Hanson uses media votes as clout for ABC review

Original article by Rosie Lewis
The Australian – Page: 4 : 4-Aug-17

The Federal Government’s cross-media ownership bill will be on the Senate’s agenda when Parliament resumes in the week beginning 7 August. One Nation continues to have concerns about the impact on media diversity of abolishing the "two-out-of-three" rule, although the minor party has signalled that it may be open to supporting the media reforms if the Government agrees to a review of the ABC and SBS. The proposed review would include the public broadcasters’ costs and the number of TV channels they operate.

CORPORATES
ONE NATION PARTY, AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, SPECIAL BROADCASTING SERVICE (SBS), NICK XENOPHON TEAM, AUSTRALIAN GREENS, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY, AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF COMMUNICATIONS AND THE ARTS

Unjust ABC ‘stealing our markets’

Original article by Darren Davidson
The Australian – Page: 2 : 1-Aug-17

Australian Associated Press CEO Bruce Davidson is the latest media industry executive to criticise the ABC’s push to gain content deals in the corporate sector. The public broadcaster recently secured a deal to replace AAP as the provider of syndicated news feeds to outdoor advertising group oOh!media. Davidson says AAP may have to retrench staff if it continues to lose contracts to the ABC. Meanwhile, One Nation has called for the ABC to increase the amount of content it produces that is aimed at regional and rural audiences.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, AUSTRALIAN ASSOCIATED PRESS PTY LTD, OOH!MEDIA LIMITED – ASX OML, ONE NATION PARTY, FAIRFAX MEDIA LIMITED – ASX FXJ, NEWS CORP AUSTRALIA PTY LTD, NEWS CORPORATION – ASX NWS, SEVEN WEST MEDIA LIMITED – ASX SWM, SPECIAL BROADCASTING SERVICE (SBS), SEVEN NETWORK LIMITED, NINE NETWORK AUSTRALIA LIMITED, FOXTEL MANAGEMENT PTY LTD, AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF COMMUNICATIONS AND THE ARTS

Calls to rein in ABC and SBS

Original article by Darren Davidson
The Australian – Page: 24 & 26 : 31-Jul-17

Media industry executives have expressed concern that the ABC and SBS are increasingly competing directly with commercial rivals for content and viewers, and urged the Federal Government to step in to ensure that the public broadcasters adhere to their charters. Criticisms of the ABC and SBS include the fact that they are not subject to the same media regulations as their commercial rivals and that SBS is using taxpayers’ funds to outbid commercial networks for US content.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, SPECIAL BROADCASTING SERVICE (SBS), NEWS CORP AUSTRALIA PTY LTD, NEWS CORPORATION – ASX NWS, FAIRFAX MEDIA LIMITED – ASX FXJ, SEVEN WEST MEDIA LIMITED – ASX SWM, NINE ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY HOLDINGS LIMITED – ASX NEC, TEN NETWORK HOLDINGS LIMITED – ASX TEN, AUSTRALIAN ASSOCIATED PRESS PTY LTD, STAN ENTERTAINMENT PTY LTD, FOXTEL MANAGEMENT PTY LTD, TELSTRA CORPORATION LIMITED – ASX TLS, AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF COMMUNICATIONS AND THE ARTS, MELBOURNE PRESS CLUB

SBS driving up prices, says Nine

Original article by Darren Davidson
The Australian – Page: 5 : 21-Jul-17

Nine Entertainment Company CEO Hugh Marks has told a parliamentary inquiry into Australia’s film and TV industry that the cost of buying overseas TV programs has risen due to competition from public broadcasters. He said SBS in particular is outbidding commercial networks for international content, and he has questioned the relevance of some of these programs to SBS’s charter. Meanwhile, the Ten Network has urged the Federal Government to abolish content quotas for children’s TV programs.

CORPORATES
NINE ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY HOLDINGS LIMITED – ASX NEC, NINE NETWORK AUSTRALIA LIMITED, SPECIAL BROADCASTING SERVICE (SBS), TEN NETWORK HOLDINGS LIMITED – ASX TEN, AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, SCRIPPS NETWORKS INCORPORATED, GOOGLE INCORPORATED, FACEBOOK INCORPORATED, NETFLIX INCORPORATED, APPLE INCORPORATED, AMAZON.COM INCORPORATED

Local content slides at ABC

Original article by Stephen Brook
The Australian – Page: 1 & 2 : 11-Jul-17

New figures show that the ABC produced 52 hours of drama in 2015-16, compared with 69 in 2012-13, while its output of factual programs fell from 547 hour to just 87. The ABC’s content budget fell by nine per cent over the four-year period. The ABC’s former head of TV, Kim Dalton, has claimed in the past that local content has become a lower priority for the public broadcaster since he stepped down in 2013. The ABC argues that it broadcasts more Australian-made content than its commercial rivals, and it should not be subject to local content quotas.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, SCREEN PRODUCERS AUSTRALIA, AUSTRALIAN FILM COMMISSION, AUSTRALIAN GREENS, NETFLIX INCORPORATED, AMAZON.COM INCORPORATED

ABC, SBS, Guardian and Fairfax racist: Newman

Original article by Darren Davidson, Stephen Fitzpatrick, Rosie Lewis
The Australian – Page: 5 : 23-Nov-16

The former MD of the ABC, Maurice Newman, has accused many left-leaning media outlets of racism, including the public broadcaster. Newman also claims that SBS, Fairfax Media, The Guardian and Crikey are also racist, due to their coverage of Aboriginal issues. His comments follow claims by Aboriginal leader Noel Pearson that the ABC is racist, a view that is supported by the head of the Prime Minister’s ­Indigenous Advisory Council, Warren Mundine.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, SPECIAL BROADCASTING SERVICE (SBS), FAIRFAX MEDIA LIMITED – ASX FXJ, THE GUARDIAN AUSTRALIA, CRIKEY.COM.AU, AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER AND CABINET, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY, AUSTRALIAN GREENS, AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF COMMUNICATIONS AND THE ARTS

Guthrie defends Netflix, ABC deal

Original article by Max Mason
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 29 : 17-Nov-16

ABC MD Michelle Guthrie has defended the public broadcaster’s deal to produce a second series of drama "Glitch" in partnership with Netflix. She has told the Screen Forever conference that ABC viewers now expect drama shows to have the same production values as those produced by subscription video-on-demand services, and notes that producing such content is becoming increasingly expensive. The co-production deal will give Netflix global streaming rights to "Glitch".

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, NETFLIX INCORPORATED, MATCHBOX PICTURES PTY LTD, FILM VICTORIA, AMC NETWORKS, SUNDANCE TV

ABC Netflix deal angers rivals

Original article by Jake Mitchell
The Australian – Page: 23 & 25 : 7-Nov-16

An ABC spokesman has defended the public broadcaster’s decision to produce a second series of drama "Glitch" in partnership with Netflix. The US-based subscription video-on-demand provider is believed to be contributing about 15 per cent of the production costs. Netflix will stream the series outside of the Australian market at the same time as it is broadcast by the ABC. The deal has been questioned by Seven West Media CEO Tim Worner and Nine Entertainment Company CEO Hugh Marks.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, NETFLIX INCORPORATED, SEVEN WEST MEDIA LIMITED – ASX SWM, NINE ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY HOLDINGS LIMITED – ASX NEC, FOXTEL MANAGEMENT PTY LTD, NICK XENOPHON TEAM, FILM VICTORIA, NBC UNIVERSAL INCORPORATED

ABC plan to ramp up iView output

Original article by Darren Davidson
The Australian – Page: 5 : 2-Nov-16

The ABC’s 2017 TV program line-up will include a number of new drama shows and documentaries, while it has confirmed new seasons of 16 current shows. The public broadcaster will also produce some 200 hours of original content for its iView video-on-demand service. ABC MD Michelle Guthrie recently stressed the need for the broadcaster to adapt in response to changes in the way viewers consume media.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION

Public service union wins ABC staff pay rise

Original article by Ewin Hannan
The Australian – Page: 5 : 28-Oct-16

The Community & Public Sector Union’s national secretary, Nadine Flood, has welcomed a new enterprise agreement for ABC employees. She notes that while not all of the union’s demands have been met, the new pay deal is much better than the initial offer from the public broadcaster’s management. The ABC put the pay deal directly to staff after negotiations with the union broke down. Amongst other things, ABC staff will receive an annual two per cent pay rise over three years, domestic violence leave and a two-week increase in paid parental leave.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC SECTOR UNION