David Tiley

David Tiley was the Editor of Screenhub from 2005 until he became Content Lead for Film in 2021 with a special interest in policy. He is a writer in screen media with a long career in educational programs, documentary, and government funding, with a side order in script editing. He values curiosity, humour and objectivity in support of Australian visions and the art of storytelling.

David Tiley's Latest Articles

Features

Box Office 9 May 2016

A Month of Sundays sags off a fragile base, but has capacity to linger in the system for some time.

Features

Selling movies with your data trail

The true experts in information gathering about audiences live in the screen sector. Like it or love it, the data…

Features

Why some cinemas thrive as cultural hubs

Against the odds, many local cinemas continue to prosper. The key is community, and this is how they make it…

Features

Budget 2016 offers no mercy to public screen sector

The damage done by cuts in the last federal budget have not been softened, so the government offers no hope…

Features

Directors' Guild considers future on eve of annual knees-up

Beyond politics and culture, what is the main problem for the sector? For the ADG's Kingston Anderson, its jobs. The…

Features

Box Office 2 May 2016 - A Month of Sundays does nicely

Who loves Captain America the most? Yes, its us...

Features

Productivity Commission drops copyright bomb

The Productivity Commission has released a draft report which hacks into existing intellectual property (IP) protection for creatives.

Features

St Kilda Film Fest - true life and young faces in the spotlight

Melbourne legend Paul Harris talks new trends in shorts, and the pop-up cinema colonising the town hall.

Features

Foxtel - extra edge to command structure

Here is an announcement which will make the FTA execs ruminate over their breakfast ratings figures - Mark Buckman goes…

Features

Box Office 25 April 2016 - the jungle law of exhibition

Tigers, witches, a parallel world and local productions marching steadily but modestly forwards.

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