hollywood

How has winning an Oscar changed your life?
It creates opportunities for me to be in different types of films. It helped me to get this job.

Where do you keep the Oscar?

In the living room.

Are you one of those people who believes there’s a master plan for all of us?

There’s definitely a grand design for people’s lives – otherwise I wouldn’t be a little girl from Tennessee in the middle of Hollywood. I have no reason to be here so, yeah, I do definitely believe in destiny.

Your parents are both in the medical profession. How did you end up acting?
I wanted to be an actor from the time I was seven. My parents thought it was a very strange choice but they were really cool about it because they knew I really wanted to do it. They’d drive me to lessons and auditions and I really appreciated that because you don’t want to feel that your dreams are stupid. I once sat next to a guy on a plane who complained he didn’t want to take his kid to ice-skating lessons because they were too expensive. He was sitting in first class. I told him: ‘I’m so glad I didn’t have a parent like you.’ My family has always supported me and revelled in my success.

What aspects of your personality have affected you in your career?

My upbringing as a small-town girl in the South has been both beneficial and detrimental. First of all, I grew up trusting everybody. Why would someone want to do something mean to anybody? I had to train myself out of that and learn not to believe everything I heard. But I think I’ve been able to create success on my own terms while still being a kind and conscientious person. I like people, I care about them and I care about the films I make. I have a real respect for the audience and I think that’s a lot to do with my upbringing.

What are your particular beauty tips?
I just try to exercise, eat well, take care of myself and use a lot of sunscreen. That’s about it. I don’t think about that stuff too much. I’m lucky to have other people who worry about how I look. That’s pretty nice.

Why did you do this film?

Because it has a lot of different, wonderful elements to it. There is definitely a romance to it. There are thriller aspects. It’s not just a film with a message where you sit there for two hours. It raises a lot of questions and makes you think about a lot of the practices that are going on nowadays and whether or not they are legal, ethical or even constitutional.

Do you agree with the practice of rendition, knowing what you know now?
Any mistreatment and the procedures that go on within the film are absolutely inexcusable and unconstitutional.

Would a female American president make serious political changes?
I don’t know. It’s impossible to imagine one person being able to resolve conflicts that have gone on for thousands of years but I’d like to think that there would be some wonderful changes.

What do you think of Hillary Clinton?
Obviously her being a front-runner is a marked step for women in this country and one I talk about with my daughter frequently. It’s an exciting presidential race with a lot of interesting candidates who could change the course of American history.

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