Giant redwoods have lots of enemies. First it was Pacific lumber. Now, it’s the growing horde of vitners who are demanding rights to raze the trees to make way for Pinot Noir vineyards and estate housing. Two large wineries in northern California are petitioning the state for the right to…
Continue reading …Richard Klein reassures digital channel’s fans but adds that it will inevitably feel effects of 20% cuts BBC needs to make The BBC4 controller, Richard Klein, has said his channel is “not going to be axed”, but confirmed its scope is likely to be reduced . Speaking at the MediaGuardian Edinburgh International Television Festival on Friday, Klein said that inevitably his digital channel would feel the effects of the 20% cuts the BBC is making across the board due to last year’s licence fee settlement freeze. “BBC4 will not be axed as far as I’m aware. Obviously it’s still under review. Will BBC4 face some consequences of the BBC-wide reduction in our funding of 20%? I’d imagine so. It’s inevitable,” he added. An online Save BBC4 petition, launched earlier this month after MediaGuardian.co.uk reported that the channel was facing cuts, has attracted more than 18,000 signatures in 10 days. Klein said the campaign to save BBC4 was “flattering” but reiterated: “The channel is not going to be axed. That’s not going to happen.” However, he added that it was “difficult to see the vast majority of savings coming from cutting budgets further” and said that viewers will notice a difference on screen. “People will see a difference, I’m sure. You can’t take 20% out of the BBC and not.” He said drama will continue on the channel but did not go into detail about its scope. BBC executives are considering reducing BBC4′s UK originated drama and comedy output, with the focus shifting to so-called “arts and archive” programming. Despite Bafta award-winning single dramas such as The Road to Coronation Street and biopic Enid, some corporation executives have questioned whether BBC2 should instead be airing such shows. BBC4 has also commissioned a smaller number of comedies, such as The Thick of It and Getting On, which have attracted critical acclaim. “One thing that will be true is that the channel as far as I’m concerned will stay true to its ideals of what we do as much as we can.” Klein said he did not think BBC4 should be annexed by BBC2 in the way that 6Music has been by Radio 2. He passionately defended the channel, saying “BBC4 is completely different”, adding, “I don’t think there’s any call at the moment to say that BBC2 and BBC4 fit that well”. Klein also eased fears about the future of original drama on BBC4 by announcing plans for an adaptation by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais of Alan Furst’s The Spies Of Warsaw. The Spies of Warsaw spans the decade from 1933, against a backdrop of Nazi Germany expanded its power and influence across Europe and eventually provoking the outbreak of the second world war with its invasion of Poland. Klein also unveiled a new arts series called Art Nouveau , a new series later next year on the recession, plus Jo Brand will look at kissing for a new show and a season of programming about the British Army. • To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000. If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”. • To get the latest media news to your desktop or mobile, follow MediaGuardian on Twitter and Facebook BBC4 BBC Television industry MediaGuardian Edinburgh International Television Festival MediaGuardian Edinburgh International TV Festival 2011 Tara Conlan guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …In a highly anticipated speech Friday morning, Federal Reserve chair Ben Bernanke announced no new efforts to provide monetary stimulus, despite the flagging economy, instead saying the Fed would “continue to consider” the issue at its next meeting in September. At a conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, organized by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas
Continue reading …A surge in sales following her death has made Amy Winehouse’s Back to Black Britain’s biggest-selling record of the 21st century, knocking crooner James Blunt into second place. The 2006 album, which shot back to the top of her charts after the singer’s death last month, has sold more than…
Continue reading …Nearly a decade after a sexual abuse scandal erupted in the Archdiocese of Boston, Cardinal Sean O’Malley has released a list of 159 clerics accused of abusing children. The list was compiled using files that go back as far as 70 years, but the archdiocese has come under fire for…
Continue reading …It’s a rat that almost ate Brooklyn. But a Housing Authority worker speared the three-foot-long rodent (including tail)—with a pitchfork, reports the New York Daily News . Experts believe the creature is likely a Gambian pouched rat , which is often kept as pet—but perhaps more at home in green…
Continue reading …If Sarah Palin decides to run for president she’ll find lots of hostile Republicans out there, according to the latest Pew Research Center poll . Some 41% of Republican and Republican-leaning voters told pollsters that there was no chance they would vote for Palin. Only Newt Gingrich, with 48%, had a…
Continue reading …WikiLeaks is releasing tens of thousands of previously unpublished American diplomatic cables, and encouraging the public to look for nuggets of information in them using a searchable database . The cables, part of a cache of 250,000 leaked State Department reports WikiLeaks says it has, had previously only been released…
Continue reading …At least 53 people were killed yesterday when gunmen burst into a casino in Monterrey and started a fire that trapped gamblers inside. Survivors say the Casino Royale gunmen sprayed gasoline and ordered people to get out, but panicked gamblers fled further into the building, the Wall Street Journal reports….
Continue reading …Documents released by National Archives show prime minister Winston Churchill feared the colony would turn communist Secret documents declassified on Friday by MI5 reveal in detail how in 1953 the UK under prime minister Winston Churchill overthrew the elected government of British Guiana – now Guyana – because he feared its leftwing leader and his American wife would lead the British colony into the arms of the Soviet Union. The documents reveal how British spies kept up intense scrutiny on Cheddi Jagan and his wife Janet, who together founded the People’s Progressive party (PPP) to campaign for workers’ rights and independence from British rule for the sugar-producing colony in northern South America. The UK had agreed a new constitution in the early 1950s which allowed British Guiana’s political parties to participate in national elections and form a government, but maintained power in the hands of the British-appointed governor. Christopher Andrew, MI5′s official historian, said the files provide new details of the coup and “further evidence that MI5 played a more important part in British decolonisation than is often realised”. The Jagans – a US-educated former dentist and his wife, born Janet Rosenberg in Chicago – seem an unlikely threat. But the 39 folders of files released by the National Archives are crammed full of tapped phone conversations, intercepted letters and accounts of physical surveillance over more than a decade. In 1951, the year after the Jagans founded their party, an MI5 agent based on the nearby island of Trinidad described them as “something new in British Guiana politics”. “Both are able and intelligent and the mere fact that Janet Jagan is white, young and not unattractive in appearance lends considerable interest to her activities and those of her husband,” he said. To British authorities, the Jagans were a headache. To the Americans, they were a potential communist threat on America’s doorstep. MI5 concluded that their party was “not receiving any financial support from any communist organisation outside the country”. Nonetheless, amid worsening strikes and unrest, Britain grew unhappy with the Jagans’ “disruptive antics”. After the party won a huge majority in British Guiana’s 1953 election, making Cheddi Jagan prime minister, Churchill decided to act. “We ought surely to get American support in doing all that we can to break the communist teeth in British Guiana,” he wrote to his colonial secretary. In the end, Britain acted alone, mounting a military operation codenamed Operation Windsor. Churchill dispatched a warship, HMS Superb, and brought hundreds of troops by air and sea to secure key sites. On 9 October, Britain suspended British Guiana’s constitution, fired its legislators and arrested the Jagans. The surprise military operation went according to plan. The Trinidad-based MI5 officer noted with quiet satisfaction that “it was obvious that the PPP leaders had no idea that the constitution would be suspended or that they might be arrested”. And the spy threw in a note of thanks for the women who helped the army to march on its stomach. “I might add in parenthesis that catering arrangements for the airborne troops during their halt in Trinidad were carried out by Mrs Beadon, wife of the commissioner of police, Mrs Rahr, my wife and Joyce Huggins … and I understand that no less than 600 large sandwiches were cut by these ladies,” he wrote. An outraged Cheddi Jagan appealed by telegram to Britain’s opposition Labour party for help. Leader Clement Attlee replied curtly: “Regret impossible to intervene.” For the next three years, British Guiana was ruled under emergency powers by the British governor and appointed officials, and the Jagans were kept under house arrest and strict surveillance. In the years that followed, MI5 softened somewhat toward Cheddi Jagan, acknowledging that he was an astute and popular politician – though the agent based in Trinidad strongly disliked Janet Jagan, whom he described as a committed communist “uncompromising in her hatreds”. By the 1960s, Britain’s spies worried that the Jagans would turn to newly communist Cuba, possibly making their country a base for Latin American revolutionaries. “If the Jagans remain in power after independence and if their activities and views remain unchanged, they will represent a threat to the stability both of British Guiana itself and of the neighbouring territories,” the officer wrote. Andrew said it was clear from previously released official documents that successive British governments “gave in to pressure from the White House to allow the CIA to use subterranean means to ensure that the first leader of independent Guyana in 1966 was not Cheddi Jagan”. He added in a podcast for the National Archives (begins 5m 38sec in): “In most British colonies, there was a relatively friendly transfer of power to independent governments. British Guiana was a notable exception.” The Jagans remained a major force in Guyanese politics and Cheddi Jagan became prime minister again in 1961, when the batch of MI5 files ends. After the cold war ended, Cheddi Jagan served as president of Guyana from 1992 until his death in 1997. His wife succeeded him between 1997 and 1999. She died in 2009, aged 88. Guyana Communism MI5 National Archives Winston Churchill guardian.co.uk
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