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David Barrie


David Barrie (born 5 April 1964) is a British creative and social entrepreneur, producer and director of media and urban development projects and programmes.

Barrie has created and led ventures that have been credited with raising £0.5bn+ ($600m) of new investment in towns, cities, entrepreneurs and communities through public-private partnerships. These ventures include projects in the U.K., Russia, Eastern Europe and Canada and progressive new enterprises such as The People's Supermarket and Wild Blue Cohort, London. They have been featured in the pages of The New York Times, China Daily, The Sunday Times and Monocle (lifestyle magazine) and won several prominent awards, including the 2016 Maserati 100, Future Minds European Award for Innovation (2011), Grand Prix RIBA Public Space (2009).

Barrie's background is in broadcast television. From 1986, Barrie produced and directed documentary television for BBC Television, Channel 4, National Geographic Channel and CNN, including documentary films on the historical story behind The King's Speech [1], the life of Wallis Simpson, art of J.M.W. Turner, death of rock star Michael Hutchence [2], interviews with Jean-Luc Godard, Alexander McQueen and Georg Baselitz and productions such as The Late Show. Recent projects include a series of documentaries on the life of Napoleon Bonaparte by Andrew Roberts (historian) and art of Winston Churchill by Andrew Marr. In 2000, while making a TV series for CNN, Barrie and African journalist Sorious Samura were wrongfully arrested and imprisoned in Liberia by Charles Taylor (Liberian politician). [3]


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