GoodFood Magazine awards creative mandate to Mudra West
MUMBAI: Mudra West has bagged the creative mandate of BBC GoodFood Magazine.
Starts 3rd October
MUMBAI: There are almost one million young adults unemployed in the UK today and many more in stop-gap jobs. It is getting continually harder to get your foot in the door and interview skills and knowledge of the job market are becoming increasingly important.
UK pubcaster The BBC has announced that in a television first, a new BBC Three series hosted by Richard Bacon and Tina Daheley, Up for Hire Live, is devoting a whole week of primetime to the most important issue facing young people in Britain today: how to get a job. The series takes on the issue of unemployment head on by offering paid work placements via the BBC Three website.
There‘s a range of 23 opportunities being offered by seven companies who are supporting the Up for Hire Live initiative ? Argos, Greggs, Hilton Worldwide, ScottishPower, Starbucks, Timpson and Virgin Media have roles throughout the UK.
Each placement lasts for a minimum of three months and all are paid. It‘s a way for people to get their foot in the door and hopefully kick-start their career.
Working alongside BBC Learning and BBC Radio 1, Up For Hire Live is an ambitious series which will explore the issues faced by young unemployed people as well as offering viewers guidance through the challenging, complex world of work.
Business leaders and celebrity guests will be taking part to share their stories and highlight the reality of the world of work. The series will give an insight into the recruitment process and give viewers tips on applying for a job.
BBC Three commissioning editor Harry Lansdown said, "Obviously a TV series can‘t solve the problem of unemployment but we aim to shine a light on it and offer practical help on how to improve your chances of getting a job. The series will be interactive and have access to business experts and a wide range of companies both in the studio and via social media."
The BBC Three programme will be broadcast live each evening from 17 October. Presenters Richard and Tina can respond to questions asked by viewers immediately and the series will be as current and topical as possible. Radio 1‘s Breakfast Show will also be running an Up For Hire theme and will be focusing on youth unemployment.
MUMBAI: BBC has announced an adaptation and completion of Charles Dickens? last novel, ?Edwin Drood?, left unfinished at the halfway mark at his death on 9 June 1870
?The Mystery Of Edwin Drood?, a two-part drama for BBC Two by writer Gwyneth Hughes, is a psychological thriller about a provincial choirmaster?s obsession with 17-year-old Rosa Bud (Tamzin Merchant) and the lengths he will go to to attain her.
?The Mystery Of Edwin Drood?, alongside Great Expectations on BBC One, forms part of the BBC?s celebration of Dickens as the pubcaster goes into the bicentenary of his birth, in 2012.
John Jasper (Matthew Rhys) is a troubled man, his psyche split between darkness and light. He has spent his life in the stifling and claustrophobic cathedral town of Cloisterham in a state of frustrated ambition and has become addicted to opium in an attempt to still his ennui and expand his horizons.
But the opium is fracturing Jasper?s mind so that even as his soul reaches for the sublime in his music, his darker self has conceived a murderous hatred of his nephew Edwin Drood (Freddie Fox) who, he believes, stands between him and the lovely Rosa. The stage is set for a story of mental and moral decline as Jasper sets out to attain the object of his desire.
A strange, disturbing and modern tale about drugs, stalking and darkness visible, The Mystery Of Edwin Drood is currently in production for transmission later this year. Made in-house by BBC Drama Production for BBC Two, the two-part drama by writer, Gwyneth Hughes is a co-production with Masterpiece on PBS.
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