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	<title>Comments on: Save the UK Film Council!</title>
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		<title>By: Jonathan Stuart-Brown</title>
		<link>http://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/save-the-uk-film-council/comment-page-1/#comment-1056</link>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Stuart-Brown</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Sep 2010 18:14:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bestforfilm.com/?p=43939#comment-1056</guid>
		<description>John,
First may I say that very many people sincerely admire your zeal in your campaign. Although people have clearly stated it is in their view backing the wrong horse, there is nontheless tremendous respect for the gusto you brought to your cause. Now that the UKFC has been repeatedly busted including by The Guardian and Michael Grade, and the list of the Matthew Vaughns and Julian Fellowes is set to grow, many people hope you will transfer your energy to really helping The UK Film Industry grow into its destiny. Hollywood finance is linked entirely to sound stage capacity. The UK has fallen from clear market leader to possible also ran in 2012. Moreover, the other usp The UK can offer Hollywood and its own indie producers and investors is state of the art sets: ancient Rome, Biblical Jerusalem, sci-fi, spaceships, pyramids, Paris, New York, Venice, Mumbai, beijing, Moscow, Tokyo, Berlin, etc which can double as tourist sites and revenue to subsidise film making. Alton Towers, Shakespeare&#039;s Stratford-on-Avon, Warwick castle get 4 million paying visitors a year. If you were to write on and campaign for this, it could come about in the next few years. Outside the south-east land is at giveaway prices with councils in every region keen to get film/tv infrastructure and provide EU and regeneration funds. The conditions are perfect to turn the UK into a glorious film and Tv set and tourist park with inward investment pouring in. Anyway regardless of whether you do or do not join in the fight, many people sincerely wish you well in any career you choose to pursue.
Jonathan Stuart-Brown
www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>John,<br />
First may I say that very many people sincerely admire your zeal in your campaign. Although people have clearly stated it is in their view backing the wrong horse, there is nontheless tremendous respect for the gusto you brought to your cause. Now that the UKFC has been repeatedly busted including by The Guardian and Michael Grade, and the list of the Matthew Vaughns and Julian Fellowes is set to grow, many people hope you will transfer your energy to really helping The UK Film Industry grow into its destiny. Hollywood finance is linked entirely to sound stage capacity. The UK has fallen from clear market leader to possible also ran in 2012. Moreover, the other usp The UK can offer Hollywood and its own indie producers and investors is state of the art sets: ancient Rome, Biblical Jerusalem, sci-fi, spaceships, pyramids, Paris, New York, Venice, Mumbai, beijing, Moscow, Tokyo, Berlin, etc which can double as tourist sites and revenue to subsidise film making. Alton Towers, Shakespeare&#8217;s Stratford-on-Avon, Warwick castle get 4 million paying visitors a year. If you were to write on and campaign for this, it could come about in the next few years. Outside the south-east land is at giveaway prices with councils in every region keen to get film/tv infrastructure and provide EU and regeneration funds. The conditions are perfect to turn the UK into a glorious film and Tv set and tourist park with inward investment pouring in. Anyway regardless of whether you do or do not join in the fight, many people sincerely wish you well in any career you choose to pursue.<br />
Jonathan Stuart-Brown<br />
<a href="http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com" rel="nofollow">http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com</a></p>
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		<title>By: david Winter</title>
		<link>http://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/save-the-uk-film-council/comment-page-1/#comment-895</link>
		<dc:creator>david Winter</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 21 Aug 2010 06:45:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bestforfilm.com/?p=43939#comment-895</guid>
		<description>UK Film Council Caught Red-Handed 
Lobbying Against Government 

 Yesterday the luvvies at the UK Film Council quango were summoned by Ed Vaizey to answer claims they had misused resources to promote their own survival rather than the interests of the British movie industry. The suspicion at the DCMS is that they were running a scaremongering spin operation drawing in the likes of Clint Eastwood and billionaire film producer Steven Spielberg to write publicly demanding the British taxpayer subsidises their movies.

A UK Film Council spin-doctor yesterday denied the allegations, piously intoning that: “The future of the UK film industry is the only thing the UK Film Council is interested in.” Unfortunately PR Week had already gone to press before Vaizey had voiced his suspicion that the luvvies were using public resources to promote their own interests, rather than those of the film industry. In PR Week Oliver Rawlins, the film quango’s head spinner boasted that he had
“been handling a comms strategy relying on third-party advocacy… We’ve ensured that the message has been simple, clear and consistent: this is a terrible decision that disregards the commercial benefits of the UK Film Council…”

Which rather undermines the quango’s subsequent claim that they weren’t spinning to save their own necks…</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>UK Film Council Caught Red-Handed<br />
Lobbying Against Government </p>
<p> Yesterday the luvvies at the UK Film Council quango were summoned by Ed Vaizey to answer claims they had misused resources to promote their own survival rather than the interests of the British movie industry. The suspicion at the DCMS is that they were running a scaremongering spin operation drawing in the likes of Clint Eastwood and billionaire film producer Steven Spielberg to write publicly demanding the British taxpayer subsidises their movies.</p>
<p>A UK Film Council spin-doctor yesterday denied the allegations, piously intoning that: “The future of the UK film industry is the only thing the UK Film Council is interested in.” Unfortunately PR Week had already gone to press before Vaizey had voiced his suspicion that the luvvies were using public resources to promote their own interests, rather than those of the film industry. In PR Week Oliver Rawlins, the film quango’s head spinner boasted that he had<br />
“been handling a comms strategy relying on third-party advocacy… We’ve ensured that the message has been simple, clear and consistent: this is a terrible decision that disregards the commercial benefits of the UK Film Council…”</p>
<p>Which rather undermines the quango’s subsequent claim that they weren’t spinning to save their own necks…</p>
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		<title>By: Jonathan Stuart-Brown</title>
		<link>http://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/save-the-uk-film-council/comment-page-1/#comment-770</link>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Stuart-Brown</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Aug 2010 19:05:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bestforfilm.com/?p=43939#comment-770</guid>
		<description>John, there is a battle place for ideas and you have certainly put yourself about on the web to put your case across. The UK Film council are using public money and press officers and staff to stress their case.  The report they co-commissioned with Pinewood Shepperton plc was designed to help the plc shareholders get planning permission (against local will) for 1400 houses on greenbelt land. It looks like they will fail, but you never seem to cover the UK sound stages (the thing Clint Eastwood used earlier this year to make a film in the UK) are leaving this nation and moving to Malaysia, China, Germany, Canada. You never seem to get that the UKFC was the only body which should have been sounding the alarm, but did not. It may now be too late.
Your baseless accusation of trolling seems the wounded cry of one losing the argument, the battle, the war.
Unlike yourself I have to account to over 300 people who can axe me if they do not agree with what I write and how I write it. They all work in the film industry, most did pre UKFC, all will after.
The lie repeated over and over is the propaganda of £1 spent making £5. It does not because the £5 goes outside The UK. If £1 made £5 every investor in the UK would invest in it. UKFC helped ensure that whether we invested in hits, or more usually misses, that we in this land could not keep the profits.
With or without UKFC, with or without tax credits, without sound stages, the whole show is moving to Malaysia by 2012. The shareholders who now own over 50% of Pinewood Shepperton plc now want high share growth, big dividends, and to release the property values. Now if you write about that, I will applaud and urge people to cheer you.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>John, there is a battle place for ideas and you have certainly put yourself about on the web to put your case across. The UK Film council are using public money and press officers and staff to stress their case.  The report they co-commissioned with Pinewood Shepperton plc was designed to help the plc shareholders get planning permission (against local will) for 1400 houses on greenbelt land. It looks like they will fail, but you never seem to cover the UK sound stages (the thing Clint Eastwood used earlier this year to make a film in the UK) are leaving this nation and moving to Malaysia, China, Germany, Canada. You never seem to get that the UKFC was the only body which should have been sounding the alarm, but did not. It may now be too late.<br />
Your baseless accusation of trolling seems the wounded cry of one losing the argument, the battle, the war.<br />
Unlike yourself I have to account to over 300 people who can axe me if they do not agree with what I write and how I write it. They all work in the film industry, most did pre UKFC, all will after.<br />
The lie repeated over and over is the propaganda of £1 spent making £5. It does not because the £5 goes outside The UK. If £1 made £5 every investor in the UK would invest in it. UKFC helped ensure that whether we invested in hits, or more usually misses, that we in this land could not keep the profits.<br />
With or without UKFC, with or without tax credits, without sound stages, the whole show is moving to Malaysia by 2012. The shareholders who now own over 50% of Pinewood Shepperton plc now want high share growth, big dividends, and to release the property values. Now if you write about that, I will applaud and urge people to cheer you.</p>
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		<title>By: John Underwood</title>
		<link>http://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/save-the-uk-film-council/comment-page-1/#comment-751</link>
		<dc:creator>John Underwood</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Aug 2010 14:46:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bestforfilm.com/?p=43939#comment-751</guid>
		<description>Jonathan,

I really think we&#039;ve endured your ill-structured rants on this thread long enough.


There are evidently two sides to every debate, even the decision to attack the UK Film Council, and you are of course at liberty to cheer Jeremy Hunt&#039;s absurd decision if you must. However, any validity your arguments have is rather diluted by your tiresome trolling and refusal to let anyone else&#039;s opinions lie. It is not gentlemanly, nor is it adult. Furthermore, your repeated insistence on using your comments as a platform for advertising your full-length diatribes is more than a little transparent.


You will note that I have not made any attempt to force my opinions or those of Best For Film on the users of your website. I suggest you spend a little more time there in future and desist from vandalising this article or any other with your petulant scribblings.


Thanks.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Jonathan,</p>
<p>I really think we&#8217;ve endured your ill-structured rants on this thread long enough.</p>
<p>There are evidently two sides to every debate, even the decision to attack the UK Film Council, and you are of course at liberty to cheer Jeremy Hunt&#8217;s absurd decision if you must. However, any validity your arguments have is rather diluted by your tiresome trolling and refusal to let anyone else&#8217;s opinions lie. It is not gentlemanly, nor is it adult. Furthermore, your repeated insistence on using your comments as a platform for advertising your full-length diatribes is more than a little transparent.</p>
<p>You will note that I have not made any attempt to force my opinions or those of Best For Film on the users of your website. I suggest you spend a little more time there in future and desist from vandalising this article or any other with your petulant scribblings.</p>
<p>Thanks.</p>
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		<title>By: Jonathan Stuart-Brown</title>
		<link>http://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/save-the-uk-film-council/comment-page-1/#comment-750</link>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Stuart-Brown</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 09 Aug 2010 13:55:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bestforfilm.com/?p=43939#comment-750</guid>
		<description>Please Mr Hunt axe The Uk Film Council now, not in 2 years time. they are spending £140 million of taxpayers money to defend their 9 live fatcat quango while cheering as real UK film jobs go to Malaysia and china, Canada and Germany. Axe them now before they spend all our money on adverts, PR events, black propaganda on saving their 6 figure jobs and fiefdom. This £140 million could build 50 sound stages around The UK magnetising Hollywood finance. It could build 10 in Nottingham.
http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/uk-film-council/
and this man Vic Armstrong has done more to build the reputation of The UK film industry than all of UKFC
http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/2010/07/vic-armstrong-should-now-direct-the-next-007-james-bond-movie/</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Please Mr Hunt axe The Uk Film Council now, not in 2 years time. they are spending £140 million of taxpayers money to defend their 9 live fatcat quango while cheering as real UK film jobs go to Malaysia and china, Canada and Germany. Axe them now before they spend all our money on adverts, PR events, black propaganda on saving their 6 figure jobs and fiefdom. This £140 million could build 50 sound stages around The UK magnetising Hollywood finance. It could build 10 in Nottingham.<br />
<a href="http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/uk-film-council/" rel="nofollow">http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/uk-film-council/</a><br />
and this man Vic Armstrong has done more to build the reputation of The UK film industry than all of UKFC<br />
<a href="http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/2010/07/vic-armstrong-should-now-direct-the-next-007-james-bond-movie/" rel="nofollow">http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/2010/07/vic-armstrong-should-now-direct-the-next-007-james-bond-movie/</a></p>
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		<title>By: Jonathan Stuart-Brown</title>
		<link>http://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/save-the-uk-film-council/comment-page-1/#comment-699</link>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Stuart-Brown</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Aug 2010 23:06:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bestforfilm.com/?p=43939#comment-699</guid>
		<description>Brenda Herrington,
Right sentiment, but wrong conclusion.
The Uk Film Council bureaucracy was nothing to do with promoting the arts and particularly drama in a school anywhere near you. Nor with any offending adults. The UKFC was about getting huge salaries for 75 people (when Channel 4 Films at its peak in the 80s and 90s had only 10) in a £24 000 a month rented palace of a building, with five star hotel and first class hotel and fantastic lunch expenses which kept the richest restaurants full.
The title UK Film Council confuses people. It did nothing to expand the opportunities to get involved in UK Film either as art or as a profession. Far more was done to create film making opportunities in the 80s and 90s by far less materialistic bureaucrats. Now that it is gone, what you and others hope for can arise in the UK. Genuine film making infrastructure across The UK, genuine opportunities.
Jonathan Stuart-Brown
http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Brenda Herrington,<br />
Right sentiment, but wrong conclusion.<br />
The Uk Film Council bureaucracy was nothing to do with promoting the arts and particularly drama in a school anywhere near you. Nor with any offending adults. The UKFC was about getting huge salaries for 75 people (when Channel 4 Films at its peak in the 80s and 90s had only 10) in a £24 000 a month rented palace of a building, with five star hotel and first class hotel and fantastic lunch expenses which kept the richest restaurants full.<br />
The title UK Film Council confuses people. It did nothing to expand the opportunities to get involved in UK Film either as art or as a profession. Far more was done to create film making opportunities in the 80s and 90s by far less materialistic bureaucrats. Now that it is gone, what you and others hope for can arise in the UK. Genuine film making infrastructure across The UK, genuine opportunities.<br />
Jonathan Stuart-Brown<br />
<a href="http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/</a></p>
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		<title>By: Brenda Herrington</title>
		<link>http://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/save-the-uk-film-council/comment-page-1/#comment-686</link>
		<dc:creator>Brenda Herrington</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Aug 2010 08:30:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bestforfilm.com/?p=43939#comment-686</guid>
		<description>I cannot beleive the short-sightedness of the Governement! The arts &amp; particularly drama, have such a benfeicial effect on even wayward members of our society as proved time and time again, from drama clubs in schools to initiatives with offending adults. I whole heatedly support this campaign and urge others to do so.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I cannot beleive the short-sightedness of the Governement! The arts &amp; particularly drama, have such a benfeicial effect on even wayward members of our society as proved time and time again, from drama clubs in schools to initiatives with offending adults. I whole heatedly support this campaign and urge others to do so.</p>
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		<title>By: Jonathan Stuart-Brown</title>
		<link>http://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/save-the-uk-film-council/comment-page-1/#comment-675</link>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Stuart-Brown</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 31 Jul 2010 20:26:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bestforfilm.com/?p=43939#comment-675</guid>
		<description>You would do much better to get a Petition to Save Pinewood and Shepperton Studios. These have 34 sound stages. Each employing people in The Uk film industry, well only 80% of them.
The plc owning it has sold the right to use Pinewood brandname in the last 12 months to competitor studios in Canada, Malaysia, Germany and The Dominican Republic. The origial UK studios will not compete against them for the Hollywood productions which rent in Iver Heath and Shepperton and employ all the film workers. The two biggest shareholders in Pinewood who this week got 51% of shares for the first time have both openly said they are interested in the property values of Pinewood and Shepperton, not especially the film making business on it. The biggest shareholder made his billions buying businesses to close them and sell the land they were on at a profit. Guess what The UKFC were mute during the transfer of the real film jobs outside The UK which is about to become accelerated. It was not even protecting The London Film Industry longterm.
You are going to be left with Elstree (only about 15% of Pinewood-Shepperton capacity) unless you start campaigning, petitioning to the Government now rather than the misguided attempt to save fatcat bureaucrats while killing the industry and driving abroad its major investor.
Jonathan Stuart-Brown
http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/2010/07/high-noon-in-pinewood-takeover-shoot-out/</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You would do much better to get a Petition to Save Pinewood and Shepperton Studios. These have 34 sound stages. Each employing people in The Uk film industry, well only 80% of them.<br />
The plc owning it has sold the right to use Pinewood brandname in the last 12 months to competitor studios in Canada, Malaysia, Germany and The Dominican Republic. The origial UK studios will not compete against them for the Hollywood productions which rent in Iver Heath and Shepperton and employ all the film workers. The two biggest shareholders in Pinewood who this week got 51% of shares for the first time have both openly said they are interested in the property values of Pinewood and Shepperton, not especially the film making business on it. The biggest shareholder made his billions buying businesses to close them and sell the land they were on at a profit. Guess what The UKFC were mute during the transfer of the real film jobs outside The UK which is about to become accelerated. It was not even protecting The London Film Industry longterm.<br />
You are going to be left with Elstree (only about 15% of Pinewood-Shepperton capacity) unless you start campaigning, petitioning to the Government now rather than the misguided attempt to save fatcat bureaucrats while killing the industry and driving abroad its major investor.<br />
Jonathan Stuart-Brown<br />
<a href="http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/2010/07/high-noon-in-pinewood-takeover-shoot-out/" rel="nofollow">http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/2010/07/high-noon-in-pinewood-takeover-shoot-out/</a></p>
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		<title>By: Jonathan Stuart-Brown</title>
		<link>http://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/save-the-uk-film-council/comment-page-1/#comment-674</link>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Stuart-Brown</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 31 Jul 2010 19:57:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bestforfilm.com/?p=43939#comment-674</guid>
		<description>Having lobbied hard to get rid of The UK Film Council, those of us at Save The British Film Industry have obviously been celebrating all week and congratulating the Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt.
For there to be a British Film Industry, there needs to be sound stages built around The UK. Ideally at least 4 in every county. Hollywood $50 million to $300 million productions can only go where sound stages are. For those who do not know, they are glorified warehouses, more normally found in The Midlands and The North YET curiously sound stages are confined to a very very small 200 acres in the area of west London, and just North and West of London. The Uk Film Industry fought tooth and nail to ensure not one penny of Lottery money was spent on building sound stages outside of this small 200 acre zone..thus guaranteeing a UK film industry could not arise. They did spend £300 000 a year on their ground rent. They did employ 75 people on £70 000 to £150 000 who often had several other jobs. But sound stages, post-production facilities, nope. If these existed across The UK, then many more entrepreneurs who invest in fast food franchaises, laundrettes, restaurants, shops, etc will take the risk and hire them to try their luck at film making for profit. It was the volume of risk taking entrepreneurs which created Hollywood, and they then built sound stages, before selling them for houses, and forever thereafter seeking to rent them elsewhere such as Pinewood, Shepperton, Elstree.
Now the MD of Elstree earns a fraction of the salary of the average UKFC employee, yet he has delivered two years of block booking of Elstree sound stages by Hollywood Studios creating lots of UK based film jobs. Why is only little Hertsmere Council, owner of Elstree, wise about sound stages ? Why did The UKFC not educate people outside West London that they are the essential infrastructure of a real industry ? Now UKFC is gone, and hopefully certain very very high paid, huge expenses Regional screen Commissions with them, the sound stages can get built and UK film making enter a true golden age.
We urge people not to sign any Petition to save UKFC  fatcat jobs. It has nothing to do with The UK Film Industry, indeed it was the enemy of most people making films in Britain.
http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/2010/07/ding-dong-the-witch-is-dead-save-the-british-film-industry-kill-the-uk-film-council/</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Having lobbied hard to get rid of The UK Film Council, those of us at Save The British Film Industry have obviously been celebrating all week and congratulating the Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt.<br />
For there to be a British Film Industry, there needs to be sound stages built around The UK. Ideally at least 4 in every county. Hollywood $50 million to $300 million productions can only go where sound stages are. For those who do not know, they are glorified warehouses, more normally found in The Midlands and The North YET curiously sound stages are confined to a very very small 200 acres in the area of west London, and just North and West of London. The Uk Film Industry fought tooth and nail to ensure not one penny of Lottery money was spent on building sound stages outside of this small 200 acre zone..thus guaranteeing a UK film industry could not arise. They did spend £300 000 a year on their ground rent. They did employ 75 people on £70 000 to £150 000 who often had several other jobs. But sound stages, post-production facilities, nope. If these existed across The UK, then many more entrepreneurs who invest in fast food franchaises, laundrettes, restaurants, shops, etc will take the risk and hire them to try their luck at film making for profit. It was the volume of risk taking entrepreneurs which created Hollywood, and they then built sound stages, before selling them for houses, and forever thereafter seeking to rent them elsewhere such as Pinewood, Shepperton, Elstree.<br />
Now the MD of Elstree earns a fraction of the salary of the average UKFC employee, yet he has delivered two years of block booking of Elstree sound stages by Hollywood Studios creating lots of UK based film jobs. Why is only little Hertsmere Council, owner of Elstree, wise about sound stages ? Why did The UKFC not educate people outside West London that they are the essential infrastructure of a real industry ? Now UKFC is gone, and hopefully certain very very high paid, huge expenses Regional screen Commissions with them, the sound stages can get built and UK film making enter a true golden age.<br />
We urge people not to sign any Petition to save UKFC  fatcat jobs. It has nothing to do with The UK Film Industry, indeed it was the enemy of most people making films in Britain.<br />
<a href="http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/2010/07/ding-dong-the-witch-is-dead-save-the-british-film-industry-kill-the-uk-film-council/" rel="nofollow">http://www.savethebritishfilmindustry.com/2010/07/ding-dong-the-witch-is-dead-save-the-british-film-industry-kill-the-uk-film-council/</a></p>
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		<title>By: Greek Accountant</title>
		<link>http://bestforfilm.com/film-blog/save-the-uk-film-council/comment-page-1/#comment-647</link>
		<dc:creator>Greek Accountant</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Jul 2010 14:26:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bestforfilm.com/?p=43939#comment-647</guid>
		<description>You say:

1)  That the contribution of the UK Film Industry to the economy has increased by 50% since 2000 when the Film Council was formed.  But in the five years prior to 2000, before the UKFC was formed, it increased by over 300%.  So what?  These figures tell us nothing at all about the UKFC&#039;s activities.

2)  That the UKFC&#039;s &quot;investments garner an average profit of 400%&quot;.  No they don&#039;t.  Tthey make a loss.  The UKFC has never made this claim.  For the facts, see the UKFC Annual Report and Accounts.

3)  That the UKFC &quot;manages all this&quot; on a budget of £15 million a year.  No they don&#039;t.  The level of income from all sources to the UKFC for 2008/2009, the most recent figures available, was £72.2 million.  Their grant-in-aid from the Government alone was worth over £30 million.  Again, see the UKFC Annual Report.

I make these points not because I think the UKFC should be abolished - indeed, I&#039;ve already signed the online petition against its closure - but because we lose credibility with Government if we can&#039;t get our facts right, and the campaign is doomed to failure.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You say:</p>
<p>1)  That the contribution of the UK Film Industry to the economy has increased by 50% since 2000 when the Film Council was formed.  But in the five years prior to 2000, before the UKFC was formed, it increased by over 300%.  So what?  These figures tell us nothing at all about the UKFC&#8217;s activities.</p>
<p>2)  That the UKFC&#8217;s &#8220;investments garner an average profit of 400%&#8221;.  No they don&#8217;t.  Tthey make a loss.  The UKFC has never made this claim.  For the facts, see the UKFC Annual Report and Accounts.</p>
<p>3)  That the UKFC &#8220;manages all this&#8221; on a budget of £15 million a year.  No they don&#8217;t.  The level of income from all sources to the UKFC for 2008/2009, the most recent figures available, was £72.2 million.  Their grant-in-aid from the Government alone was worth over £30 million.  Again, see the UKFC Annual Report.</p>
<p>I make these points not because I think the UKFC should be abolished &#8211; indeed, I&#8217;ve already signed the online petition against its closure &#8211; but because we lose credibility with Government if we can&#8217;t get our facts right, and the campaign is doomed to failure.</p>
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