Stuart Prebble

Stuart Prebble (born April 15, 1951) is a former CEO of ITV, Granada Sky Broadcasting and of ITV Digital.

Educated at Newcastle University he was producer and editor of the World In Action current affairs series and went on to be Head of Factual Programmes at Granada TV and Controller of Factual Programmes for the ITV network. He was nominated for a BAFTA TV Award for Best Factual Series for World in Action.

He was promoted to CEO of ITV in April, 2001,[1] after ITV struggled to find a replacement CEO for well over a year.[2] In March 2002 he was CEO of ITV Digital when it was forced into administration.[3]

In Autumn 2002 he left ITV to set up an independent television production company based in North East England called Liberty Bell. The company produced a wide range of factual programmes for all of the UK terrestrial broadcasters and for some digital channels. He was the executive producer and writer of the 2003 - 2004 Grumpy Old Men series for BBC2. There were three series of Grumpy Old Men, and his company also made several series Grumpy Old Women which also became a successful touring stage show. Other TV productions for Liberty Bell have included 3 Men in a Boat for BBC2, Why We Went to War for More4, The Alastair Campbell Diaries for BBC2, and Willie's Wonky Chocolate Factory for Channel 4.

Prebble eventually sold Liberty Bell Productions to Avalon and in summer of 2011 he left to set up another TV production company, StoryVault Films and a web-site dedicated to individual memories called www.storyvault.com.

Prebble is the author of nine published books. These include two early novels, A POWER IN THE LAND, and THE LAZARUS FILE, as well as five comedy books on "Grumpy" themes. 'SECRETS OF THE CONQUEROR', which is about the Falklands and the Cold War, was published by Faber in October 2012. His recent novel, THE INSECT FARM is published by Alma Books in the UK in March 2015, and in the US by Mulholland Books in July 2015

References

  1. Brown, Matthew (2 May 2002). "Stuart Prebble resigns as chief executive of ITV". DM Weekly. Retrieved January 2010. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  2. , ELEANOR TRICKETT, Campaign, 01 September 2000. Accessed January 2010
  3. Doward, Jamie (March 31, 2002). "ITV's biggest turn-off". The Observer. Retrieved November 2006. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.