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  • A BBC cameraman operates his equipment during a rehearsal for an outside broadcast for the One Show at Broadcasting House, on 4th October 2018, in London, England.
    bbc_production-11-04-10-2018.jpg
  • A BBC cameraman operates his equipment during a rehearsal for an outside broadcast for the One Show at Broadcasting House, on 4th October 2018, in London, England.
    bbc_production-01-04-10-2018.jpg
  • A BBC cameraman operates his equipment during a rehearsal for an outside broadcast for the One Show at Broadcasting House, on 4th October 2018, in London, England.
    bbc_production-09-04-10-2018.jpg
  • The veteran BBC broadcaster Richard Baker (same name as the photographer of this picture) is seen in a Radio 3 studio in Langham Place, in central London. With glasses at hand and programme notes on his console with microphones pointing to his face, Baker is looking to camera with a pair of old-fashioned earphones around his neck. Richard Baker OBE (born 1925) started at the BBC as an announcer and presented many classical music programmes on both television  and radio, including for many years the annual live broadcast from the Last Night of the Proms but he’s best known as a newsreader for the BBC News from 1954 to 1982 and the long-running Your Hundred Best Tunes for BBC Radio 2 on Sunday nights.
    richard_baker-17-02-1986.jpg
  • A TV video camera ready to report the 2015 general election, located under Victoria Tower at the Palace of Westminster in central London. Days before the general election of 2015, an eventual victory for David Cameron's Conservatives, we see the broadcast equipment ready to film and report the goings on at Westminster, a symbol for government and parliamentary activity.  After the result, the Conservatives once again accused the BBC of bias throughout the election campaign.
    parliament_media01-06-05-2015_1.jpg
  • Hours after the Wikileaks co-founder Julian Assange was forcibly removed from the Ecuadorian embassy by British police, after his 7-year occupancy, a CBS reporter prepares for broadcast opposite the embassy, on 11th April 2019, in London England.
    assange_embassy-10-11-04-2019.jpg
  • Television technician working amongst equipment and complicated wires prior to the broadcast of the BAFTA Awards in London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160214_tv technician wiring_A.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen woth his smiling wife Michelle and young family after speaking to his party faithful at a rally in Chicago the night of their election victory. Their faces merge together in a moment of television merging of images, large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. The First Family have become household names and their lives  are about to change forever before they move into the White House. Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night60-05-11-2008.jpg
  • A British family watch the Queens speech to the nation on Christmas Day, a tradition started in 1932 and which she first broadcast on television in 1957, on 25th December 2019, in Bristol, England.
    queen's_speech-11-25-12-2019.jpg
  • Christmas presents remain unopened beneath a Christmas tree during the Queens speech to the nation on Christmas Day, a tradition started in 1932 and which she first broadcast on television in 1957, on 25th December 2019, in Bristol, England.
    queen's_speech-04-25-12-2019.jpg
  • A British family watch the Queens speech to the nation on Christmas Day, a tradition started in 1932 and which she first broadcast on television in 1957, on 25th December 2019, in Bristol, England.
    queen's_speech-01-25-12-2019.jpg
  • A British family watch the Queens speech to the nation on Christmas Day, a tradition started in 1932 and which she first broadcast on television in 1957, on 25th December 2019, in Bristol, England.
    queen's_speech-09-25-12-2019.jpg
  • Hours after the Wikileaks co-founder Julian Assange was forcibly removed from the Ecuadorian embassy by British police, after his 7-year occupancy, a CBS reporter prepares for broadcast opposite the embassy, on 11th April 2019, in London England. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    assange_embassy-10-11-04-2019.jpg
  • Television technician working amongst equipment and complicated wires prior to the broadcast of the BAFTA Awards in London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160214_tv technician wiring_B.jpg
  • Television anchor from US Magazine prepares for another broadcast, waiting on the second Royal baby story, London, UK.
    20150502_tv anchor_A.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen speaking to his party faithful at a rally in Chicago, and his face is large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. A shopper stops to watch the lunchtime news programme as Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night54-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. The Reverend Jesse Jackson who once stood next to Martin Luther-King during the days of segregation and racial discrimination sobs with tears falling down his face at Barack Obama's victory rally before party faithful at a rally in Chicago. His face is large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. A shopper stops to watch the lunchtime news programme as Jackson weeps with joy thinking of the changes promised to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night53-05-11-2008.jpg
  • Live BBC news is being broadcast on TV screens in the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen speaking to his party faithful at a rally in Chicago, and his face is large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. A shopper stops to watch the lunchtime news programme as Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night51-05-11-2008.jpg
  • A foreign TV reporter updates news to her audience at home on developments of the Duchess of Cambridge's birth details. Standing during London's heatwave of July 2013, when monarchist followers held their breath for news on Britain's newest royal heir, TV channels camped outside the royal hospital in central London, desperate for information and giving regular broadcasts to the millions abroad.
    royal_baby_wait21-22-07-2013_1.jpg
  • Foreign media mark out tape for their TV broadcasts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth to a baby boy. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where the heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the waiting world.
    royal_baby_wait27-22-07-2013_1.jpg
  • Two part-time air show commentators stand on the harbour wall at St. Peter Port, Guernsey, Channel Islands. During a break in the show’s sequence of flying by an assortment of military aircraft, the two men stand in the shade on this warm summer day. Wearing headsets and microphones, the elderly gents are surrounded by broadcasting wiring and digital sound gadgets.
    Red_Arrows712_RBA.jpg
  • Live BBC News broadcasts a breakdown of College votes results the morning after Barack Obama's historic victory in the 2008 Presidential election. The TV screens are in he audio and electronics floor of the John Lewis department store in Oxford Street, London, England. A newly-elected Barack Obama is seen speaking to his party faithful at the rally in Chicago, and his face is large on the many home cinema screens seen across the world's media after this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. A shopper stops to watch the lunchtime news programme as Obama speaks with passion about the changes he promises to bring to America while the rest of the world looks on hoping for new political directions.
    obama_election_night58-05-11-2008.jpg
  • A couple watch Senator John McCain giving a hearfelt speech, conceeding defeat on a live CNN TV screen that is broadcasting live from Phoenix, Arizona the senator's conceeding speech immediately after the TV channel called Obama's victory in the 2008 US presidential elections. A life-sized cut-out of Barack Obama stands to the screen's left and the new President smiles towards the camera but his adversary, John McCain looks across the London pub as if talking to the young couple who sit without expression in this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. The location is a pub called the Hoop and Toy, in South Kensington, West London which has been opened all night for this special event for the American expatriate community living in this European capital.
    obama_election_night42-05-11-2008.jpg
  • In London England, a life-size cardboard cut-out of Barack Obama stands next to a SKY News TV screen that is broadcasting live the latest polls of the 2008 US presidential elections. A Democratic party supporter listens intently and reacts with the tension of the early polls that suggest Obama is doing well against his Republican adversary, John McCain in this historic political election which saw the election of America's first black Commander in chief. The location is a pub called the Hoop and Toy, in South Kensington, West London which has been opened all night for this special event for the American expatriate community living in this European capital.
    obama_election_night15-05-11-2008.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia39-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia41-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia31-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia23-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia19-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia11-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia12-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia08-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia07-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia03-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia14-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia22-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia36-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia26-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia20-31-10-2020.jpg
  • On a TV screen in Bar Italia, the famous Italian cafe in Soho, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses the the UK on live TV to announce a second nationwide lockdown during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 31st October 2020, in London, England. Businesses like Bar Italia will again have to close except for takeaways, from midnight on Thursday for a period of one month.
    coronavirus_bar_italia15-31-10-2020.jpg
  • Satellite dishes on the side of a block of flats in a south London estate. The receivers have been bolted to the brick at the end of this block's outer wall, their shadows forming a pattern of dark circles. The flats are in Camberwell, in the south London borough of Southwark.
    camberwell_dishes02-17-08-2015_1.jpg
  • As the UK Coronavirus death toll rises by 621 to 4,934 and with worldwide cases passing 1.2m, Queen Elizabeth of great Britain addresses the nation on TV, thanking the health professionals of the NHS National Health Service and key workers for their work during the pandemic, on 5th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_queen-01-05-04-2020.jpg
  • City workers watch a womens tennis match on a huge screen outside the City of London headquarters of insurance company Aviva during Wimbledon fortnight, on 4th July, London, United Kingdom. Seen through the large window of Avivas foyer, reflections of City buildings as well as visitors to the building merge with the tennis action, a lady player bouncing the ball for a serve.
    city_wimbledon-04-04-07-2016.jpg
  • US NBC TV reporter Natalie Morales with technicians reports live for Today from media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait22-19-07-2013.jpg
  • Media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait12-19-07-2013_1.jpg
  • US NBC TV reporter Natalie Morales with technicians reports live for Today from media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait11-19-07-2013.jpg
  • BBC brolley and camera in media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait10-19-07-2013_1.jpg
  • The Italian operatic tenor Luciano Pavarotti performs in London during the free Party in the Park concert to celebrate his 30 years in opera. A crowd of 100,000 stood in the London rain to watch Pavarotti perform 20 arias by Verdi, Puccini, Bizet and Wagner. VIPs the Princess of Wales, Prime Minister John Major and Michael Caine got soaked in heavy rain along with everyone else sitting on the grass cowering beneath tarpaulins. We see the rotund Operatic maestro in full flow, belting out an aria while dressed in formal tails and wastecoat and holding his customary scarf that he uses to dab the sweat from his brow. Pavarotti helped bring an otherwise high-brow artform to the ordinary Man after the BBC used his rendition of Nessun Dorma to theme their World Cup TV coverage. This lead the way to Opera reaching the Common Man in Britain.
    RB_041-30-07-1991.jpg
  • Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher seen on TV wagging a finger during exchanges at the dispatch box with Labour opposition. Thatcher died on April 8th 2013 after suffering a stroke while staying in the Ritz Hotel, London.
    margaret_thatcher14-03-09-2007_1.jpg
  • Chairman of Ernst & Young Mark Ottey peers down on his employees on a giant screen, addressing his loyal audience of E & Y staff who have congregated at an Ernst & Young Academy Day held for 3,000 of company London employees at Excel in London's Docklands, England. The hall is packed and his disciples listen and watch intently and obediently to watch their Leader speak like a Big Brother character, who ernestly and sincerely talks down to them despite being dressed casually for such a large event. Each employee will attend this brainstorming fair where later, motivational pep-talks from executives, outside speakers and gurus will talk to large groups of E & Y personnel so their presence on this day away from the office is vital for the year's business ahead.
    Ernst+Young_Academy148-21-09-2007_1.jpg
  • As the UK Coronavirus death toll rises by 621 to 4,934 and with worldwide cases passing 1.2m, Queen Elizabeth of great Britain addresses the nation on TV, thanking the health professionals of the NHS National Health Service and key workers for their work during the pandemic, on 5th April 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_queen-02-05-04-2020.jpg
  • Queen Elizabeth and husband Prince Phillip are televised from the balcony of Buckingham Palace on to a giant screen for the crowds below, during the monarchs Golden Jubilee celebrations, on 3rd June 2002, in London, England.
    queens_golden_jubilee-03-06-2002.jpg
  • Newsreader on Somaliland TV station reads the news in a ramshackle studio, Hargeisa, Self Declared Independent country of Somaliland. The country has very developed TV and media outlets funded mostly from the diaspora abroad
    sfe_031208_0003.jpg
  • US Fox TV markings on pavement as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait30-19-07-2013_1.jpg
  • US NBC TV reporter Natalie Morales with technicians reports live for Today from media village behind railings as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending labour and birth. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where an heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the world.
    royal_baby-wait23-19-07-2013.jpg
  • Media photographers stand on tall stepladders  as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending birth to a baby boy. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where the heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the waiting world.
    royal_baby_wait23-22-07-2013_1.jpg
  • Media interview on tall stepladders as tension mounts outside St Mary's Hospital, Paddington London, where media and royalists await news of Kate, Duchess of Cambridge's impending birth to a baby boy. Some have been camping out for up to two weeks during a UK heatwave, having bagged the best locations where the heir to the British throne will eventually be shown to the waiting world.
    royal_baby_wait03-22-07-2013_1.jpg
  • An old fashioned pair of public address speakers have been attached to a scaffolding pole overlooking the Northumberland countryside at the Kielder Air Show. Here, the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team are to perform and the squadron's commentator - known as Red 10 - will be describing the 25-minute routine performed in front of a few hundred people, probably the smallest of the Red Arrows audiences. The Hawk aircraft will be flying over the borderland between England and Scotland during this display which has attracted a local crowd to this pretty landscape. This primitive method of amplification makes for it charmingly quirky. We see a low-tech and makeshift apparatus, vastly different to other shows where digital sound quality reproduces audio to many of thousands of spectators.
    Red_Arrows525_RBA.jpg
  • BBC warm-up man Miles Crawford holds up two boards prompting the audience watching the National Lottery Show to Clap or Laugh in BBC Television Centre in West London, England. Lit by studio lighting with a universe of stars in the background, Crawford is a respected and versatile stand-up comic and TV personality in his own right  working for the BBC, Sky, Channel 4 and ITV. Ironically, warm-ups perform a preliminary act before a TV show is recorded to literally warm an audience into non-spontaneous laughter to help a comedy's atmosphere - albeit with the help of prompt signs like these. The first National Lottery Live show was at 19:00 on Saturday 19 November 1994.
    RB_013-16-03-1996.jpg
  • Multi-screen TV images of Margaret Thatcher's last speech as PM at Tory Party conference before being deposed weeks later.
    margaret_thatcher15-03-09-2007_1.jpg
  • Billy Graham preaches with sincere, confidently open hands to British Christians during Mission 89, a series of evangelical revival rallies in London, England. Graham is an Evangelical Christian who has been a spiritual adviser to several U.S. presidents including George W Bush with Time Magazine calling him “.. the nation's spiritual counselor."  He is number seven on Gallup's list of admired people for the 20th century and member of the Southern Baptist Convention. Here he is seen towering on a giant screen over the small heads of his UK congregation who are sitting passively listening to the message of this great man of God. The scale of his personality and presence above them makes this a powerful image of leadership and of followers.
    billy_graham_rally02-03-09-2007_1.jpg
  • A ticket to the Nation of Islam event, that was due to be held at Ocean in Hackney, London. Ocean cancelled 5 days prior to the event that was then held at the Broadwater Farm estate community centre in Tottenham, North London.  Minister Hilary Muhammad, UK Coordinator hosted the Nation of Islam UK celebrations for Saviours Day in North London. One of the main events was a live TV link up from Chicago USA, where Minister Louis Farrakhan spoke on reparation; the minister is currently banned from entering the UK.
    01-noi_4719.jpg
  • A choir rehearse a Mary Poppins song during an outside broadcast for the One Show at Broadcasting House, on 4th October 2018, in London, England.
    bbc_production-13-04-10-2018.jpg
  • Climate activists from Exctinction Rebellion occupy the forecourt of BBC New Broadcasting House during day five of two weeks of planned demonstrations on 11th October, 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Extinction Rebellion accuse the BBC of staying silent and demand they tell the full truth about the climate crisis.
    CD 11-10-19 XR BBC HQ-28.jpg
  • A young girls smiles at climate activists from Exctinction Rebellion dressed as endangered animals as they occupy the forecourt of BBC New Broadcasting House during day five of two weeks of planned demonstrations on 11th October, 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Extinction Rebellion accuse the BBC of staying silent and demand they tell the full truth about the climate crisis.
    CD 11-10-19 XR BBC HQ-18.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-remain protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing061.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-remain protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing035.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-leave protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing031.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-remain protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBC's long-running topical debate programme Question Time. (photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20190917_supreme court hearing016.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-leave protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBC's long-running topical debate programme Question Time. (photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20190917_supreme court hearing003.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-remain protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing059.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-remain protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing062.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-leave protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing060.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-leave protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing032.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-remain protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing037.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-leave protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBC's long-running topical debate programme Question Time. (photo by Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)
    20190917_supreme court hearing003.jpg
  • An image of veteran wildlife and environmental broadcaster Sir David Attenborough is held high in Parliament Square next to the statue of Field Marshal Jan Christiaan Smuts, the South African and British Commonwealth statesman, military leader and philosopher, during the week-long protest by climate change activists with Extinction Rebellions campaign to block road junctions and bridges around the capital, on 23rd April 2019, in London England.
    extinction_rebellion-40-23-04-2019.jpg
  • An image of veteran wildlife and environmental broadcaster Sir David Attenborough is held high in Parliament Square during the week-long protest by climate change activists with Extinction Rebellions campaign to block road junctions and bridges around the capital, on 23rd April 2019, in London England.
    extinction_rebellion-09-23-04-2019.jpg
  • Campaigners hug beneath an image of veteran wildlife and environmental broadcaster Sir David Attenborough is held high in Parliament Square during the week-long protest by climate change activists with Extinction Rebellions campaign to block road junctions and bridges around the capital, on 23rd April 2019, in London England.
    extinction_rebellion-07-23-04-2019.jpg
  • BBC headquarters, BBC Broadcasting House, Portland Place, London, England, United Kingdom. The main building was refurbished, withradio stations BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio 4, and the BBC World Service transferred to refurbished studios within the building. The extension links the old building and includes a new combined newsroom for BBC News, with studios for the BBC News channel, BBC World News and other news programming. The move of news operations from BBC Television Centre was completed in March 2013.
    20180331_bbc_004.jpg
  • Veteran political BBC TV Broadcasters, Peter Snow And Sir Robin Day listen to speeches during the 1989 Labour Conference in September 1989 in Brighton, England.
    snow_day-11-09-1989.jpg
  • A portrait of Australian-born, Clive James on 20th January 1990 in Cambridge UK. Clive James AO CBE FRSL b1939 is an Australian author, critic, broadcaster, poet, translator and memoirist, best known for his autobiographical series Unreliable Memoirs, for his chat shows and documentaries on British television and for his prolific journalism. He has lived and worked in the United Kingdom since 1962.
    clive_james03-20-01-1990.jpg
  • A portrait of Australian-born, Clive James as he is recognised and photographed by a Japanese tourist, on 20th January 1990 in Cambridge UK. Clive James AO CBE FRSL b1939 is an Australian author, critic, broadcaster, poet, translator and memoirist, best known for his autobiographical series Unreliable Memoirs, for his chat shows and documentaries on British television and for his prolific journalism. He has lived and worked in the United Kingdom since 1962.
    clive_james01-20-01-1990.jpg
  • A portrait of Australian-born, Clive James on 20th January 1990 in Cambridge UK. Clive James AO CBE FRSL b1939 is an Australian author, critic, broadcaster, poet, translator and memoirist, best known for his autobiographical series Unreliable Memoirs, for his chat shows and documentaries on British television and for his prolific journalism. He has lived and worked in the United Kingdom since 1962.
    clive_james02-20-01-1990.jpg
  • Peopel arriving at  BBC broadcasting house. Central London, UK.
    UK-Culture-BBC-8_1.jpg
  • TV personality Jonathan Ross OBE dances his version of The Stonk in a Television studio in which celebrities from the entertainment industry performed to a charity song which was released by comics Hale and Pace which reached a UK number for one week in March 1991 raising £100,000 in aid of Comic Relief. Ross is a BAFTA-winning English film critic and presenter of BBC radio and television and is seen here in 1991 after a few years into his broadcasting career.
    jonathan_ross01-24-1991_1.jpg
  • Naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough watches video of killer whale sequence from The Trials of Life at home in London. Sir David Frederick Attenborough (born 1926) is a British broadcaster and naturalist. His career as the face and voice of natural history programmes has endured for more than 50 years. He is best known for writing and presenting the nine Life series, in conjunction with the BBC Natural History Unit, which collectively form a comprehensive survey of all life on the planet. He is also a former senior manager at the BBC, having served as controller of BBC Two and director of programming for BBC Television in the 1960s and 1970s. Attenborough is widely considered a national treasure in Britain, although he himself does not care for the term. He is a younger brother of director, producer and actor Richard Attenborough.
    david_attenborough04-17-09-1990_1.jpg
  • Naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough watches video of killer whale sequence from The Trials of Life at home in London. Sir David Frederick Attenborough (born 1926) is a British broadcaster and naturalist. His career as the face and voice of natural history programmes has endured for more than 50 years. He is best known for writing and presenting the nine Life series, in conjunction with the BBC Natural History Unit, which collectively form a comprehensive survey of all life on the planet. He is also a former senior manager at the BBC, having served as controller of BBC Two and director of programming for BBC Television in the 1960s and 1970s. Attenborough is widely considered a national treasure in Britain, although he himself does not care for the term. He is a younger brother of director, producer and actor Richard Attenborough.
    david_attenborough03-17-09-1990_1.jpg
  • Naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough watches video of killer whale sequence from The Trials of Life at home in London. Sir David Frederick Attenborough (born 1926) is a British broadcaster and naturalist. His career as the face and voice of natural history programmes has endured for more than 50 years. He is best known for writing and presenting the nine Life series, in conjunction with the BBC Natural History Unit, which collectively form a comprehensive survey of all life on the planet. He is also a former senior manager at the BBC, having served as controller of BBC Two and director of programming for BBC Television in the 1960s and 1970s. Attenborough is widely considered a national treasure in Britain, although he himself does not care for the term. He is a younger brother of director, producer and actor Richard Attenborough.
    david_attenborough02-17-09-1990_1.jpg
  • Naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough watches video of killer whale sequence from The Trials of Life at home in London. Sir David Frederick Attenborough (born 1926) is a British broadcaster and naturalist. His career as the face and voice of natural history programmes has endured for more than 50 years. He is best known for writing and presenting the nine Life series, in conjunction with the BBC Natural History Unit, which collectively form a comprehensive survey of all life on the planet. He is also a former senior manager at the BBC, having served as controller of BBC Two and director of programming for BBC Television in the 1960s and 1970s. Attenborough is widely considered a national treasure in Britain, although he himself does not care for the term. He is a younger brother of director, producer and actor Richard Attenborough.
    david_attenborough01-17-09-1990_1.jpg
  • Recently renovated BBC Broadcasting House is the headquarters and registered office of the BBC in Portland Place and Langham Place, London. Broadcasting House is home to BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio 4, and BBC Radio 7 and also houses the BBC Radio Theatre, where music and speech programmes (typically comedy for BBC Radio 4) are recorded in front of a studio audience.
    20100522broadcasting houseA.jpg
  • Computer screen showing the website for online self broadcasting site, You Tube
    20091214screen grabAH.jpg
  • The BBCs veteran political broadcaster, Sir Robin Day stands on an equipment box to make a report to camera on College Green in Westminster, on 17th March 1992, in London, England. Sir Robin Day 1923 – 2000 was an English political journalist and television and radio broadcaster and called the most outstanding television journalist of his generation. He helped transform the television interview, changed the relationship between politicians and television, and strove to assert balance and rationality into the mediums treatment of current affairs.
    robin_day-17-03-1992.jpg
  • Crystal Palace Transmitting Station in London, United Kingdom. The Crystal Palace transmitting station, officially known as Arqiva Crystal Palace, is a broadcasting and telecommunications site in the Crystal Palace area of the London Borough of Bromley, England. It is located on the site of the former television station and transmitter, operated by John Logie Baird, from 1933.
    20190907_crystal palace transmitter_...jpg
  • Climate activists from Exctinction Rebellion occupy the forecourt of BBC New Broadcasting House during day five of two weeks of planned demonstrations on 11th October, 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Extinction Rebellion accuse the BBC of staying silent and demand they tell the full truth about the climate crisis.
    CD 11-10-19 XR BBC HQ-25.jpg
  • Climate activists from Exctinction Rebellion occupy the forecourt of BBC New Broadcasting House during day five of two weeks of planned demonstrations on 11th October, 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Extinction Rebellion accuse the BBC of staying silent and demand they tell the full truth about the climate crisis.
    CD 11-10-19 XR BBC HQ-4.jpg
  • A climate activist from Exctinction Rebellion on the canopy of BBC New Broadcasting House during day five of two weeks of planned demonstrations on 11th October, 2019 in London, United Kingdom. Extinction Rebellion accuse the BBC of staying silent and demand they tell the full truth about the climate crisis.
    CD 11-10-19 XR BBC HQ-16.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-remain protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing062.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-leave protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing060.jpg
  • Television presenter and broadcaster David Dimbleby speaks to pro-remain protesters outside The Supreme Court as the first day of the hearing to rule on the legality of suspending or proroguing Parliament begins on September 17th 2019 in London, United Kingdom. The ruling will be made by 11 judges in the coming days to determine if the action of Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament and his advice to do so given to the Queen was unlawful. David Dimbleby is a British journalist and former presenter of current affairs and political programmes, now best known for the BBCs long-running topical debate programme Question Time.
    20190917_supreme court hearing059.jpg
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