India-born media executive Dr. Samir Shah yesterday was confirmed as the new BBC chairman after his selection cleared the stages of scrutiny to be approved by King Charles III this week.
According to a PTI report from London, Shah, who has worked in the United Kingdom broadcasting for over 40 years, was picked as the government’s preferred candidate in December last year and went on to be quizzed by cross-party MPs of the House of Commons Media Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee for his pre-appointment scrutiny.
The 72-year-old has now been confirmed in the 160,000 pounds per year and four-year term role to take charge as the public broadcaster’s first Indian-origin Chair from March 4 and running until March 2028.
“With a career spanning more than 40 years in TV production and journalism, Dr Shah has a wealth of experience to bring to the position of BBC Chair,” said UK Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer as she announced his selection.
“He has a clear ambition to see the BBC succeed in a rapidly changing media landscape, and I have no doubt he will provide the support and scrutiny that the BBC needs to meet the challenges and opportunities of the future,” she said.
(Samir Shah photo courtesy UK’s House of Commons/PA)
FY26 Q3 pay TV viewership dips; telecom subs, revenues up: TRAI
India’s football body invites commercial rights bids for 15 years
NDTV India, NDTV 24×7 lead YouTube viewership amid major news cycle
SC judge Nagarathna says media can’t perform under constraint
JioStar’s Piyush Goyal outlines vision for ‘Any Screen, Any Pipe’ future of TV
‘Scary Movie’ returns with 6th instalment, set for June release
WPP Media elevates Dipti Gulati as APMEA VP for Client Growth
Apple TV cancels Kristen Wiig-led comedy ‘Palm Royale’
Jio Platforms appoints Dan Bailey as prez to drive global expansion
Rising Bharat ’26: PM outlined vision of self-reliance, AI leadership 

