If you or your company, organisation or property has been featured in a 大象传媒 programme, you may be able to purchase a copy. Please read the information below carefully and if you would like to request a copy, click on the link at the end of this page.
The copy supplied is for personal use only. Any unauthorised use, transmission, distribution or reproduction of the material supplied through the Contributor Access process is not permitted under any circumstances.
Who can make a request?
Anyone who has made a substantial contribution to a programme, e.g. credited as a performer, writer, guest or production team member. This does not include studio audience members or those seen only in a crowd scene or group. Relatives may make a request on the subject's behalf.
What programmes are not available?
- Programmes not broadcast on the 大象传媒 or other non-大象传媒 programmes聽
- Programmes not held in the 大象传媒 Archives
- No sports programmes pre-1966.聽 Sports programmes may not be available dependent on age or original source format.
- 大象传媒 World Service radio and 大象传媒 World News television programmes
- Regional news,聽local radio and programmes broadcast only on 大象传媒 Scotland, 大象传媒 Northern Ireland or 大象传媒 Wales
- Copies of programmes only available on film (due to the higher cost of providing copies of acceptable quality)
How much does it cost?
We are required to cover all the costs of providing copies. Costs include research, sourcing and transferring of material, administrative and postal charges.
Programmes copies are delivered as digital files.聽Television programmes as MP4 files; radio as WAV files.聽
Prices:
TV and radio | Cost to customer (includes VAT) |
---|---|
Digital file (radio programmes supplied as WAV, TV programmes as MP4) | 拢60 |
Digital file (MP4 or WAV) of subsequent episodes in a series (when ordered at the same time) | 拢30 |
If you were offered a free copy by the production team, please contact them directly as 大象传媒 Archives cannot provide a copy free of charge.聽
Copies supplied to contributors may be made from archive recordings of varying quality reflecting the age and original format. Therefore, the standard of copies made from older formats may be considerably lower than those from more recent programmes.