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Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Royal wedding broadcasters

PINNACLE Telecom has won three contracts with international news networks in the UK covering the Royal wedding.

Telecoms specialist will provide data and voice networks for US news giant CNN, Australia's Seven Network and Canada's Global Television Network.

The new contracts are to provide voice and data networks opposite Buckingham Palace at Canada Gate, the Mall and Horse Guards Road, along Whitehall and Downing Street and opposite Westminster Abbey.

Alan Bonner, Pinnacle's chief executive, said: "The Royal Wedding between Prince William and Kate Middleton is likely to be Pinnacle's highest-profile event of the year.

CNN is available to 100 million US households and 212 countries around the world.

Last week Pinnacle announced it had also secured the contract to provide voice and data connectivity for the UK local elections days after securing a similar deal for Radio1's Big Weekend event.

The Paisley-based firm also announced in March it had secured for the second year a network connectivity contract for the Glastonbury Festival.

Pinnacle has also completed a number of outside broadcast contracts with the BBC in recent months, including the Aintree Grand National, the Labour party conference and NME Music Awards.

Royal wedding tour

Royal wedding? As soon as the phrase was uttered, everyone was chattering. Everyone had something to say.

People spoke of relatives with plans to get up early in the morning to see it on television. Great consternation arose over when it actually would be. Was that Eastern time or Atlantic? Would it actually start at that time, or is that when the guests start arriving? When is the actual wedding.

Royal Wedding Walk" starts on an unremarkable London side street around the corner from the Ritz Hotel with a bit of history: Queen Elizabeth was born by caesarean section here, at 17 Bruton St.

The slightly odd, if harmless, details of the 85-year-old monarch's birth signal what this 15-pound ($25), 90-minute tour is going to be all about.

Like many of the wedding-themed tours (not to mention books, documentaries and other souvenirs) sweeping the United Kingdom ahead of Prince William and Kate Middleton's April 29 nuptials, this guided walk past some of London's iconic scenery offers enthusiasts a mix of tabloid gossip, urban myth and fact-based trivia.

But on this tour, the pomp and gravity of the fairy tale fall away, replaced by mundane and relatable human embarrassments and conjectures made by people who share nothing but a British accent with Middleton and William's inner circle.

Stopping outside a women's clothing store, part of the Jigsaw chain Middleton worked for briefly, tour guide Hana Umezawa notes: "She's had trouble holding onto a job, much to the displeasure of the Queen."

She follows this with a story of Middleton and William's 2007 breakup: The future princess was at work when the prince phoned to break it off. Middleton reportedly cried in front of her co-workers.

William, meanwhile, is said to have hung out in London nightclubs the week after making the call. Standing outside Mahiki, a "popular haunt" at the corner of Dover and Piccadilly streets, Umezawa says: "It's said Prince William managed to rack up a bill of 11,000 pounds (about $18,000) in just over a week.
Upcoming royal wedding will be an interesting spectacle, but I don't feel a personal connection to, or deep interest in, the event.

I wish them all the best, but I'm a lot more excited about weddings I will actually be invited to.

My only curiosity is about The Dress.

Kate has impeccable taste and access to the world's best designers, so she's sure to look spectacular. My blasé attitude might fall apart on the big day, though right now I don't see myself hunkering down with the hardcore royal watchers.

Pressure could be overwhelming, yet we can be optimistic for them. Kate's reaffirmation of faith may open the way to a reawakening of values vital to the future of the monarchy: public honouring of the national religion; respect for the royal tradition of uncomplaining service; and an easy familiarity with the truth.
When in need of guidance, William and Kate can look to the Queen, whose life of sacrifice and duty has earned enduring affection. Yet what the Americans call "the greatest generation" – of which Elizabeth II is a shining example – need have no monopoly of these virtues. It seems to be William and Kate's generation who more easily see past the wedding theatrics outside the Abbey to the enduring certainties within. Given the chance, those certainties will liberate our future king and queen from the mistakes of the past and from fear of what lies ahead.


Royal wedding tour operators, help UK economy

British PM David Cameron called the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton “unadulterated good news.” As Britain prepares for a second consecutive four- day weekend, business groups and economists beg to differ.

Federation of Small Businesses calculates the extra public holiday to mark the nuptials in London’s Westminster Abbey on April 29 may cost the economy as much as 6 billion pounds ($9.8 billion). That’s 10 times the 620 million pounds Verdict Research, a unit of Datamonitor Plc, estimates that sales of wedding memorabilia might add to the economy.

Many U.K. citizens are taking advantage of back-to-back four-day weekends to flee the U.K., just as foreign tourists roll into London for the wedding of Prince William to Kate Middleton. Travel experts say the exodus is unprecedented for this time of year.

ABTA-The Travel Association estimates that about 3.5 million people—or about 5% of the U.K. population—are heading abroad. One tour operator, Thomas Cook, has added an extra 100,000 vacation packages to meet the demand.

Tourism chiefs predict an extra 600,000 tourists from home and abroad will flock to London to celebrate the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton on April 29, pushing the total number of visitors up to 1.1 million.

Those well-wishers are forecast to spend around £50 million (57 million euros, $82 million) on the day of the wedding, as they party in style on the streets of the capital.

"We are hoping that for years to come, tourists are going to come here off the back of the royal wedding and generate a real legacy for British tourism," said Mark Di-Toro, spokesman for national tourist authority VisitBritain

Cameron could use some royal-wedding relief to distract Britons from their economic woes. The government increased the sales tax this year and is cutting 310,000 public-sector jobs to shrink the budget deficit. Gross domestic product shrank 0.5 percent in the fourth quarter, and inflation is double the Bank of England’s target, eating away at savings and spending power.

A survey carried out by polling firm YouGov found 23% of respondents were planning to do just that. The poll, for travel retailer lastminute.com, said almost 23 million Britons—nearly half the adult population—would be sidestepping the royal celebrations to take advantage of the extra bank holiday.

As the Brits pour out, foreigners are flooding in. Expedia, the online travel firm, says bookings to London have more than tripled from last year during the period of the royal nuptials. The national carrier British Airways says it will transport more than 250,000 people into London this coming week ahead of the festivities.

The capital is expected to gain the biggest tourism boost but other associated regions could also benefit.

"London will be the main beneficiary from the royal wedding event with major tourist attractions -- ie. the British Museum, National Gallery, Tate Modern, Natural History Museum and London Eye -- benefitting the most," Popova said.

"Tour operators in the city but also in the countryside are expected to see a growing interest from travellers.

"Special tours are already launched to the village of Bucklebury where Catherine Middleton was raised but equally, St Andrews University in Scotland, where the couple met, and Anglesey in North Wales, where they will live.
Use a customer-centric approach. Today’s consumers demand individualized interactions with brands, and they’re clamouring for messages that are relevant and personalized. In other words, you have to know what’s important to your customers and then incorporate that into your messaging and product offerings. For example, Celebrity Planet, a London-based tour operator, took the bull by the horns and launched a William and Kate tour, chronicling the young couple’s courtship. Likewise, restaurants are catering to their patrons’ fascination with all-things-Royal-Wedding, and many are planning a range of special events, from themed menus and free cake to special decorations and big screen tv coverage. Dunkin Donuts is caught up in the whirlwind, too, offering customers a rare culinary tribute: the Royal Wedding Donut. And even children can get in on the fun with these adorable “action figures” depicting William and Kate, the Queen, Prince Phillip, a Mounted Royal Guard, a foot soldier and a Corgi.
London is full of tourists for most of the year in any case, so this event won't make much of a difference to total tourist income."

But he conceded that it would provide a valuable advertising platform.

"This event can be seen as a type of advertising for the UK as a tourist destination -- if one considers all the pages of coverage in newspapers and magazines around the world, its value can be considered equivalent to the cost of renting all that newspaper and magazine space for adverts.

"From that perspective, its value is clearly quite high. But as with all forms of advertising, one can never be sure just how much extra revenue it brings.

Royal wedding broadcast

Planning every last aspect of Will and Kate’s wedding to the minutest detail in the run up to this Friday’s ceremony. And with over 2 billion people worldwide expected to tune in to the momentous event live, their choice of production team couldn’t be more important.

Tiny cameras hidden in altar flowers for fly-on-the-wall effect
Two billion set to watch worldwide
No guest safe from world's gaze as every emotion will be recorded
World's media barter for best vantage point in commercial buildings
But rain could put a dampener on big day

So the palace has turned to one of the most respected stage managers in television, Diccon Ramsay. The 27-year-old will take a break from his day job on ITV1 talent show The X Factor to take command of the 60 special cameras located around Westminster Abbey to capture every emotion of the king-to-be and his blushing bride.
Buckingham Palace has asked Diccon Ramsay, the 27-year-old stage manager of the U.K. version of Simon Cowell’s X-Factor, to take time off from his day job and bring some showbiz drama to coordinating coverage inside the Abbey, where a network of cameras that have been installed to deliver every aspect of the ceremony to an audience predicted to be 2 billion viewers worldwide.

Royal wedding gift list

Just days before the Royal Wedding, question on what to give the soon to be royal couple has been answered by the couple thmeselves.

Instead of lavish gifts, Kate and William hope to receive donations for their charitites. They have support 26 charities, many of which are not particularly well known.

Prince William and Kate Middleton share their wedding guest list
William and Kate Invited their exes to their Wedding
Prince William and Kate Middleton plan to Travel Across Canada
Prince William and Kate Middleton to tie the knot on April 29
Prince William to marry Kate Middleton

Instead of gifts, Prince William and Kate Middleton have requested that well wishers donate to their charitable gift fund.

The fund will focus on assisting charities that support five causes chosen by the couple to reflect the experiences, passions and values they hold.

While none of the 26 selected charities are based in the county, many have offices and work with residents in Worcestershire.

Cruse Bereavement Care’s Worcester branch is one of the reasons the charity made it onto the list.

Startled and elated, Kate said “yes.” Snatching a nearby microphone, Billy jokingly asked to be called by his given name, William, and announced: “William and Kate, we’re gonna have a royal wedding.”

Before that, likely in June, the bride-to-be will don a replica of Middleton’s engagement dress for an engagement announcement photo. It was a gift from “The Nate Berkus Show,” an episode of which the couple recently taped. It airs at 2 p.m. Wednesday Channel 5, two days before the royal nuptials.

Mucci, who plays no polo and works for a plastics manufacturing plant in Rockford ,not very royal, is content to catch bits and pieces on the DVR. This whole royal thing, he admitted, isn’t his cup of tea.

Royal Wedding - Jewelry and Accessories for the Royal Wedding

Prince and Kate engagement was announced in November, 2010, after the couple had dated for eight years. William gave Kate his late mother's 18 carat blue sapphire and diamond ring, a ring Prince Charles gave Diana when the pair became engaged in 1981.
The royal wedding will be held at Westminser Abbey in London on April 29, 2011, with live media coverage around the world. The event is expected to draw the largest number of television viewers in history. After the wedding, Queen Elizabeth II will host a reception at Buckingham Palace.

Anyone is waiting to see Kate's wedding dress and wedding day jewelry. William will wear a military uniform.

Royal wedding jewelry

Dolls in miniature versions of her couture clothes. People can eat off china emblazoned with her smiling engagement picture. Jewelry stores offer replicas of her $50 million diamond and sapphire engagement ring.

Friday, people worldwide will watch Kate Middleton marry future king of England Prince William at Westminster Abbey in London. Among those people watching will be at least one Shelby resident.

Nancy Six left London 52 years ago when she was 22. Twelve years after that, she moved to Shelby. But after decades in the United States, Six’s pristine British accent and her love for the royal family reveal she’s still a Brit at heart.

Six said she plans to raise a toast to the happy couple on their wedding day and wish them many years of happiness. Six went through a similar royal-wedding routine in 1981 when Lady Diana Spencer married William and Harry’s father, Prince Charles.

“It’s exciting to see young people coming up in the royal family,” Six said, adding that the newly married couple will bring new, fresh ideas to the monarchy.

People have speculated since the engagement was announced last year about wedding details, from which A-list celebrity guests will attend the ceremony to who will design Middleton’s wedding gown.

Most of those details are closely guarded secrets, but Six said one thing is certain: the ceremony will be an elaborate, memorable event.

Royal wedding dress

Spectators heading to central London to watch the royal wedding unfold on giant screens are being encouraged to dress up for the occasion by wearing hats.

Organisers said they want those attending to feel like wedding guests. As well as the suggested dress code, they are also laying on wedding bands at both locations, and stalls selling champagne, Pimm's and wedding cake so that members of the public can toast the royal couple.

Children will be able to take part in hat-making workshops, with photo booths in place to record the moment for posterity.
The events are being jointly staged by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, London Mayor Boris Johnson and the Royal Parks. They are free and non-ticketed, with places allocated on a first-come, first-served basis once the sites open at 7am on Friday.

Tourism Minister John Penrose said: "The royal wedding will put the UK in the international spotlight as never before.
"Billions all around the world are expected to watch it on TV with hundreds of thousands coming to London to be part of the celebration. These free events - each one taking place in London locations that are world-famous in themselves - will add enormously to the visitor experience."
About 21,000 people are expected to flock to Trafalgar Square and the immediate vicinity, while about 240,000 are anticipated in Hyde Park, where three screens will show all the action on the day.