The sad demise of British TV production
Discussion
Last one of a production line. BTW: Do we actually make anything now?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8222421.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8222421.stm
The title of your post actually highlights the debate around what the UK produces more accurately than I imagine you thought.
I had assumed we'd not made TVs in this country for a couple of decades, so my immediate bemused reaction was that for some reason TV programme production has suddenly died in this country!
Although we've not got a television manufacturing industry any more, we've got a huge industry in creating tv programmes and licencing the formats - over £630M in 2007.
The US may well earn more than we do from exporting TV programmes, but nobody else does. Sure, I know X Factor is crap, but it's lucrative crap, and Britain leads the world in it!
I had assumed we'd not made TVs in this country for a couple of decades, so my immediate bemused reaction was that for some reason TV programme production has suddenly died in this country!
Although we've not got a television manufacturing industry any more, we've got a huge industry in creating tv programmes and licencing the formats - over £630M in 2007.
The US may well earn more than we do from exporting TV programmes, but nobody else does. Sure, I know X Factor is crap, but it's lucrative crap, and Britain leads the world in it!

Dracoro said:
And how many people here have recently bought a British made TV?
To be honest who would even notice. So it's the last Toshiba TV to be made in Britain? I didn't know Toshiba even made TVs here, since they are a Japanese company so I would never have thought of it as British.If I was knowingly buying a British TV I would be looking for a British company name like Ferguson or Rediffusion but since I didn't live in the 1970s and they were all rubbish anyway I wouldn't have bought one.
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