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Amid pressure to strengthen its core, the BBC decided to cut its losses and move on. NC2 made clear that the future of the brand lay in the digital sphere and said the transition was under way. "I imagine BBC will focus on what they do best, rather than try to be a multipurpose corporation," said Ellis Cashmore, a professor of media culture and sport at Staffordshire University. "Many might just read about and think
'Tut tut, the Beeb is wasting more of the license payers' money.' But I think there is another narrative here, so to speak. BBC Worldwide is actually a surefooted, profitable organization. This is just an Icarus-type folly: it got burned, but not too damagingly." Based in Nashville, Tennessee, NC2's primary shareholder is Brad Kelley, an American who made his fortune in tobacco and is listed on the Forbes 400 list of the world's richest people. Now a rancher, he is among the top landowners in the U.S. and is a board member of Churchill Downs, the home of the Kentucky Derby. The BBC bought 75 percent of Lonely Planet in 2007 for 88.1 million pounds and paid an additional 42.2 million pounds for the rest four years later.
[Associated
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