{"id":5253,"date":"2022-11-26T04:40:53","date_gmt":"2022-11-26T04:40:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/enews.sotout.com\/culture-secretary-michelle-donelan-on-the-bbc-licence-fee-channel-4-privatisation-and-matt-hancock-on-im-a-celebrity-ents-arts-news\/"},"modified":"2022-11-26T04:40:53","modified_gmt":"2022-11-26T04:40:53","slug":"culture-secretary-michelle-donelan-on-the-bbc-licence-fee-channel-4-privatisation-and-matt-hancock-on-im-a-celebrity-ents-arts-news","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/culture-secretary-michelle-donelan-on-the-bbc-licence-fee-channel-4-privatisation-and-matt-hancock-on-im-a-celebrity-ents-arts-news\/","title":{"rendered":"Culture Secretary Michelle Donelan on the BBC licence fee, Channel 4 privatisation, and Matt Hancock on I’m A Celebrity | Ents & Arts News"},"content":{"rendered":"
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The culture secretary has told Sky News that the BBC is a “national asset”, that she’s “working very closely” with Channel 4 to decide whether it should be sold off or not and that she’d be “too hangry” to follow Matt Hancock into the I’m A Celebrity jungle.<\/p>\n
For Michelle Donelan as the 11th Tory secretary for digital, culture, media and sport in 12 years, taking on the role at a crucial time for public sector broadcasters, there is a lot of work to do.<\/p>\n
Sky News was given exclusive access to film Ms Donelan as she went to see construction work under way at Shepperton Studios in Surrey, which, once completed, will be the second-biggest film and TV studio in the world.<\/p>\n
A consequence of long-term leases signed with both Netflix and Prime Video, Britain’s billion-pound film industry is thriving.<\/p>\n
It’s our public sector broadcasters that are desperate for some clarity on where they stand from the government.<\/p>\n
If culture and the arts were, at times, casualties of an ideological war under Nadine Dorries, Ms Donelan’s predecessor, perhaps now the economic importance of cementing good relationships is coming to the fore.<\/p>\n
Ms Donelan sets a markedly different tone to Ms Dorries when it comes to the future of the BBC licence fee<\/strong><\/a>, saying: “I think the BBC is a fantastic institution… we do need to make them sustainable in the long-term.<\/p>\n “It’s a national asset, we need to inject fairness and choice into the system that we pick, but we will make any decisions informed by evidence.”<\/p>\n