Be the Bigger Picture: OKRE Summit 2025

At the 2025 OKRE Summit, we showcased entertainment underpinned by authenticity: where an audience doesn’t just see what's on screen, they really feel part of the bigger picture.

Our host Elle Osili Wood guided us through a day of keynotes, panels and provocations to get under the skin of how embedding collaboration makes for more impactful content.

Let Me Entertain You: The Assembly

The Independent called it “the most groundbreaking show of the year, it’s a hot tip to be recognised at the next BAFTA Awards and its already been recommissioned for 2026. ‘The Assembly’ is the show that puts neurodivergent and learning-disabled people in the role of celebrity interviewers resulting in a joyful, mischievous and fresh format.

Panellists Stu Richards and Michelle Singer (Co-founders, Rockerdale Sudios), Sara Missaghian-Schirazi (Producer) and Sam Tatlow MBE (Head of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion at ITV) served up a deep dive into how the show was conceived and delivered, and how it has made fundamental changes to how they work. Chaired by Chaired by Dhruti Shah, Creative Lead, Have You Thought About.

Very often when you're talking about disability programming in whatever format, whatever broadcaster, and any genre, it's seen as a risk. It shouldn't be. If it's a good programme, and it does something different, and it lands for the audience, it shouldn't be see as a risk. And shows like The Assembly are absolutely proving that it isn't.

Sam Tatlow

Head of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, ITV

In Conversation with Paris Lees, Author, Screen-writer and Journalist

Paris Lees reflects on adapting her memoir ‘What It Feels Like for a Girl’ for television, and her observations and analysis of the role of influence, authenticity and honesty in storytelling.  

BBC Three’s 2025 adaption of Paris Lees’ memoir, ‘What it Feels Like For a Girl’, resulted in an unflinching drama series which has already picked up a host of awards. In a funny, fearless and frank conversation with her friend, writer and campaigner Ugla Stefanía Kristjönudóttir Jónsdóttir, Paris gave us an insight into what it feels like to see your life be turned into on screen entertainment, and how she navigated the tensions when truth collided with drama.

I was involved as much as I could be, but there were so many different moving parts to it. And I'm going to be honest with you, it was really, really difficult to let go of that, because I am a bit of a control freak and I'm a bit of a perfectionist, as I think a lot of creative people are.

Paris Lees

Author, Screen-writer and Journalist

Meeting Audiences Where They Are

Digital storytellers are setting the pace, telling stories on their own terms and reaching communities traditional media often overlooks. This panel talked about the differences between gatekeeper led entertainment landscapes and creator led landscapes, explored the role creator led content plays in driving social impact, and touched upon what other sectors can learn from how creators connect with their audiences.

Panellists Yaw Basoah, Founder, Dark Pictures (Beth), Diane Glynn, Head of Social, Channel4, Adjani Salmon, writer, director, actor (Dreaming Whilst Black) and Zeb Kidd, strategy director at Arcade Creative, also considered whether profit and purpose can ever truly align. Chaired by Elle Osili Wood, broadcaster.

I work in legacy media, right? I make TV, and I guess my personal responsibility is, unfortunately, course correcting decades. Which show had the most Black actors for a very long time? Crime Watch. Yeah. So my sense of responsibility is just almost telling the truth, which is normal life. That's literally Dreaming Whilst Black’s USP - let me just show you normal Black life.

Adjani Salmon

Writer, Director, Actor

Finding the Funny

You can approach a comedy project with the best of intentions, but if the audience aren’t laughing, it’s all for nothing. In this panel, writer, actor & producer Kyla Harris (We Might Regret This), comedian, actress, and writer Ashley Storrie (Dinosaur) and Matt Nida, Programme Manager, Laughing Matters took a deep dive into thinking about the challenges and opportunities for messaging through comedy. They considered some of  the diverse ways in which British sitcoms have subtly but influentially explored challenging or once-taboo subjects, tackled the pros and cons of tokenisation, and suggested some strategies to make something funny and impactful. Chaired by Kate Martin, Head of Lived Experience, Wellcome Trust.

When we talk about, like, Greta Gerwig, it's like, she's the women's director. She makes films for women. But nobody ever says about Martin Scorsese, he's the man's director, he makes films for men. He just makes films about the human experience and being a gangster and that. So I wish I could just live in a world where I was just allowed to be a bit of a dick and write funny jokes. I wish I could just be funny, and that was it. But as it is, I can't, so I'm gonna use whatever I can, to get through the door.

Ashley Storrie

Comedian, Actress, and Writer

20 Years of Youtube

In a crowded media landscape, knowing your audience is crucial, and nowhere is this more apparent than on YouTube, where creators have a direct line to their audience. Roya Zeitoune, Head of Culture and Trends, EMEA, YouTube, illustrated how this dialogue is crucial to the platform’s influence by charting the story of Dua Lipa’s evolution into the cultural polymath she is today.

“Good for her embracing internet culture, and it really, really worked... Because the community is so strong on YouTube and the fandom is so great, you see these comment sections really come to life.”

Roya Zeitoune on Dupa Lipa

Head of YouTube Culture & Trends, EMEA

The Power of Play: Understanding the Impact of Your Work in Entertainment

Intentionally or not, creators across the entertainment industry shape worldviews, values, and messages through their work.

Panellists Charly Conquest, Responsible Productions Lead, Sky Entertainment, Danny Gray, Chief Creative Officer, ustwo games, Dr Howard Fine, Consultant Clinical Psychologist for Entertainment and Prof. Panayiota Tsatsou, Sir Lenny Henry Centre for Media Diversity, explored what motivates purpose and how storytelling delivered with a lightness of touch can deliver more positive impact. Chaired by Maxine Thomas-Asante, POP Fund Lead at Comic Relief.

The duty to communities can sometimes be at odds with the desire to get as large an audience as possible. Sometimes drama and fear tactics and extremeness draws audiences. And so how do we find balance in these conversations?

Professor Panayiota Tsatsou

Professor in Media Diversity, Sir Lenny Henry Centre for Media Diversity 

Men on Screen: Changing Depictions of Masculinity

Are the narratives about masculinity that we see on our screens keeping step with healthy expectations for men and boys? This year, Netflix’s hit ‘Adolescence’ turned the spotlight on how teenagers might become vulnerable to harmful messaging, but what is the wider story? In his previous role as EastEnders’ Executive Producer, Chris Clenshaw and his team worked with experts on the storyline for Phil Mitchell’s depression and associated psychotic symptoms. Chris explained why this was an authentic character development for the ‘hardman” of Albert Square.
Wendy Robinson, Director of Services, CALM, Susie McDonald MBE, CEO, Tender and Sarah Sternberg, Global Director, Reimagining Masculinities, Movember shared the importance of narrative change to support their own organisational missions. Chaired by K Biswas, Editor of Representology: The Journal of Media & Diversity and Chair of Resonance FM, Chair of HEARD

We want to change something in society that we identify as a real issue. It's really important to do that with shifting policy. But what we know to be true is that you need allies. You need people to feel empowered to think differently.

Wendy Robinson

Director of Services, CALM

Shifts in Storytelling: Dystopian Narratives Vs Optimistic Storytelling

A delve into the psychological forces behind the stories we tell about the future and what that tells us about ourselves. Does dystopian storytelling foretell what’s to come and what does it take for hope driven narratives to thrive? In this session we looked at different approaches to inspiring creativity, curiosity and compassion with Joy Gharoro-Akpojotor, Founder and Producer, Joi Productions, Pinny Grylls, Filmmaker (Grand Theft Hamlet), Dr Patrick Kennedy-Williams, Co-director, Psychology Oxford, Co-director, Climate Psychologists/Mind & Plane, and Debbie Ramsay, Editor, 5 News. Chaired by Marya Bangee, Senior Advisor Pop Culture Collaborative.

There's this idea that hope breeds complacency, and so kind of hopeful stories or a utopian imagined future somehow doesn't allow us to connect in a serious way with the message of the day. And I think that's misguided.

Dr Patrick Kennedy-Williams

Clinical Psychologist and Co-director, Climate Psychologists
One of the compliments we get from viewers [of Grand Theft Hamlet] is that they don't feel that we're trying to tell them what to think. And I think a lot of media does actually underestimate the intelligence of the audience, and you should never do that.

Pinny Grylls

Filmmaker, Director

OKRE Focus: Sunny Dancer

A peek into the making of Sunny Dancer, a forthcoming OKRE-supported feature film set in a summer camp for teenagers with cancer.  Writer/ Director George Jaques and co-producer Caitlin Spiller shared the fascinating story of how they made the film in collaboration with Teenage Cancer Trust and health experts. With George Jaques, Filmmaker, writer, director, Caitlin Spiller, Editor & Co-Producer and Dr Rachael Hough, Consultant Haematologist, University College London Hospital’s NHS Foundation Trust. Chaired by Jenna Al- Ansari, Programmes and Engagement Manager, OKRE.

 

I think the whole process was fascinating , a bit scary to start with when it's something so outside your comfort zone, but I think it comes back to [...] trust. When you see authenticity and a desire to tell a proper story, I think it puts your mind at rest and I enjoyed the process.

Dr Rachael Hough

Consultant, University College London Hospital's NHS Foundation Trust

Keynote: What Are Your Access Requirements?

Embedding access should be part of the foundation of the process, and certainly not an afterthought. Multidisciplinary Artist & Access Coordinator Jess Mabel Jones is part of the production team on a host of mighty entertainment shows including Traitors, Race Across the World and Gogglebox.  “When every single person has an access requirement, what do we mean when we ask, what are your access requirements? What we’re asking in this context is, what do you need to do your best job?”

“In my experience, productions are terrified of working with deaf, disabled, neurodivergent and autistic people, because they think we're coming to get you. But people feel the same about spiders and ghosts. The truth is, we've all been misrepresented.”

Jess Mabel Jones

Multi-Disciplinary Artist and Access Coordinator

OKRE FOCUS: Let it Rot

An inside look at OKRE-funded project ‘Let it Rot’, a horror film about teen radicalisation set in rural Devon. Filmmakers Misha Vertkin and Elena Ruscombe-King shared how the research and workshops they ran deepened their understanding of the systemic factors of radicalisation and the subsequent fundamental shifts they made to ensure their work was rooted and authentic. Chaired by Jenna Al- Ansari, Programmes and Engagement Manager, OKRE.

If you want to kind of speak to a broader population, you have to kind of meet them where they are. And you also have to make it entertaining. My dad is working class, and he basically only watches things with car chases and explosions. So every time I'm thinking about what I'm writing, I'm like, would he like it, or would he realise he's being lectured to?

Misha Vertkin

Filmmaker, Director

What Would it Take to Embed Impact Production in Entertainment?

Co-produced by OKRE and AKO Storytelling Institute with support from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation 

Impact campaigns offer a mechanism for entertainment with a social message to achieve real-world change. Impact producers working alongside production teams can get that content seen by the right people. Using it strategically can accomplish a wide range of goals, from raising awareness to targeted education and changing laws. This session explored the opportunities and barriers to embedding this practice across the industry, including the practicalities of running a campaign, financing it, and the role of commissioners and charities. 

With panellists Dr Louise Anderson (Senior Research and Evaluation Manager, BAFTA), Timothy Hancock (Commissioning Editor, Channel 4), Husna Mortuza (Associate Director of Public Engagement, Joseph Rowntree Foundation), Dr Sarah Rappaport (Campaign Manager, Jamie Oliver Group) and impact producer Lucy Wilson. Chaired by Francesca Panetta, Director, AKO Storytelling Institute. 

I believe that depth, realness, and actually putting campaigns at the heart of TV makes them better. If you have a purpose to making a tv show, it is a better television show.

Timothy Hancock

Commissioning Editor, Channel 4

Commissioning for Impact: Balancing Audiences, Metrics and Meaning

What exactly does the term “impact” mean for entertainment commissioners? And how might they work with others to prioritise social impact without compromising audience reach? Panellists Caroline O’Neill (Assistant Commissioner, BBC) and David Smyth (Commissioner, Entertainment, ITV) explored what it means to commission with both purpose and performance in mind, with a focus on shows made for daytime and peaktime audiences. Chaired by Caroline Meaby, Head of Programmes & Engagement, OKRE. 

If you're from an organisation or a charity that wants to explore that world [of TV and commissioning], try and get a production company that you think will be the best partner, that already makes the kind of stuff that you like... and then you can see where that conversation goes.

David Smyth

Entertainment Commissioner, ITV