'We are going to very soon announce that we are going to be looking very seriously about how we fund the BBC,' she said.
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In January she had appeared to indicate the end of the licence fee when she said the latest funding deal would be its last, before subsequently toning down her remarks.īut in a new interview with The Spectator she once again appeared to signal that the TV licence system of funding the corporation would be killed off. Mrs Dorries said she was also considering how media regulator Ofcom could 'hold the BBC to account'. She said the current model is 'completely outdated' and that in the coming months ministers would be 'looking very seriously about how we fund the BBC'.
The Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries has also taken aim as she pushed on with selling Channel 4.
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The maximum fine for a breach of the code will be £250,000 or an amount up to 5% of their revenue, whichever is higher. They will also give the UK media watchdog the power to draft and enforce a new video-on-demand code, aimed at setting standards for 'larger TV-like services' such as Netflix, ITV Hub and Now TV to level the rules with traditional broadcasters. Ministers have already released a blueprint that will also signal the death knell for the licence fee by saying the Government is 'ready to implement a new way of funding the BBC'. 'This would be achieved in part by creating an IP joint venture, leveraging necessary private capital to find future generations of hit shows that make Britain famous worldwide, and that make Channel 4 the envy of other broadcasters.' 'In terms of content, Channel 4 would seek to invest 1 billion pounds ($1.3 billion) a year in distinctive home-grown British programming by 2030,' she told reporters. Mahon said Channel 4 wanted to expand its commitment to the regions and nations of the United Kingdom, including commissioning more than 50% of its programmes outside London, and increasing its staff outside the capital - in Leeds, Glasgow, Bristol and Manchester - from 400 to 600 by 2025.
Nadine Dorries (pictured outside Downing Street) has signalled the death knell for the licence fee by saying the Government is 'ready to implement a new way of funding the BBC'