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Lord Hall tells me: "Our lives will be enriched by having not only what the streamers can offer, but also what the public service broadcasters can bring. It's unthinkable not to build on what the BBC and others can deliver".Sir Peter Bazalgette predicts that, "Small doesn't cut it," adding that, "The winners will have to be big enough to [both] afford high end dramas for winning subscribers and maintain large back catalogues to keep subscribers happy."
He says we now live in "the 'martini' streaming age - any time, any place, anywhere".The question is whether the leaders of the public service broadcasters can forge the right plan to safeguard their industry in that age.A new exhibition celebrating "the misfits and the oddballs who didn't really fit in anywhere" has opened in Liverpool.
For Your Pleasure, which "explores queer club culture of the 1990s", has been curated by Martin Green and James Lawler from DuoVision for the Open Eye Gallery.The pair, who have worked with the LGBTQIA+ creative community since 2012, curate exhibitions by what they describe as undervalued artists, photographers and designers, aimed at engaging with a wider audience.
They said their creative company was "all about celebrating people from the queer community, the people who don't fit in with anything, but create amazing work".
Club culture was an integral part of their world, as Green was also a DJ and ran the influential '90s club Smashing, while Lawler avidly frequented clubs in London and the North West.For the road down to the beach - Church Street - it can leave residents there unable to get in or out from their own homes for hours on end.
"The people who live on Church Street, there are so many houses there, and they basically have to plan their day around the visitors that come to the area - which isn't right at all," said the county councillor for the area, John Ifan Jones.From Friday a fresh attempt to address the issues was being tested.
Parking at the main beach car parks will rise to £5 for two hours, and then a further 70p for every additional 20 minutes - up to a maximum of £15 a day.In addition, there will be a trial over the bank holiday weekend, closing access to the car parks on Saturday, Sunday and Monday as they become full.