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BBC mulls departure from White City

Director general Mark Thompson may use his address to staff on Thursday to reveal plans to quit west London Mark Thompson, the BBC’s director general, is considering announcing that the BBC will quit its entire west London home – possibly selling it to a football club – as part of radical plans that could see more staff moved out of the capital. The corporation is also planning to concentrate out-of-London production into fewer locations, with a plan to shut down the factual department in BBC Birmingham being mooted. England’s second city was once a key BBC centre, and is home to programmes such as the BBC’s Chelsea Flower Show coverage. BBC chairman Lord Patten and Thompson are addressing corporation staff on Thursday to tell them the results of the long-awaited “Delivering Quality First” cost-cutting strategy , which will see nearly 2,000 more jobs going at the public broadcaster. The BBC’s best-known west London home, Television Centre, is up for sale and it is thought the corporation has been in talks with both Queen’s Park Rangers and Chelsea football club about the clubs moving to the site. Chelsea in particular is looking to develop a larger stadium in the west London area. Television Centre is home to what is now called the BBC’s Vision division, including TV channel controllers, commissioning executives and production departments such as drama and entertainment. The site is also home to studios used for programmes such as Strictly Come Dancing, which are operated as a standalone BBC commercial subsidiary. The corporation is vacating the doughnut-shaped TV Centre by 2015, with its several thousand staff due to move to the refurbished Broadcasting House in central London or around the country to sites such as Salford. There have also been rumours, which the corporation has previously denied, that BBC drama could move to Cardiff. However, because parts of TV Centre are listed, the football clubs have expressed an interest in the BBC’s adjacent White City offices instead, which could be knocked down. The White City building – part of the overall White City office complex – is where Thompson and BBC Worldwide are based. One source said that BBC executives are deliberating whether or not to reveal the latest developments in the sale of Television Centre and possible move from White City at Thursday’s announcement. There is also spare capacity at the BBC’s new headquarters in Salford, which is the new home of children’s, sport, learning, parts of Radio 5 Live, future media and technology and BBC Breakfast. It is understood that despite the upheaval of those departments, they will not escape the DQF cuts, and that some of the vacancies created by people choosing not to move from London to Manchester will not be filled. BBC sources say that the 2,500 job losses being proposed include the 650 cuts to the World Service already announced. It is expected that the remaining redundancies will be “back-loaded”, so there will only be a few hundred during the first year or so, with the rest to come after that. About 50% of the cuts are due to come from non-programming areas, with the remaining half from programming. BBC Birmingham is expected to be scaled back, although it is understood that daytime drama Doctors and The Archers will continue to be made there. According to sources, there is a proposal that BBC Birmingham’s factual department is to be closed and its responsibilities, such as Chelsea Flower Show, moved to BBC Bristol. •

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BBC mulls departure from White City

Director general Mark Thompson may use his address to staff on Thursday to reveal plans to quit west London Mark Thompson, the BBC’s director general, is considering announcing that the BBC will quit its entire west London home – possibly selling it to a football club – as part of radical plans that could see more staff moved out of the capital. The corporation is also planning to concentrate out-of-London production into fewer locations, with a plan to shut down the factual department in BBC Birmingham being mooted. England’s second city was once a key BBC centre, and is home to programmes such as the BBC’s Chelsea Flower Show coverage. BBC chairman Lord Patten and Thompson are addressing corporation staff on Thursday to tell them the results of the long-awaited “Delivering Quality First” cost-cutting strategy , which will see nearly 2,000 more jobs going at the public broadcaster. The BBC’s best-known west London home, Television Centre, is up for sale and it is thought the corporation has been in talks with both Queen’s Park Rangers and Chelsea football club about the clubs moving to the site. Chelsea in particular is looking to develop a larger stadium in the west London area. Television Centre is home to what is now called the BBC’s Vision division, including TV channel controllers, commissioning executives and production departments such as drama and entertainment. The site is also home to studios used for programmes such as Strictly Come Dancing, which are operated as a standalone BBC commercial subsidiary. The corporation is vacating the doughnut-shaped TV Centre by 2015, with its several thousand staff due to move to the refurbished Broadcasting House in central London or around the country to sites such as Salford. There have also been rumours, which the corporation has previously denied, that BBC drama could move to Cardiff. However, because parts of TV Centre are listed, the football clubs have expressed an interest in the BBC’s adjacent White City offices instead, which could be knocked down. The White City building – part of the overall White City office complex – is where Thompson and BBC Worldwide are based. One source said that BBC executives are deliberating whether or not to reveal the latest developments in the sale of Television Centre and possible move from White City at Thursday’s announcement. There is also spare capacity at the BBC’s new headquarters in Salford, which is the new home of children’s, sport, learning, parts of Radio 5 Live, future media and technology and BBC Breakfast. It is understood that despite the upheaval of those departments, they will not escape the DQF cuts, and that some of the vacancies created by people choosing not to move from London to Manchester will not be filled. BBC sources say that the 2,500 job losses being proposed include the 650 cuts to the World Service already announced. It is expected that the remaining redundancies will be “back-loaded”, so there will only be a few hundred during the first year or so, with the rest to come after that. About 50% of the cuts are due to come from non-programming areas, with the remaining half from programming. BBC Birmingham is expected to be scaled back, although it is understood that daytime drama Doctors and The Archers will continue to be made there. According to sources, there is a proposal that BBC Birmingham’s factual department is to be closed and its responsibilities, such as Chelsea Flower Show, moved to BBC Bristol. •

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Cameron rewrites conference speech to remove credit card pay-off call

We were not ever trying to urge people to pay their credit card bills tomorrow, Downing Street says David Cameron has hastily rewritten his conference speech to remove any suggestion that he is either urging or instructing the public to pay off their credit card bills – a move that could dampen consumer demand and worsen the recession. The prime minister’s aides said the speech would now read: “That is why households are paying down the credit card and store card bills”. The pre-briefed version of the speech on Tuesday read: “The only way out of a debt crisis is to deal with your debts. That means households – all of us – paying off the credit card card and store card bills.” A Downing Street aide said: “We are putting our hands up on this. It has been misinterpreted, and the only way to deal with it is to change the wording. We are not going to carry on when it is fairly obvious that it needed to be clarified. “People at home who are struggling cannot afford to pay off their debts, so to have an instruction from on high to do so would have been wrong. We were not ever trying to urge people to pay their credit card bills tomorrow. It was intended as a metaphor or an observation, as opposed to an instruction.” Downing Street also denied that Treasury forecasts showed household debt was set to rise, saying these figures included mortgages. A variety of papers had written up the speech as a haughty instruction from Cameron to the public to pay off their debts for the sake of the economy. On Wednesday morning, economists suggested the plan for a collective pay-off of credit card debts, if interpreted literally, would be economically disastrous as well as politically inept. The episode shows the delicate balancing act Cameron faces in trying to offer some optimism in the middle of the deepening recession. The prime minister does not want the entire Tory message to be one of gloom, deficits and debt, but fears he will be regarded as out of touch if he strays from those areas of concern. Conservative conference 2011 Conservative conference David Cameron Economic policy Conservatives Borrowing & debt Credit cards Consumer affairs Economics Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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Cameron rewrites conference speech to remove credit card pay-off call

We were not ever trying to urge people to pay their credit card bills tomorrow, Downing Street says David Cameron has hastily rewritten his conference speech to remove any suggestion that he is either urging or instructing the public to pay off their credit card bills – a move that could dampen consumer demand and worsen the recession. The prime minister’s aides said the speech would now read: “That is why households are paying down the credit card and store card bills”. The pre-briefed version of the speech on Tuesday read: “The only way out of a debt crisis is to deal with your debts. That means households – all of us – paying off the credit card card and store card bills.” A Downing Street aide said: “We are putting our hands up on this. It has been misinterpreted, and the only way to deal with it is to change the wording. We are not going to carry on when it is fairly obvious that it needed to be clarified. “People at home who are struggling cannot afford to pay off their debts, so to have an instruction from on high to do so would have been wrong. We were not ever trying to urge people to pay their credit card bills tomorrow. It was intended as a metaphor or an observation, as opposed to an instruction.” Downing Street also denied that Treasury forecasts showed household debt was set to rise, saying these figures included mortgages. A variety of papers had written up the speech as a haughty instruction from Cameron to the public to pay off their debts for the sake of the economy. On Wednesday morning, economists suggested the plan for a collective pay-off of credit card debts, if interpreted literally, would be economically disastrous as well as politically inept. The episode shows the delicate balancing act Cameron faces in trying to offer some optimism in the middle of the deepening recession. The prime minister does not want the entire Tory message to be one of gloom, deficits and debt, but fears he will be regarded as out of touch if he strays from those areas of concern. Conservative conference 2011 Conservative conference David Cameron Economic policy Conservatives Borrowing & debt Credit cards Consumer affairs Economics Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk

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Raw Video: Amanda Knox Plane Arrives in Seattle

The plane carrying Amanda Knox has arrived in Seattle. Knox spent four years in an Italian prison after being convicted of murder. That conviction was overturned Monday. (Oct. 4)

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Raw Video: Amanda Knox Plane Arrives in Seattle

The plane carrying Amanda Knox has arrived in Seattle. Knox spent four years in an Italian prison after being convicted of murder. That conviction was overturned Monday. (Oct. 4)

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Missing Dog Found 3000 Miles From Home

Cooper, a chihuahua-whippet mix missing for two years from the Baetge family home in Sacramento, has turned up safe at a clinic in Florida. Cooper is micro-chipped and the family has no idea how he got to Florida. (Oct. 4)

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Missing Dog Found 3000 Miles From Home

Cooper, a chihuahua-whippet mix missing for two years from the Baetge family home in Sacramento, has turned up safe at a clinic in Florida. Cooper is micro-chipped and the family has no idea how he got to Florida. (Oct. 4)

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Kia to roll out re-badged Hyundai electric minicar in late 2011

There’s still no indication that it’ll hit the North American market, but it looks like Kia will soon have an all-electric “minicar” to call its own. That will come in the form of a re-badged Hyundai i10 (pictured above), which is expected to pack a 16-kWh lithium-ion battery and a range somewhere south of a hundred miles. No word on pricing just yet either, but the car is set to roll out in late 2011, with production tapped at a modest 2,000 units for 2012. Kia to roll out re-badged Hyundai electric minicar in late 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Oct 2011 08:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Howard Dean: Tea Party ‘Not Playing With Full Deck’

Bulletin from the Bureau of Pot-Meet-Kettle: Howard Dean has declared that Tea Party Americans “are not playing with a full deck.”

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