Big News
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | September 7, 1929 |
---|---|
Directors | Gregory La Cava |
Distributed by | Pathé Exchange |
Producers | Ralph Block |
Screenplay | Frank Reicher |
Walter DeLeon | |
Jack Jungmeyer | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2612804 |
About Big News
A boozing reporter (Robert Armstrong) is framed for murder by the gangland advertiser who gets him fired.
Newsnight: BBC News chief says Newsnight cuts reflects changing audience habits
... And they actually also find it off-putting when sometimes, on a Big News day, they re coming to Newsnight and finding similar content that they could have seen on the News at Ten for example...
Robert Pattinson and Suki Waterhouse expecting first child
... Singer Suki revealed the Big News on stage, gesturing at her baby bump while fans screamed in reaction...
Glastonbury Festival: Emily Eavis lines up 'really big' US artist for 2024
... I ve posted about going to lots of gigs before, but I didn t expect it to be quite such Big News...
G20 laments war in Ukraine but avoids blaming Russia
... The other Big News came when Mr Modi formally invited the African Union (AU) to become a permanent member of the G20...
How my dad rescued a stolen £40m da Vinci masterpiece
... It was Big News around the world...
Ryan Tubridy: Why Ireland is gripped by the RTÉ pay scandal
... " RTÉ has such a big place in Irish society, so this scandal was always going to be Big News, " freelance entertainment reporter Emma Kelly tells BBC News...
Sienna Miller: Phone hacking put me under intense pressure
... Back in 2011 it was Big News, once the Guardian revealed the News of the World had intercepted the voicemails of murdered schoolgirl Millie Dowler...
Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump and the in-fighting at Fox News
... " And this was Big News...
Ryan Tubridy: Why Ireland is gripped by the RTÉ pay scandal
By Daniel RosneyCulture reporter
While The British media has been dominated by allegations about a BBC presenter, across the Irish Sea , national broadcaster RTÉ has for weeks been dealing with its own, very different scandal.
It centres around undeclared payments made by The Corporation to Ireland's highest-paid broadcaster, Ryan Tubridy .
The controversy has snowballed and is gripping The Nation , to such an extent that parliamentary committee hearings are being screened in pubs.
On Tuesday, Tubridy is expected to appear at the Oireachtas (Irish Parliament) in front of two committees examining over five years, on top of his declared annual salary of almost 500,000 euros (£428,000).
Pubs across the country are planning to show the televised meetings as the population hears directly from the Chat Show host for the First Time .
Some clips from previous committee hearings have been viewed More Than A Million times on TikTok, with many other videos racking up hundreds of thousands of hits.
" There are very few shared moments in national culture now, " says Brian Foley from the Vintners' Federation, a trade body representing thousands of pubs.
" This story has dominated the airwaves for The Past three weeks like No Other , " he tells Bbc News . " It has broken all The Rules of a lifespan of a typical news story. "
Mr Foley says customers have been " glued to the story" joking that The Levels of interest in the country are similar to 1979, when the Pope visited.
For weeks, viewers have been hooked on the cross-examination of RTÉ executives by politicians.
Members of parliament took the organisation's chief financial Officer - who couldn't confirm his own salary - to task for claiming not to know the " full extent" of Tubridy's pay arrangement, with one telling the executive he knew The Star " wasn't being paid in jelly tots".
It is turning into one of the biggest crises for the broadcaster in its 97-year history.
Similar to The Bbc , which will publish a list of its highest salaries on Tuesday, RTÉ also reports what it pays its top talent. An audit of the Irish organisation's finances found irregularities with what was in the Public Domain and what the accounts actually showed.
After further reading, The Corporation has been accused of running " a slush fund" - spending and gig tickets as well as millions on a failed musical, all " while crying poverty".
Taoiseach (Prime Minister ) Leo Varadkar has said reform of how the institution is funded is well overdue.
Unlike The Bbc , the Irish broadcaster, and The Scandal has dented The Trust its audience has in it.
" RTÉ has such a big place in Irish society, so this scandal was always going to be Big News , " freelance entertainment reporter Emma Kelly tells Bbc News .
" The Late Late Show in particular is such a cultural touchstone, so when people find out that RTÉ and Ryan Tubridy haven't been fully transparent, it's going to hurt. "
The programme Tubridy presented is not only an Irish institution - with a packed live audience for More Than two hours each Friday Night - But is the longest-running late-Night Talk Show in Europe. The Format smoothly flips between light entertainment interviews to serious society debate, with pop stars performing in the studio as well.
" The whole thing feel feels like a betrayal, " Kelly explains. " The more ridiculous details that emerge or big names that get dragged in, the harder it is to Look Away . "
Tuesday will be the First Time Tubridy has spoken publicly since The Scandal was first reported. He'll appear with his agent Noel Kelly for hours of questioning.
Before the controversy was made public, the 50-year-old stood down as host of The Late Late Show after nearly 14 years, to be.
On Monday, former Bbc News executive Kevin Bakhurst took over as director general and promptly.
He wrote in an email to staff: " Change will be essential if We Are to rebuild trust in public service broadcasting in Ireland and in RTÉ. "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com