• Ceri Thomas is BBC News head of programmes

    Submitted by ITV Production on Mar 12
    Indiantelevision.com

    MUMBAI: Ceri Thomas has been announced as the new head of programmes for BBC News.

    Ceri will take on the new role from 18 March. He takes over from Stephen Mitchell, who is leaving the BBC.

    News Programmes brings together all the major daily and weekly current affairs output, investigative journalism and major interview programmes including Panorama, Today and Newsnight. The department also includes services focused on distinctive audiences, including Radio 5 Live news programmes and Asian Network news as well as BBC Radio 1 news programmes such as Newsbeat.

    The department is a journalistic powerhouse for the kind of original journalism which distinguishes the BBC from its competitors. Interviews and original journalism are shared across News adding value for audiences by bringing exceptional expertise together to find and break more news stories.

    Ceri said, "So much of the heart and soul of BBC News lives in this department. It?s full of variety and ambition and endeavour. It?s where we take risks - calculated editorial risks, but risks all the same - and it?s vital that we don?t stop taking them. It?s an enormous privilege and a huge challenge to take on the job of running it."

    BBC director of news Helen Boaden said, "Ceri brings outstanding experience of running one of our highest profile daily Current Affairs programmes, Today, which he has brilliantly modernised while building new relationships across the BBC. He is passionately committed to delivering courageous, challenging current affairs journalism on all platforms and is one of the most creative thinkers in BBC News.? Ceri started his broadcasting career in 1989 as a producer of AM at LBC Radio. He then joined the Today programme as a junior producer in 1991, progressing to Assistant Editor under Roger Mosey from 1995.

    Ceri then moved to Radio 5 Live as Breakfast Editor and eventually to Head of News for the station. He spent a year at Harvard University as a Nieman Fellow and, on returning, took on the new role of Radio Newsgathering Editor, taking the lead in strengthening the relationship between Newsgathering and Radio News and reviewing and re-organising Radio News? own reporting base.

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