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Stars' pay - Government warning (Read 3748 times)
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Stars' pay - Government warning
Apr 14th, 2006, 8:57am
 
This is taken from the Independent:

BBC on mission to discover: who leaked our stars' salaries?
By Ciar Byrne, Media Correspondent
Published: 14 April 2006


The BBC is investigating how confidential salary details of some of its radio presenters and television stars were made public.

It was revealed yesterday that Radio 1 breakfast host Chris Moyles earns £630,000 a year, nine times as much as fellow DJ Pete Tong. An internal hunt is now on at the BBC to find out how The Sun newspaper obtained the information about the earnings of eight Radio 1 DJs.

A BBC spokeswoman said: "We are looking into it. The key thing here is we never discuss anyone's salary other than our top executives who have to disclose them in the annual report. It's confidential information.

"If someone has leaked these, we're not happy. They have appeared in The Sun and if they have appeared as the result of a leak, that's cause for concern."

Jo Whiley, who presents the mid-morning show, is named as the second highest-earning DJ on the station with a salary of £250,000 a year.

Sara Cox is believed to earn £200,000 a year for presenting two shows every weekend.

Edith Bowman and Colin Murray, who form a double act to host the weekday early afternoon slot on the station, are said to receive an annual salary of £175,000 and £170,000 respectively.

The Drivetime presenter Scott Mills and Zane Lowe, who fronts the Evening Session, are both said to earn £130,000 a year.

It is not the first time newspaper has printed confidential information about the salary of BBC employees. The same Sun reporter revealed salary details for members of the cast of EastEnders last month. That has lead to speculation that a disgruntled BBC employee with access to a computer database containing salary information has been leaking it to the press.

Ross Kemp, who plays Grant Mitchell, who recently returned to the soap opera, was reported to earn £380,000 a year, still considerably less than Moyles.

June Brown, the actress who plays Albert Square veteran Dot Cotton, was said to enjoy an annual salary of £370,000, while Barbara Windsor and Steve McFadden, who play two more members of the Mitchell clan, Phil and Peggy, were said to earn £360,000 a year each.

If the leaks are correct, Moyles's wage packet, paid for out of the licence fee, is a reflection of the increased audience he has brought to Radio 1. The DJ has even styled himself the "saviour of early morning radio".

According to the latest radio listening figures, Moyles added an extra 160,000 listeners to his show in the three months to January 2006 and has an overall audience of 6.6 million.

The breakfast host earns even more than the director general, Mark Thompson, whose total salary for 2005 was £459,000.

He is also on a higher wage than the head of BBC Radio, Jenny Abramsky, whose published salary last year was £304,000.

The salaries of BBC newsreaders came under scrutiny last year after senior journalists including John Humphrys and Andrew Marr questioned why they were paid so much for "reading an autocue".

In Ireland, the state broadcaster RTE was required to publish details of its presenters' salaries under Freedom of Information legislation, but the BBC's chairman, Michael Grade, rejected similar calls to disclose newsreaders' wages, saying it would make it virtually impossible to recruit freelance talent.

BBC salaries

Director General Mark Thompson £459,000

Chairman of Governors Michael Grade £96,000

Radio 1 DJ Chris Moyles £630,000

Radio 1 DJ Jo Whiley £250,000

Radio 1 DJ Sara Cox, left £200,000

Eastenders actor Ross Kemp £380,000

Eastenders actress June Brown £370,000
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Row over stars' pay
Reply #1 - Apr 20th, 2006, 7:00am
 
This is taken from The Independent:

BBC squirms after more leaks of 'excessive' pay
By Ciar Byrne, Media Correspondent
Published: 19 April 2006


The BBC is facing calls to make details of top presenters' pay public and to exercise restraint over how much it pays, following a series of leaks of confidential salary information.

Radio 2 presenters' salaries were the latest to be revealed yesterday, following the disclosure last week of Radio 1 DJs' pay.

Revealing how much nine of the best-known names earn, the Daily Mirror reported that the station spent more than £3m a year on employing its big-name presenters.

The veteran breakfast host Terry Wogan is Radio 2's best-paid presenter, according to the newspaper, earning £800,000 a year.

On a per-minute basis, Jonathan Ross is reported to earn even more than Wogan, with an annual salary of £530,000 for his Saturday morning radio show, or £56.62 a minute, compared to Wogan's rate of £25.64 a minute. Chris Evans is said to have negotiated £540,000 a year for taking over the weekday drive-time show from Johnnie Walker. Steve Wright, who presents five three-hour shows a week, is reportedly on £440,000 a year.

The BBC said it was "urgently" investigating how the Mirror obtained the confidential information. It follows similar leaks to The Sun, which revealed last week that the Radio 1 breakfast DJ Chris Moyles was the station's top earner on £630,000, and last month published details of how much stars of EastEnders were paid.

A BBC spokeswoman said: "We are taking this very seriously. We can't confirm if it is a leak, because we don't know where the information comes from. We are looking into it as a matter of urgency." In the past, the BBC has refused demands to reveal how much it pays presenters, arguing that to hire and retain the best talent it must pay market rates and keep details of salaries secret.

But Luke Crawley, the BBC supervisory official for the broadcasting union Bectu, said: "The BBC could and should exercise restraint in the amount it pays. The BBC is the biggest employer of talent, therefore, to a certain extent it can dictate market rates."

John Beyer, director of the broadcasting lobby group Mediawatch UK, said: " In this age of openness ... the BBC should be transparent about wages they pay. These figures certainly do seem excessive." The BBC refused to comment on speculation that an insider had leaked the salary information.

What they earn

TERRY WOGAN (breakfast show, Monday to Friday) - £800,000

JONATHAN ROSS (Saturday morning show) - £530,000

MARK RADCLIFFE (weeknights at 10.30pm): £197,000

KEN BRUCE (mid-morning show Monday to Friday): £194,000

MICHAEL PARKINSON (Sunday Supplement): £115,000

JANICE LONG (midnight to 3am five days a week): £137,000

BOB HARRIS (three shows a week) : £96,000

CHRIS EVANS (drive-time show, Monday to Friday) - £540,000

STEVE WRIGHT (afternoon show, Monday to Friday) - £440,000
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Re: Row over stars' pay
Reply #2 - Apr 20th, 2006, 5:50pm
 
This is taken from the Guardian:

Jowell warns BBC on talent costs

by John Plunkett
Thursday April 20, 2006


Culture secretary Tessa Jowell has warned that the BBC must keep its talent costs in check to avoid fuelling inflationary deals in the broadcasting market.

Speaking in the aftermath of revelations about the earnings of some of the corporation's highest-paid stars, Ms Jowell said the BBC must be aware that paying large amounts of money to creatives and performers may have knock-on effects for other broadcasters.

"We need to investigate the extent to which the costs of other broadcasters are driven by the BBC," she added, speaking today before the Lords select committee on BBC charter review.

"If the BBC came in at a lower level [of spending] on talent, creativity and innovation, to what extent would this reduct the cost for other broadcasters? To what extent does the BBC make the market?," Ms Jowell added.

However, she said it was "categorically not" her job to set BBC salaries.

"It would be extremely dangerous for a secretary of state for culture, media and sport to take a view on what the BBC pays its array of interviewers. That is a matter for the BBC," she added.

Ms Jowell also warned that the BBC would not get all of the inflation-busting licence fee settlement that it had requested.

"I would certainly expect the figure to be lower than the BBC proposed, yes," she said.

The BBC is asking for a funding settlement of inflation (RPI) plus 2.3% annually between 2007 and 2013, which would see the licence fee rise from the current £126.50 a household to £150.50.

However, assuming an annual RPI of 2.5% - the Bank of England's target figure - licence fee payers would actually be paying £176.46 by 2013.
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