PDA

View Full Version : Channel 5 has new owner



Perdita
25-07-2010, 09:08
Richard Desmond, the owner of the Daily Express and Daily Star, has bought Five Group from entertainment network RTL for £104m.

The deal for Mr Desmond's Northern & Shell company to buy Five, which runs TV channel Five, has been closed with immediate effect.

RTL said a recovery in the UK TV advertising market meant now was a good time for it to sell.

Last month, Mr Desmond indicated that he wanted to buy the Sun newspaper.

Channel Five has always struggled to establish a clear identity - and in the digital world, where advertisers, and most viewers, have dozens of channels to choose from, its place is even less secure.

Richard Desmond is expected to introduce more celebrity programmes, trading on a formula that has worked well at the Express and his weekly magazine OK!

He's likely to cut costs - as he has at the Express - and may also try to revive Big Brother, now in its last series on Channel 4.

Richard Desmond is different from previous owners of public service TV channels in that he controls his company - Northern & Shell - personally.

He remains a controversial figure, and he will certainly shake up the world of public service broadcasting.

"I am delighted to have taken ownership of the network, and know with the right investment, drive and leadership it can go from strength to strength as a competitive broadcaster and a modern player for the digital consumer," Mr Desmond said in a statement.
'Exciting plans'

Dawn Airey, Five's chief executive, said she was "looking forward" to working with the new owners.

"Northern & Shell are an international media business with a prominent position in the UK.

"We now move forward under the ownership of a successful media company that wants to grow our business and has exciting plans for the development of Five."

Channel Five was first launched in 1997 and is home to popular Australian soaps Neighbours and Home and Away, as well as the Crime Scene Investigation series.

The channel was hit hard by the slump in advertising revenue during the downturn but the advertising market has picked up this year.

"With a significant recovery of the UK TV advertising market and Five performing well in the first half of 2010, we saw a window of opportunity to realise a transaction based on a fair evaluation of Five," said Gerhard Zeiler, chief executive of RTL Group.

Rival UK broadcaster Channel 4 was reportedly also interested in buying channel Five.
Colourful character

Richard Desmond has had a colourful and controversial career since leaving school at 14 with few academic qualifications.

By the age of 21, he owned his own house and two record shops, before acquiring the Express newspaper titles in 2000 with money he had made in the adult entertainment industry.

Roger Parry, the former chairman of Johnston Press who once made a bid for ITV, said Mr Desmond may be best known for his top-shelf publications but he will adopt an entrepreneur's approach to the channel.

"He is certainly colourful and has got a very high profile in Private Eye and other such magazines," he said.

"But I don't think you can necessarily judge his past in terms of guessing what he's going to do with channel Five.

"He's very cost-focused and on the surface at least very successful. Commercially the Daily Express and OK! magazine seem to have thrived under his ownership."

BBC News

parkerman
25-07-2010, 09:28
Strange the article doesn't mention the other television channels he currently owns....

alan45
25-07-2010, 10:07
Strange the article doesn't mention the other television channels he currently owns....

Or the top shelf magazines and premium rate phonr services he offers.

Lord Gnome will make good reading this week

Perdita
11-08-2010, 11:51
Seven of Channel Five's nine executive directors are to leave as part of new owner Richard Desmond's major overhaul of the business, it has emerged.

According to media reports, Five staff were informed about the changes in a meeting this morning, with up to 80 jobs under threat in the broadcaster's 300-strong team as Desmond looks to cut costs by £20 million.

Despite the cuts, Desmond's Northern & Shell business plans to invest around £300m annually in programming over the next five years to help the broadcaster "go toe-to-toe with the biggest players in the TV world".

As revealed earlier, Five chairman and chief executive Dawn Airey will be leaving her post for a role at former Five parent company RTL. However, she will not depart the broadcaster for several months.

Among Five's senior executives, only the managing director of digital channels and acquisitions Jeff Ford and the sales director Kelly Williams will remain at Five.

Ford will take over the role of Five director of programmes Richard Woolfe, who is leaving the firm, along with Five managing director Mark White.

Five's director of legal affairs Paul Chinnery is also leaving, along with corporate affairs director Sue Robertson, director of strategy Charles Constable and finance director David Hockley.

In a statement, Airey said: "I love Five, its staff, its spirit and all we have achieved. I wish the channel, its team, Richard Desmond and Northern & Shell all the success they deserve."

Desmond, who completed his £103.5 million takeover of Five last month, wants to make cost savings of around £20m, with £9m coming from staff cuts and £11m from overheads.

Five employees were also told that they will be relocating from their offices on Covent Garden to Desmond's Northern & Shell premises on Lower Thames Street in the City.

The move will be used to merge back office functions such as IT, finance and human resources between the businesses to further reduce costs.