Fatal crash vehicle drove wrong way
CHANNEL 4 is to begin relocating staff to Leeds from next summer in a move the broadcaster’s chief executive claimed would provide new opportunities for people to work in creative and broadcasting industries. Alex Mahon told
that huge amounts of Channel 4’s creative decision-making will be done from Leeds, a factor she said would alter the flavour and tone of the broadcaster.
She added that the process of selecting where exactly in the city it will be based was underway and that Leeds had been “a really clear winner” in the bidding process.
“We are looking to grow how we spend money,” she said.
“We are going to spend an extra quarter-of-a-billion pounds across the UK. So Leeds gave us the reach across the North. But it also has an amazing independent production community already.
“We want to grow the pipeline of talent into the sector. Leeds and Bradford will allow us to bring really diverse, young and new people into the sector.”
Leeds came out ahead of Manchester and Birmingham in the selection process, which will see a total of 300 new roles created by the broadcaster in the city by 2023.
It is also to open a new broadcasting studio to allow Channel 4 news to be anchored from both Leeds and the capital.
Ms Mahon added that a completely new digital creative unit would be opened in Leeds and that it would be looking to recruit locally to staff it. “I think actually for people in the area, that is a really exciting thing,” she said.
“There is always with us a particular focus on how we bring new talent into the industry.
“Channel 4 has got a real role in bringing people into the industry that would not otherwise have a chance to do it. That is even more true for people who either can’t afford or don’t want to move to London.
“This is a big opportunity to bring them into the sector.”
Ms Mahon took the helm at Channel 4 in October last year and is the first female chief executive of any major broadcaster in Britain.
The relocation and ability to broadcast from outside of London will change the nature and style of the way news is produced, she said.
“The flavour of the news is very different where you have it,” she said.
“Having contributors and producers outside of London will help us represent a lot more of the UK.
“What we are trying to do is make sure that we represent wider views, values, communities, backgrounds, opinions, accents and contributors that are not just London.
“I think really you have to have part of the team away from London to do that properly.
“So our aspiration is to represent better across the UK by doing that. You do make creative decisions differently if you are in other places and it is that sense that we want to get more in broadcasting.”
Ms Mahon was full of praise for the way the Leeds bid was organised.
“What we saw when we went out to hear the pitches was humbling. You had independents in there, universities, politicians – that combined sense of team and partnership.
“But the passion and excitement, and the fact that we felt we would make impact here, it was that combination. It felt vibrant and growing and different.”
A driver was killed in a collision near Ferrybridge after driving the wrong way up the motorway.
The man in his 30s was driving a red Suzuki Swift car which collided with a silver Hyundai i40 car and then hit the central reservation between junctions 42 and 41 of the A1(M) southbound at 6.20pm on Thursday. The driver of the Hyundai was taken to hospital, police said yesterday.