Podcast appearances and mentions of tim hincks

  • 5PODCASTS
  • 9EPISODES
  • 33mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Mar 8, 2019LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about tim hincks

Latest podcast episodes about tim hincks

Springs & Mr. Geek
S06E08 – Spooky Boos Moon Boys

Springs & Mr. Geek

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2019 54:44


Previously On: The Puppy Called Clem Fandango New(s) Business: Snow in Salt Spring Who Is Podcasting Now? RIP Peter Tork Podcasts This Show: Mr Geek Stalking Time For The Moon Boys David Baddiel and his mate Tim Hincks talk all things David Bowie. They spin out [...]

Stalking Time for the Moon Boys with David Baddiel

David Baddiel and Tim Hincks are back with episode four of Stalking Time for the Moon Boys. Amongst other things they discuss the podcast’s name and Baddiel's perceived meaning behind it, David Bowie’s disputable online presence and the route he would've taken if he were born in a different era, and Bowie's interactions with the Laughing Gnome. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Stalking Time for the Moon Boys with David Baddiel

In the first instalment of Stalking Time for the Moon Boys David Baddiel and Tim Hincks, the two self-confessed David Bowie nerds, show off their encyclopaedic knowledge of Bowie. They discuss everything from where their infatuation began, to Halloween Jack, to Bowie getting a lollypop in the eye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Stalking Time for the Moon Boys with David Baddiel
Stalking Time for the Moon Boys Trailer

Stalking Time for the Moon Boys with David Baddiel

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2018 2:11


This is the trailer for Stalking Time for the Moon Boys - the brand new loosely David Bowie related podcast from David Baddiel and Tim Hincks. If you like the sound of it, you can listen to the first episode this Friday 6th April from 8AM. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Broadcast: Talking TV
Talking TV #93: BBC3's This Country & Broadcast's Indie Summit

Broadcast: Talking TV

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2017 34:05


This week, we head to the Cotswolds to spend time with BBC3’s latest village-based mockumentary This Country and travel to Bafta to hear from the cream of the indie crop at Broadcast’s own Indie Summit. We speak to This Country creators Daisy May Cooper and Charlie Cooper about their long-gestating comedy and how they went from a Vicky Pollard-lite pilot to one of the year’s most talked about shows. In the news, we head to outer space to find out more about Amazon’s priests-versus-aliens Oasis, detail all of the high-level discussions and gossip at the indie summit and look at the latest round of hires at Tim Hincks and Peter Fincham’s new well-funded indie.

The TBI Podcast
From Liverpool to Berlin, via London and the internet

The TBI Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2017 38:08


The TBI Podcast is back, and we’ve got news, views and a shiny new intro format for you to enjoy. TBI editors Stewart Clarke and Jesse Whittock discuss this week’s BBC Worldwide Showcase, the various London screenings that have spawned around it, and a chaotic Berlinale International Film Festival. We also dissect the stories making headlines in international TV – who really won the Discovery-Sky carriage war, and what are Peter Fincham and Tim Hincks planning for their new indie business Expectation?

tv internet berlin liverpool expectation tbi peter fincham stewart clarke tim hincks
Broadcast: Talking TV
Talking TV #62: Tim Hincks & Robot Wars

Broadcast: Talking TV

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2016 30:15


Talking TV’s first episode of the year features a discussion on Tim Hincks’ departure from Endemol Shine Group and Robot Wars’ reboot. Joining host Jake Kanter at Maple Street Studios is Broadcast features editor Robin Parker and Faraz Osman, the managing director of Lemonade Money. As well as rounding up the week’s news, the trio also preview Gold's new Catherine Tate comedy Do Not Disturb and BBC2 documentary Phone Shop Idol.

The Media Show
Live from the Royal Television Society Convention in Cambridge

The Media Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2015 28:36


The Royal Television Society Convention in Cambridge brings together senior figures from the TV industry to discuss the challenges of a shifting media landscape. This year's convention looks to television in 2020 and the challenges for content, creativity and business models. The Media Show is broadcasting live from the event.Sir Peter Bazalgette, President of the RTS and Chair of the Arts Council England outlines the themes of the event. Media Show presenter Steve Hewlett also hears from David Abraham, Chief Executive of Channel 4 and Tim Hincks, President of Endemol Shine Group about whether consolidation and the growth in foreign ownership of UK production is stifling creativity.Brian Elsley, the creator and writer of Skins talks E4 talks about taking his hit show to the USA and why the UK needs more US-style showrunners.And the Guardian's media editor Jane Martinson looks ahead to speeches by Tony Hall, the Director-General of the BBC and John Whittingdale MP, the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport.Producers: Dianne McGregor and Paul Waters.

The Media Show
Tim Hincks, BBC Three going online, The future of Olympic coverage

The Media Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2015 28:09


Tim Hincks, the President of Endemol Shine, on defining and nurturing creativity, tackling the middle class bias in TV, why we should embrace the mainstream and why UK television is best when it engages with the rest of the world.Richard Ayre from the BBC Trust explains why the Trust has given a provisional and conditional go-ahead to BBC proposals to close BBC3 as a broadcast channel and move it online, and to extend the evening hours of CBBC - but has said no to the idea of BBC One +1.The former director of the BBC's London 2012 Olympic Games coverage, Roger Mosey discusses the International Olympic Committee's decision to award European TV rights to the games to the US communications company Discovery. How big a blow is it to the BBC and what will it mean for viewers?And we hear the latest on reports of further job cuts at the BBC as it faces what is claimed to be a £150M shortfall in anticipated income, as more viewers choose to watch TV exclusively via online catch-up services - which are exempt from the licence fee.