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MAYOR BLOOMBERG ANNOUNCES FORMATION OF THE MAYOR’S OFFICE OF MEDIA &
ENTERTAINMENT
Executive Order Integrates NYC Media, the
Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting and Digital Coordination Functions into
a Single Entity
Part of Effort to Streamline Government Resources As
Committed to in State of the City Speech
July 30, 2010 - Mayor
Michael R. Bloomberg today announced the creation of the Mayor’s Office of Media
and Entertainment. The existing Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and
Broadcasting has joined with NYC
Media, the official television, radio and online network of the City of New
York, to create a single entity that will also perform citywide digital
coordination functions as the use of social media becomes more prevalent. The
planned merger, announced by Mayor Bloomberg in his 2010 State of the City
speech, aims to integrate and expand the City’s diverse media industries and
spur the development of innovative new media technologies and uses. Commissioner
Katherine Oliver, who was appointed Commissioner of the Mayor’s Office of Film,
Theatre and Broadcasting on August 1, 2002, and has been the President of NYC
Media since April 2009, will oversee the new office and serve as Commissioner.
Since January, Commissioner Oliver has worked with her staff and the Departments
of Information Technology and Telecommunications and Small Business Services to
implement the changes the Mayor made official in an executive order.
“Today, we have taken another step towards making government better and
stronger by creating the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment,” said Mayor
Bloomberg. “Katherine Oliver has achieved great things as Commissioner of the
Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting, and I know she will have just as much
success in her expanded role. This dynamic new entity will allow us to make
better of digital media and to continue to make New York the place where movies,
television shows and theatre want to come.”
“Serving as the Film
Commissioner for the last eight years has been truly one of the greatest honors
of my life,” said Commissioner Katherine Oliver, “I look forward to the next
phase as Commissioner of Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment, implementing
the Mayor’s ideas of making government services and messages better, continuing
our duties to bring film and entertainment to New York City and making sure we
do our best to be the most digitally creative City that we can be.”
Todd
Asher, who had been Chief Operating Officer of NYC Media, was appointed First
Deputy Commissioner. Asher will coordinate the entities within the Mayor’s
Office of Media and Entertainment and report to Oliver. Asher has worked at NYC
Media since May 2009. John Battista will continue to serve as Deputy
Commissioner of the Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting. Diane Petzke will
serve as General Manager of NYC Media, overseeing programming for radio and
television.
The Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting,
originally established in 1966, will continue its function as the one-stop shop
for productions shooting in the City, issuing all permits required for films,
television series and still photography shoots. The agency has created
innovative incentive programs to attract and retain film and television
production as well as workforce development and education programs to grow the
entertainment industry. One of its most successful programs is the “Made in NY”
Production Assistant Training Program, developed in partnership with Brooklyn
Workforce Innovations, which gives unemployed and disadvantaged New Yorkers
their start in the TV and film industry as production assistants.
As the
official TV, radio and online network for the City, NYC Media informs, educates
and entertains New Yorkers with programming featuring the City’s diverse people
and neighborhoods, government, services, attractions and activities. NYC Media
oversees several television channels, a radio station and other online assets.
NYC life – Channel 25 on most systems and Channel 22 on Cablevision – explores
art and culture, entertainment and lifestyle, and history and education, and
features the people and places that make the City unique; NYC gov provides a
window into City government by airing press conferences, City Council hearings
and public events; NYC world offers international programming for New York’s
diverse ethnic communities; and NYC drive features live feeds from a network of
City cameras providing local travelers with coverage of the City’s main
roadways. The NYC Media Video On Demand Player also allows viewers to watch NYC
life original programming online at any time.
Within the new Office of
media and Entertainment, the Office of Digital Coordination will implement the
City’s digital media efforts, and enhance communications between City government
and the public through social media and other digital tools. The Office of
Digital Coordination will use evolving technology and media to provide more
transparency in government.
The Office of Media and Entertainment will
also provide unemployed and under-employed New Yorkers with opportunities for
hands-on experience in the television industry at NYC Media. Each year,
graduates of the “Made in NY” Production Assistant Training Program will be
considered for paid PA positions at NYC Media. The program helps create job
opportunities, connects disadvantaged New Yorkers with employers in the
industry, and educates production assistants on how to work collaboratively with
the communities in which they shoot.
The merger provides various
cost-saving efficiencies, some of which have already been realized. A number of
operational staff from the Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre and Broadcasting,
including communications, marketing, and finance, now fulfill responsibilities
for the new office, and the Departments of Information Technology and
Telecommunications will administer the back office support, including payroll,
budget, IT, and human resources.
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