tpr media consultants
creative, intelligent campaigns
tpr media
For nearly two decades, tpr media has worked with some of the most outstanding international documentary filmmakers. Among these are Nick Broomfield, Morgan Spurlock, Larry Charles, Kim Longinotto, Brian Hill, Roger Graef, Brian Woods, Daisy Asquith, Angus Macqueen and Morgan Matthews. We’ve worked on the international festival circuit including the London Film Festival, Sheffield Doc/Fest and Raindance. At IDFA in Amsterdam, tpr media handled the PR for the premiere of Matt Shepard is a Friend of Mine by first-time filmmaker Michele Josue; the film was recently awarded an Emmy. We’re fiercely dedicated to documentary as art form and in the spirit of documentary filmmaking, we aim to create campaigns that open conversations and debate, working with talented and trusted journalists across print, broadcast and online to stimulate discussion. Providing first-class campaigns for factual and documentary programming in the UK and internationally is a key area of our expertise. We are passionate about compelling storytelling and we like to reflect that in our campaigns. We believe that each project is different and that’s why we create bespoke, tailored campaigns. We’re boutique enough to be passionate, and well connected enough to deliver results. tpr media can offer the profile and positioning that sets its clients apart from the crowd and has represented some of the world’s most influential and creative broadcast, media and arts organisations. These include Channel 4, BBC, Associated Press, Reuters and BRITDOC, as well as many leading production companies.
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tpr media consultants, 3 Muswell Hill Road, London N6 5FJ +44 (0)20 8347 7020 | sophie@tpr-media.com
Working with us...
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A taste of our campaigns...
Last Whites of the East End Lambent Productions, BBC One, May 2016 In the usual heady rush of TV scheduling, we were contacted at the last minute – just two weeks before transmission – to promote the thoughtful and provocative documentary Last Whites of
the East End.
This revealing documentary looked at contemporary Britain and the impact of immigration on
one long-standing community – the East End cockneys. With the European referendum looming
and immigration at the top of the agenda, the challenge was to create a thoughtful campaign
that acknowledged the complexities lying beneath the surface of this story – a portrait of this tight-knit community, and what is driving them to leave.
Journalists from the Daily Telegraph and the Daily Mail invested a lot of time and energy visiting
the area and speaking to contributors first-hand resulting in thoughtful features that raised
important questions. The debate on radio and TV was similarly open and informed. On BBC
London’s Vanessa Feltz Show callers spoke about sweeping changes taking place across the city –
from Bromley to Brixton, not just in Newham. Feltz noted that her own grandparents moved
from the East End to the suburbs. Meanwhile contributor Usmaan – whose family has lived in the East London for five generations – spoke on Eddie Nestor’s Drive Time show about his real concern that the cockney way of life would vanish.
The Telegraph
Daily Mail
The Sun
Daily Express
Tales of the Grim Sleeper Production Company: HBO Documentary Films, in association with Sky Atlantic & Lafayette Films, February to March 2015 Legendary British filmmaker Nick Bromfield’s documentary, Tales of the Grim Sleeper, looks at
the arrest of Lonnie Franklin Jr in July 2010 after a 25-year killing spree in which it is thought he
could have killed over 100 women, potentially making him the most prolific serial killer in history. Significantly his arrest was not the product of painstaking detective work but completely
accidental, the result of a computer DNA match that linked him to a possible 20 victims. Tales of the Grim Sleeper looks into how it was possible for this to happen, investigating the shocking levels of official neglect for African-Americans in the US today.
tpr media were approached to coordinate a publicity campaign around the UK nationwide
theatrical release across cities including London, Bristol, Norwich, Liverpool, Oxford, Canterbury,
Glasgow and Ipswich at cinemas including Curzon and Picturehouse branches. Our strategy was
both national and regional, resulting in features in the Guardian, Telegraph and The Sun,
alongside TV and radio interviews with a wide range of regional titles.
The Telegraph The Guardian
The Sun
IndieWire
Holocaust: Night Will Fall Spring Films & Angel TV, Channel 4, January 2015 Holocaust: Night Will Fall is André Singer’s powerful documentary about the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps and how combat and newsreel cameramen filmed the almost
unbelievable scenes encountered there. Acclaimed by the 2014 Sheffield Doc/Fest jury, this deeply moving film ‘reveals the power of documentary and why it matters.’
When Allied forces liberated the Nazi concentration camps in 1944-45, their terrible discoveries
revealed for the first time the full horror of what had happened. Making use of British, Soviet and
American footage, the Ministry of Information’s Sidney Bernstein (later founder of Granada
Television) aimed to create a documentary that would provide lasting, undeniable evidence of the
Nazis’ unspeakable crimes. He commissioned a wealth of British talent, including writer and future
cabinet minister Richard Crossman – and, as treatment advisor, his friend Alfred Hitchcock.
Yet, despite initial support from the British and US Governments, the film was shelved before it could be completed. It was considered too sensitive for the rapidly changing political climate as
reconciliation with Germany was now imperative and the Soviet Union was emerging as a new
post-war enemy.
70 years later, on the anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camps, tpr media were
commissioned to coordinate a publicity campaign around Channel 4’s broadcast, part of a
coordinated screening of the feature-length documentary across Europe and around the world, including the US, Israel and Japan, with 15 other broadcasters.
Our coverage included a feature in the Guardian on the impact of the images in Holocaust: Night
Will Fall, an article in the Jewish Chronicle and an interview with André Singer on BBC’s World
Service’s Weekend programme. Channel 4’s consolidated viewing figures reached 2million.
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No Fire Zone: The Killing Fields of Sri Lanka Outsider TV, Channel 4, 2012 to 2016 Since 2012, we’ve been working on Callum Macrae’s Emmy and Nobel-nominated documentary
film No Fire Zone. The product of a three-year investigation, the film documents the horrific human rights abuses committed in the closing weeks of civil war in Sri Lanka in 2009.
We’re extremely proud to have managed an ongoing UK and international news and current affairs press campaign for No Fire Zone, which has raised international awareness and even
helped to play a key role in convincing the UN Human Rights Council in March 2014 to launch a
major international war crimes investigation into the atrocities.
In addition to securing hundreds of articles, features and reports in newspapers, magazines and websites worldwide – from The New York Times to The Times of India – as well as over 50
television interviews with Callum Macrae, No Fire Zone’s social media campaign was also visible
with the feature-length documentary widely tweeted about, from politicians to high profile celebrities, trending both in the United Kingdom and India.
British Prime Minister, David Cameron, released the following statement on seeing the film and
called for an independent investigation: “No Fire Zone is one of the most chilling documentaries I've watched…. Many of the images are truly shocking…. This documentary raises very serious questions that the Sri Lankan government must answer about what it did to protect innocent
civilians. Questions that strengthen the case for an independent investigation. Questions that need answers if Sri Lanka is to build the truly peaceful and inclusive future its people deserve.”
Los Angeles Times
The Times of India Mail Online
The New York Times
Guardian
The Undateables Betty TV, Channel 4, Series 1– 3, 2012 to 2014 tpr media was responsible for promoting the first three series of Channel 4’s The Undateables and creating a brand for this award-winning series about dating and disability. There was a delicate
balance to be struck between being tasteful and provocative. Our contributors – who were all
looking for a relationship with someone special – had a range of disabilities, some physical, some
mental, and it was important for us to engage them in the campaign and for them to have input in how it should run.
The title – The Undateables – is Channel 4 at its provocative best and designed to stimulate
debate. Many of the contributors liked this because they said that too often disabled people are
not heard but ‘The Undateables’ couldn’t be ignored. In fact, in the series titles the ‘Un’ prefix of
Undateables is dislodged by ‘cupid’s arrow’, making the contributors dateable. The campaign,
across all three series, was at heart human interest and case-study led. We provided media training for contributors who appeared on TV sofas – Good Morning Britain, This Morning, Lorraine and in articles in the Guardian and The Sun.
Independent
Telegraph
Guardian
The Sun
All in the Best Possible Taste with Grayson Perry Seneca Productions, Channel 4, June 2012 In this three-part series for Channel 4, Grayson Perry, one of Britain's leading artists, and winner
of the Turner Prize, explored the details of modern life, and the truths those details tell us about
ourselves. The work that resulted was Perry’s notorious series of six imposing tapestries called
‘The Vanity of Small Differences’ – his personal but panoramic take on the taste of 21st century Britain.
tpr media’s campaign around the series exceeded press targets, continuing to build in
momentum as the series developed. Highlights include features in Sunday Times magazine,
Radio Times and a picture-led Eyewitness profile by Charlotte Williamson in the Guardian.
Grayson Perry appeared on Radio 4’s Start The Week, the series was reviewed on Saturday Review with Tom Sutcliffe and Perry authored pieces for i, The Times, The Sun and Royal
Academy magazine. It also received overwhelmingly positive reviews in nationals and regionals.
The Sunday Times
The Sun Guardian
Don’t Stop The Music Fresh One Productions, Channel 4, July to December 2014 tpr media was commissioned to design and implement a visible, dynamic six-month media
campaign around the different elements of Don’t Stop The Music, the passionate campaign of
internationally renowned pianist James Rhodes highlighting the decline of musical education in
primary schools.
The aim of the campaign – which complemented a two-part Channel 4 TV series on James’s
battle to improve music education in the UK – was to encourage the public to donate unused
instrument to charity shops in a nationwide ‘instrument amnesty’. The instruments were then given a new lease of life before being distributed to selected primary schools in need.
Our brief was to support the drive for school registration and instrument donations as well as the
wider political campaign engendered by the project, supported by celebrity ambassadors including Paul McCartney, Tinie Tempah, Tom Jones and Jessie J and Labrinth.
The campaign required a strong, national profile coupled with regional grassroots coverage in
print, online and broadcast. We invested considerable resources liaising with 20 key primary
schools, creating resource packs, which included a template release and clear instructions on
how to place stories. Interest was enormous and helped influence mainstream audiences, galvinising political opinion and debate. Coverage encompassed broadcast, nationals and
regionals, as well as specialist education and music press.
Sunday Telegraph Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Time Out
Justice for Health From March 2015 Justice for Health is led by an independent group of five NHS doctors, speaking out on behalf of
the public and brought together by their passion for a safer and better NHS. Dr Ben White, Dr
Marie-Estella McVeigh, Dr Amar Mashru, Dr Fran Silman and Dr Nadia Masood all believe that
the imposition of an unsafe contract for junior doctors must be stopped as it will endanger
patient safety and affect the future of the NHS.
Earlier this year, tpr media were appointed by Justice for Heath, to lead an ongoing press
campaign to support a legal challenge against the new junior doctors’ contracts. This judicial
review process formed part of the ongoing challenge by junior doctors nationwide, including
April’s unprecedented all-out strike in emergency departments.
tpr’s far reaching campaign began with the resignation of Dr Ben White live on Good Morning
Britain on Monday 25 April, the day before the first-ever all-out strike by doctors. Ben resigned in
protest over the new junior doctor contacts and the impact they would have on patient care and the future of the NHS. His resignation became the key human interest story of the week. He
appeared again twice on Good Morning Britain. Other broadcast interviews included ITN, BBC London Lunchtime News, London Live, ITV National News, the Jeremy Vine Show and LBC.
Ben’s resignation was covered by most national titles as part of the wider junior doctor strike
coverage, as well as the Standard and several online outlets including The Huffington Post,
Buzzfeed and Vice. Open letters by the Justice for Health team ran in The Telegraph, The Mirror
and the Standard. tpr media’s longer term aim is to help the Justice for Health team identify key stories that tie into wider issues about the NHS.
Good Morning Britain
Victoria Derbyshire
BBC News The Mirror
Artem From 2012 Award-winning special effects company Artem is a UK-based special effects company at the forefront of physical builds and SFX over the
last three decades. Today, with workshops in West London and in Glasgow, Artem continues to
serve as a one-stop-shop for television, film and advertising alongside live events, exhibitions and retail display industries. The creative effects and innovative solutions team can provide props,
atmospherics, prosthetics, models and miniatures, pyrotechnics, mechanical rigs, animatronics,
special costume and huge media builds.
tpr media has been working with Artem since 2012 when the company was contracted to provide a vast range of effects for the London Olympics opening and closing ceremonies, from giant puppet to a 50m inflatable octopus. Since then, we have worked to highlight the range of Artem’s work in trade media, alongside national, online, TV and radio.
Coverage highlights have included a feature in the Mail on Sunday’s Event magazine, a video
news story on the BBC News Entertainment & Arts site (‘How to blow up a car and other film
special effects’), profile pieces in London-based publications, including the Evening Standard,
Time Out and Stylist, and a cover story for 3D Digital.
Event Magazine
Develop 3D
Broadcast Tech CNN
The Evening Standard
Website: www.tpr-media.com Twitter: @tpr_media_PR Issuu: www.issuu.com/tpr-media Email address: sophie@tpr-media.com Telephone: +44 (0)20 8347 7020 tpr media consultants, 3 Muswell Hill Road, London N6 5FJ