Shillinglaw in 2018

Kim Danila Shillinglaw[1] (born 1969) is a British media executive and non-executive director. A former controller of BBC Two and BBC Four, head of science and natural history commissioning at the BBC, and commissioner for children's entertainment at CBBC, she later became director of factual businesses at Endemol Shine's.[2] She is known for having transformed popular science on television.

Early life and career

Born in London, Shillinglaw spent her early years in Cameroon and Spain, countries in which her parents worked during the 1970s.[3]

After her family's return to Britain, she attended Holland Park Comprehensive and then read history at Wadham College, Oxford.[4] After her graduation, she worked in strategy and the music industry then joined Observer Films (for a time part of the Guardian Media Group) as a researcher, eventually becoming a series producer.[5] Following this, she worked for ITV and Channel 4.

Early BBC posts

From 2006, Shillinglaw worked as an executive producer for BBC Factual and the commissioner of independent productions for CBBC.[5] Among shows that she developed and commissioned at CBBC was the Horrible Histories series.[6] Shillinglaw was responsible for changing the original pitch, a long-form drama idea about a ghost train, into a comedy proposal based on sketches with contemporary references to popular culture. She also requested the recruitment of adult comedy writers.[7] Working under Karen O'Connor from late 2007, she then became one of 10 "creative leads" in London Factual[8] and Executive Produced the Bafta-nominated Chemistry: A Volatile History[9] with Jim Al Khalili, Blood and Guts with Michael Mosley and The Incredible Human Journey with Alice Roberts.

Science and Natural History

In May 2009, Shillinglaw was promoted the BBC's commissioning editor and head of commissioning for science and natural history,[10] responsible around 2012 for 200 hours of programming per year.[11] During her tenure she increased the number of natural history hours produced by the BBC, including new landmarks [12] Frozen Planet, Africa, Hidden Kingdoms, Dynasties and The Hunt (2015 TV series). She turned the Planets programmes into a returning brand with Planet Earth II and Blue Planet II[13] (originally known as Oceans) which she commissioned at the 2013 Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival.[12][14] She grew lower cost popular franchises such as Autumnwatch and Winterwatch, Gordon Buchanon's ...And Me series, Animal's in Love, Tiger about the House and Nature's Weird Events.

She expanded the range of science subjects on TV to include more difficult topics such as math[15] and unusual programmes such as After Life: The Strange Science of Decay, a 90-minute film using Timelapse cameras to record a glass kitchen full of rotting food, reported as "a winner with audiences"[16] which doubled BBC4's usual ratings.[17] She brought the Royal Institution's Christmas Lecture back to The BBC after an absence of more than a decade.[18] She commissioned more popular science series including Stargazing Live, which won its slot against drama on BBC1,[19] Brian Cox's Wonders of the Universe, Trust Me I'm a Doctor, Supermarket Secrets,[20] Bang Goes the Theory.[21] and factual drama such as Challenger[22][23] starring William Hurt playing physicist Richard Feynman which won the RTS Award for Best Single Drama.[24]

The proportion of science-themed broadcasting on BBC One is said to have risen during Shillinglaw's period in charge of the department.[25] In 2010, she organised the BBC's Year of Science to raise the profile of science, which reportedly increased the BBC's science reach by more than four million people and doubled the number of searches for BBC Science.[26] On Dec 7th 2010 the Telegraph called it "a fantastic moment for science on tv" and "a glorious new age of science of television".[27][28] In a speech to the Royal Society the Science Minister David Willets MP said "The BBC has been doing a fantastic job"[29] and DCMS identified 'the BBC's decision to make science a more prominent part of its schedules" as a 'key factor' in the growth of interest in science.[30] Output she commissioned is said to have had a significant effect on the British public offscreen. Many of her science programmes have become staples of classroom teaching, and physics qualifications are said to have increased due to the ‘Brian Cox’ effect[31][32] and sales of telescopes due to Stargazing Live.  

The Times included Shillinglaw in a list of the top 100 influential people in British science, observing her role in promoting more female presenters onto screen, as well as introducing Brian Cox to television. "The fact that Shillinglaw has chosen presenters with serious academic backgrounds, as opposed to simple celebrity sparkle, also brings her respect among the scientific community".[33] In a 2011 article for The Guardian, she argued television had not done enough to include women onscreen.[34] Shillinglaw brought more diversity to screen, including Liz Bonin, Kevin Fong, Helen Czerski, Gabrielle Weston, Maggie Aderin-Pocock, Hannah Fry, and Saleyha Asan, among others. She is reported as having tweeted: "Why are only women on Mock the Week compilations laughing cutaways? They never get to speak. Surely not because not funny?"[35][36] In 2012, Broadcast magazine's Hot 100 described her as "about as far from the stereotype of a BBC commissioner as you can get: enthusiastic, uncensored and jargon free".[37]

Shillinglaw has a long standing involvement in tech innovation but has also expressed scepticism about hype. She ran experimentation with VR, AR and 3D for The BBC, including 3D versions of Dr Who, Wimbledon and David Attenborough, and was quoted as saying "watching 3D is quite a hassly experience in the home".[38] In 2014 she was interviewed by the technology magazine Wired in where she speculated that "technology often asks us to work too hard".[39] In 2013 Shillinglaw conceived and initiated Make it Digital, the largest BBC initiative of its kind, to inspire a new generation to get creative with coding and digital technology, which the BBC launched in 2015.[40] The project provided a free Micro Bit coding device to all year 7 children across the UK, one million devices in total, and apprenticeships, and created a season of output involving BBC brands such as Doctor Who, Eastenders, Radio 1, BBC Weather and The One Show. Shillinglaw also commissioned a factual drama about video game Grand Theft Auto for BBC2, starring Daniel Radcliffe.[41] The project was backed by around fifty organisations, including ARM, Barclays, British Computing Society, BT, Code Club, the DWP, Microsoft, the Sklls Funding Agency and Tech City UK. Shillinglaw has also contributed to tech education and innovation policy on the Board of the innovation think tank NESTA,[42] which she joined in 2012 and the Board of the Raspberry Pi Foundation.[43] She chaired an R&D Taskforce funded by the Wellcome Foundation.

Other roles during this time included various on public-private partnerships, chairing the BBC's Commercial Genre Board which increased long term commercial funding for Natural History output, and chairing the BBC's DQF Taskforce[44] on commercial income which drew up a strategy for integrated public-private working between the BBC and BBC Worldwide and eventually led to the creation of BBC Studios.

She assumed her posts as controller of both BBC Two and BBC Four in April 2014, in succession to Janice Hadlow[45] at a time when critics were reported as saying "certain things are rather tired about it now",[46] calling for a "boot up the rear" and pointing to ageing audiences. During her period as the 13th (and final) controller of BBC Two,[47] On 9 January 2015, Shillinglaw told Broadcast magazine that "BBC2 is a fundamentally grown-up channel but should be young at heart".[48] According to the television producer contacts of journalist George Monbiot, she was less keen to commission programmes on environmental issues.[49] Shillinglaw commissioned programmes such as the comedy Mum,[50] Exodus,[51] Muslims Like Us,[52][53] The Real Marigold Hotel,[54] which eventually moved to BBC One due to its high ratings, introduced the first female presenter of a TV Comedy Panel Show, QI,[55] the first non-white presenter of the RI Christmas Lectures[56] and brought women's football into prime-time.[57]

In January 2016, it was announced the posts of BBC One, BBC Two and BBC Four controllers were being abolished in a re-structure by the BBC's director general Tony Hall. At the same time, it became known Shillinglaw was leaving the BBC; however, according to The Guardian it was intended that she would work through her six-month notice period.[58]

Later career

In August 2016, she was appointed as the first director of factual programming at Endemol Shine UK.[2] Shillinglaw executed substantial restructuring including hiring new managing directors[59][60] for several companies, merging or rebranding other businesses and opening new offices in Belfast and Leeds.[61] Over three years, she tripled turnover and substantially increased profitability, before exiting on the successful sale of EndemolShine to Banijay.[62]

Shillinglaw is a non-executive director at Natural England,[63] at Ofcom,[64] the Natural Environment Research Council,[65] and Raspberry Pi.[66]

Personal life

She is married to the television producer Steve Condie, who has worked on Newsnight. The couple live in west London and have two children.[4]

References

  1. ^ England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1916–2007
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  4. ^ a b John Plunkett "Kim Shillinglaw: the straight-talking new controller of BBC2", The Guardian, 20 April 2014
  5. ^ a b Katherine Rushton "Kim Shillinglaw, BBC science and natural history", Broadcast, 21 January 2014
  6. ^ "BBC - Press Office - Horrible Histories Press Pack: introduction". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  7. ^ "Horrible Histories". Laurence Rickard | Official Website. 3 January 2022. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
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  9. ^ "2010 Television Specialist Factual | BAFTA Awards". awards.bafta.org. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
  10. ^ Leigh Holmwood "BBC appoints first Muslim head of religious programming", The Guardian, 11 May 2009
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Media offices Preceded byJanice Hadlow Controller of BBC Two 2014–2016 Succeeded byAbolished Preceded byRichard Klein Controller of BBC Four 2014–2016 Succeeded byAbolished