Red Alert

Author Archive

Future of television#4

Posted by Brendon Burns on August 27th, 2010

Cabinet is currently wrestling with what to do with TVNZ’s non-commercial channesl 6+7 once funding runs out next year. Leaving it up to TVNZ to sort out may be gaining the upper hand.  In part, they may be looking to technology to deliver an answer. Some Ministers apparently believe that given you can find an increasing amount of material that might be considered ‘quality’ or ‘public service’ content on the Internet or off Sky, why create a new edifice? The thinking goes that the market will solve this quite soon.

This is the derivatives approach to broadcasting; that amid a sea of junk bond programmes there will be some with real value. All you’ve got to do is find them and put them into a portfolio/folder/channel.

Here some will start crying that we fund local production via NZ on Air and this provides a platform for programmes which feed our sense of identity, and constitutes “public service broadcasting.”

Local production (however incentivised by NZoA or imposed by regulation) is not the same thing as public broadcasting.  For one thing, NZoA has no capacity to direct where programmes go; if they ain’t ‘commercial’ they are likely to be ghettoised, no matter what their broader importance or value. For many years, Governments have behaved as though it is–a convenient approach because it keeps the noisy creatives happy, while reducing the debate to commercial vs non-commercial objectives, and the circular and wholly subjective discussion of what constitutes “quality.”

The consequence is that there has been no history in N.Z. of what public broadcasting could be as a unified “system” within the total broadcasting landscape, and what its objectives in the digital era ought to be. It is time we had that debate.

Let’s accept the current model of state-owned television is skewed to the commercial realities. For twenty years, TVNZ has done what successive governments told it to do; make money. Sure, we as Labour stitched on the ‘dual mandate.’ We provided funding via the TVNZ Charter, admittedly modest, to try and provide something more. TVNZ was too attuned to its over-riding requirement to make money. It squandered some of the money on programming clearly outside the non-commercial ambit of the Charter and unwound some of the case for it.

Labour believes in public service broadcasting; the Charter was an attempt at achieving that.   We have it with Radio New Zealand. We  believe New Zealanders deserve some of that via television. Our sense of ourselves and the need for that to be reflected back to us is too important to entrust to the vagaries of the market, especially one that is changing fast.

We need a television platform that can endure into the future and survive the technological shift, while providing the New Zealand content that defines and redefines who we are as communities and a nation. The options could include Channel One, Channel 7 or even Parliament TV(when it’s not showing the House, which is the majority of times. ) Funding could come from a mix of revenue – from Channel 2 as the recession recedes, from some advertising or sponsorship, from a greater portion of NZ on Air funding, from the ‘digital dividend.’

Maori Television now provides ‘public service broadcasting’ for an audience that while actually attracting more Pakeha than Maori, is programmed around Maori interests. It costs around $35m a year for an essentially non-commercial service, about the same as Radio NZ. Maori Television, panned by the Nats and others when it started, is now accepted by most as providing innovative, modestly-costed flaxroots,  proud to be Kiwi television albeit to a modest audience. If we are talking about providing a viable, affordable platform into the future for all New Zealanders, that might be a good benchmark figure and comparative model to get us started on a national debate.


Future of television#3

Posted by Brendon Burns on August 26th, 2010

A television executive recently achieved techno-nirvana. He successfully piped Internet video signals into his television receiver. “Brilliant,” said his wife.”Now you can watch television on television.”

This is the world to which we are hurtling. Latest Nielsen data from the States shows while traditional television audiences are holding up, ‘time-shifted’ programme watchers rose nearly 15 % in the past year and video via Internet by TV rose nearly 6 percent. And the really big growth is those watching video on their mobiles – up by more than half year on year, though mostly still clips not full programmes but IPad will change that.

Television companies in New Zealand understand this shift. TVNZ is now a digital media company; Jason Paris who drove that strategy now runs TV3. Sky’s stellar $103m profit of last week is framed as much around add-ons like MYSKY as increasing subscriptions.

All broadcasters face the challenge of Over the Top (OTT) content – that provided by non-broadcasters, with little or no overheads to meet. Within a few short years, free-to-air television will earn as much of their revenue from content shown on screens other than televisions.

So the lines between broadcasting and telecommunications are blurring fast.

Yet the rules are very different. Ask Paul Reynolds. The telecommunications market can be subject to Ministerial intervention faster than you can flick a fly rod. It makes little difference which Government is in power; telecommunications is deemed too important to leave to the vagaries of an unregulated market.

Contrast that with broadcasting which is now becoming paper-thin in separation from telecommunications.

Distribution systems and platforms have technically converged in their use for “broadcasting” (content) and “telephony” (also content). These distribution systems are regulated to ensure competition when used for telco purposes, but NOT when used for broadcasting purposes. Hello?

The pricing and terms of trade for providing “telephony” content services are regulated to ensure competition, but not for broadcasting content even when both are paid for by the user. The logic and equity of that is….what?

(more…)


Water pressure

Posted by Brendon Burns on August 24th, 2010

The Nats polling must be disastrous among Canterbury voters on its handling of water issues for today’s backflip to take place.

Why otherwise would they send 120,000 homes – at taxpayers’ expense – a four page glossy brochure with John Key seeking their views, including asking whether  new elections are wanted immediately for Environment Canterbury councillors, axed in 30 hours of urgency in March.

Today Key refused to answer my question about how much the brochures cost taxpayers: “Seeing it is paid out of the leader’s budget, I have no ministerial responsibility for that.” Cop out.  Await the OIAs.

Jim Anderton suggested consultation was best before the Government fired the elected councillors, rather than asking them 5 months later. ” I think that Cantabrians support the moves by the Government, and that is why over 55 percent of people in a recent poll gave that view,” said Key.

Sorry, if 55 % support the move, why revisit it?   Three inter-connected issues may have driven the Govt PR initiative (at our expense!) ; a wish to try and defuse water as a local body election issue (for non-endorsed candidates);  Key might be want to move away from Hide, a key supporter of the ECAN legislation as ACT implodes; and sending a peace-making signal may help ensure the crucial national Land and Water Forum can actually report this month amid ongoing signals of distrust from environmental reps who were deeply aggrieved at the ECAN legislation handing Water Conservation Order powers to the Govt-appointed commissioners…

One certainty; a lot of water has flown under the bridge since the pre-Easter legislation – and it’s made this the number one political issue in Canterbury.


The final Act

Posted by Brendon Burns on August 19th, 2010

The Trans-Tasman political letter excels itself this week with some great lines in surveying the ACT train wreck.

” ACT was already in trouble before the events of this week. It doesn’t have a role any more and its continued existence in Parliament is based on National putting up a Claytons candidate in Epsom against Rodney Hide.

The most eloquent and well thought-out work which exemplifies the Act Party’s priorities and policies – or at least, what should be the ACT Party’s priorities and policies – was the 2025 Task Force Report released last year. And the Govt made it pretty clear it will implement the report’s proposals around the same time Osama Bin Laden holds an interdenominational church service in Jerusalem.

It leaves the ACT Party largely irrelevant but – as so often happens – being irrelevant intensifies the internal squabbles. The phrase “two bald men fighting over a comb” springs to mind.”

Filed under: act party

Future of television#2

Posted by Brendon Burns on August 18th, 2010

When you blog or comment about the need for us as a nation to have public service television – admittedly an awful phrase – you sometimes get branded elitist, high-brow, wasteful of taxpayer dollars to provide content for a minority.

So what about Desperate Housewives? Rupert Murdoch’s British arm, BSkyB has just bought the UK rights to Home Box Office. That means if you want to watch Desperate Housewives – and a string other such others – you have to pay Rupert for the privilege.

How long before that’s your only option here? Sky is now in close to 55% of NZ homes. It is already pursuing such popular programmes to build on its movies and sport base. While free-to-air television has been knocked for six in the last two years, Sky is regarded as ‘recession proof.’ People stay at home and watch Sky. On Friday Sky will report its latest after-tax profit. Projections are $100m this year, up $9m on last year and growing to $141m in two years. Little wonder the analysts are suggesting Sky can gear up and buy something. TVNZ?

To date, TVNZ and TV3 (free-to-air television) have stayed ahead of Sky in viewership by mixing the likes of Desperate Housewives with New Zealand content.

Big threats are posed for free-to-air television once Sky outbids and buys these rights. We all have a stake in TVNZ. The rising cost to buy overseas programmes against Sky will dilute TVNZ’s capacity to make local content, which can be ten times the cost of buying foreign shows. NZ on Air is our $80m mechanism to keep it Kiwi on television. But note NZOA’s chief executive Jane Wrightson in her latest newsletter who felt like writing a “bleak missive” about challenges ahead and “likely enemies preparing to storm the gates.” Ouch!

So we have a government that refuses to acknowledge the competition issues being presented by the increasing power of Sky, is telling TVNZ to only focus on making money and now is looking at raiding NZ on Air funding which keeps FTA viable and allows it to show New Zealanders themselves on television.

The funds-raid is likely to have been in a ‘white paper’ discussed at Cabinet last Monday or soon will be, on what to do once TVNZ 6 + 7 funding runs out next year; options include do nothing (let TVNZ sort it), run 7 + possibly 6 as a small independent entity, or integrate them with Radio NZ.

The first option could mean a ghetto service at best unless there’s a remarkable lift in TVNZ revenue and there’s a high-risk of that being the case with the other two options. And yes, we might well all be watching most of our content on screens other than our televisions in a decade, but someone still has to fund, create and showcase our stories.

A connection to the TVNZ mothership is crucial in my view. Some 20+ years ago, I worked in London for Channel 4 News. Initially the new channel provided the news. It was simply studio interviews that bored viewers into switching off. Independent Television News, ITN, came in and provided a base news feed to liven up what became an excellent news hour including extended interviews, assisted by being, then, non-commercial.

This does not mean Channel 7 (and possibly 6) have to be run by TVNZ. Point is, television needs pictures and TVNZ is probably best placed to provide some of them, not just for news but through its other programming and archives. But how Channels 7 (and 6?) might best work deserves more than a Cabinet paper and some blogging.  Feedback from a variety of industry and academic sources confirm that a national debate is demanded with opportunity for real input . We want a television future that regards us as New Zealand citizens as well as consumers.

Next blog:  Watching television on other screens and how rapidly it’s changing


Sticky Fingers Key

Posted by Brendon Burns on August 18th, 2010

John Key’s all but endorsement of Christchurch Mayor Bob Parker last night indicates how out of touch he is with Christchurch voters. Key attended a widely-promoted ‘John and Bob’ gathering at Sticky Fingers in Christchurch last night, their handshake making the front page of The Press. http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/news/christchurch/4034228/Praise-from-PM-but-no-endorsement

Key praises Parker as having done “a very good job.”

Ok, as a Labour MP I’m not dispassionate here. I totally support Jim Anderton’s bid (though I will say Parker is an extraordinarily gifited speaker and his full-time unpaid Mayoress wife Jo deserves better than to be remembered for having muffins and coffee with the Mayor – (even Key referred to ‘muffingate’ last night)

Point is that it’s not just Labour supporters who are openly saying they want to see Parker go. So are card-carrying Nats and many others. On Monday my dentist, just returned from his European holiday, couldn’t wait to say  how much he wanted to see a change. Last night at Saunders Unsworth’s bash, yet another senior Christcurch business leader told me he won’t be voting for Parker. His reason? The way Parker responded to criticism of the $17m bail-out of property developer Dave Henderson. To compound matters for Parker, ‘Hendo’, once praised, defended and befriended by Rodney Hide, has recently been exposed as having not paid IRD for the GST on the $17m paid  to him. So ratepayers and taxpayers are both out of pocket from the deal.

Add to that, the council’s attempt to hike council tenants’ rents by 24% in one go (defeated in the High Court) and the $3m purchase of the “Ellerslie” flower show for Christchurch, have all led to a city-wide view that Bob has to go. Not that Jim is resting on his laurels; he has had a large and vigorous  campaign team from before his launch several weeks ago capitalising on the mood for change.

Key’s handshake alingment with Parker at Sticky Fingers might be a touch of the tar baby for both of them.


A future for television #1

Posted by Brendon Burns on August 16th, 2010

Decision-time looms on the future of any version of public service television. As early as today, Cabinet will consider what to do, if anything, once the funding for TVNZ’s non-commercial channels, 6 + 7, runs out next year. These channels form the backbone of the Freeview service, set up to provide a digital competitor to the Murdoch-dominated Sky TV pay channels. About one in four NZ homes are now receiving Freeview – half those with Sky.

My understanding is that the Ministry of Culture and Heritage and Treasury’s Crown Ownership Monitoring Unit are juggling three possible outcomes which reflect the lack of coherence within Cabinet about public service broadcasting:

1/ Do nothing, leave it up to TVNZ to sort it out, unassisted.

2/ Create a small independent entity to run 7 (and possibly 6), perhaps with some contracted Radio NZ services

3/ Morph TVNZ 7 into Radio NZ

None of these options seem likely to be funded to work. viably.

  • Leaving it to TVNZ will have its likely Cabinet backers. Bill English and Treasury will not sanction a new funding round to the tune of last time, so sticking it on little-loved TVNZ will have its appeal. Steven Joyce, who made his fortune in private radio, may be in this camp too, so this option may prove hard to beat. Except the state owned broadcaster is barely trading profitably this year and to date has subsidized 6+7 well beyond the $79m one-off funding grant (created out of boomtime TVNZ dividends.) Funding even TVNZ7 would eat into expected dividends. And TVNZ is now explicitly told that its only function is to make cash; to require it to carry two, or even one non-commercial channel, is contrary to the aims of the TVNZ Amendment Bill (before Parliament but not passed.)
  • Creating a small independent entity is implausible. Television needs pictures. The easiest and best way to provide them is via TVNZ. Some form of ongoing link to TVNZ could possible be stitched into any the provisions for a small new broadcaster but TVNZ would then expect to be paid handsomely for  news and other programme feeds. At present, young TVNZ reporters are cutting their teeth on the round-the-clock demands of TVNZ 7. As already blogged, if the funding for a stand-alone were to come from cuts to NZ on Air’s budget, this could be at the expense of the independent production sector. Even forcing NZ on Air to hand over the new Platinum Fund to TVNZ7 seems unlikely, as it would be an embarrassing backdown for Broadcasting Minister Jonathan Coleman. And “ghettoising’ much NZ content in a small audience channel would pull viewership off TV One, Two and TV3 to the further benefit of Sky.
  • A forced merger of TVNZ7 and Radio NZ would be opposed by many supporters of Radio NZ, myself included. That’s not because combined operations can’t work but like any relationship they need time, space and security.  I doubt there is enough goodwill in this Cabinet towards the concept of public service broadcasting for that to happen. Radio NZ is already under-funded; you can’t strap on television without  new funding and a new Charter for public service  broadcasting  to make this work well. Neither of these will appeal to Coleman and Cabinet.  

 For about $15m a year, we’ve had two non-commercial channels – extraodinary value thanks to Steve Maharey and TVNZ’s stretch of resources.  A renewed arrangement could look at all the funding options and provide a huge opportunity to re-define how Channel 7 operates and its relationship with TVNZ.

Perhaps, just perhaps, some in Cabinet might see that as a nation we need a viable alternative to an increasingly commercial model where even news bulletins are shaped around minute by minute ratings;  and how  TVNZ’s value to the Crown and taxpayers is diminishing as Sky beams into ever  more homes while audiences also fragment to new media.

Some thoughts on that next post.


Radio with pictures

Posted by Brendon Burns on August 8th, 2010

People in and around what remains of ‘public service broadcasting’ are anxious. They have every reason.

Treasury and MCH are scrambling to deliver to Cabinet shortly on Jonathan Coleman’s instruction, made explicit in an OIAed December 22 letter to TVNZ, to find a way “to provide and fund public broadcasting.”

I understand this has seen MCH CEO Lewis Holden visit integrated television/radio newsrooms at the BBC and elsewhere, though Treasury’s Crown Ownership Monitoring Unit is donkey deep. 

As the BBC and ABC show,  joint operations can work. But not if radio becomes the perpetual poor cousin of television.  And that’s almost certainly in prospect under this government. Its track record on broadcasting over the last 20 months – and for many years before – shows palpable contempt for public service broadcasting as a concept.

Now it is faced with the dilemma of what to do once the $79m in funding provided to TVNZ to fund Channels 6 + 7 runs out in 2012. Credit to TVNZ for having made these channels work.  I attended the launch last week of the Spotlight on Science series – probably funded for less than Rick Ellis’  Amex bill – but worthy and important television nonetheless. It could not happen without TVNZ stretching its resources to help foster these channels and the Freeview digital platform they support.

Now the explicit instruction to TVNZ is to simply crank up the dividend and nothing else. There’s barely even a ritual bow in the current TVNZ Amendment Bill to New Zealand content, let alone anything vaguely non-commercial. Meantime, it’s handing over its archives and audience share to Sky via the new Heartland channel.

So one option is for Radio NZ’s news and perhaps wider operations to be morphed into TVNZ 7 (and possibly 6). A sort of ‘radio with pictures.’

This is just too important  to emerge from a quick circuit of MCH/Treasury/Cabinet before announcement and implementation; especially from a Government with a known loathing for ‘public service broadcasting’, heavyweight Ministers who’ve made their loot in private radio and a clear Cabinet agenda to sell TVNZ when politically possible.

The list of possible losers is substantial: 

  • Radio NZ, if reporters/broacasters have to service television with little new resource, the current ethos and excellence takes a bath
  • The NZ independent production community, if NZ on Air funding is cut to part-fund a new television/radio combine
  • TVNZ and TV3, where New Zealand content funded by NZ on Air, helps keep ratings and revenue up against Sky’s increasing penetration 
  • Those who value Radio NZ and who don’t want it gutted by a fast Government fiat

These issues are far-reaching. They stretch beyond the life of one government. Jonathan Coleman should open them up to submission and input from interested New Zealanders in a genuine process without any pre-determination of the outcome.

Am I hopeful of this? Well here’s a link to an article from one of Britain’s best commentators, Will Hutton, who urges Poms to stick up for the BBC as the new Tory/Libs Government get it in their sights. He argues it’s the last bulwark against rule by the mob

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/jul/25/will-hutton-bbc-democracy-culture


Gerry built scheme

Posted by Brendon Burns on August 3rd, 2010

A good journo has exposed the Emperor being without clothes.  The Press today carried a story in which Energy Minister Gerry Brownlee is unable to rule out power prices increasing as a result of his daft idea  to split the Waikati River power generation system from Meredian ownership and give Tekapo A and B power stations to SOE competitor, Genesis. Reducing power price rise pressures was a core purpose of the bill Gerry steered through with opposition from Treasury and many in the power industry.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/the-press/news/3983417/Power-price-rise-not-ruled-out-in-compulsory-asset-transfer

Filed under: Energy

NZ abstains on UN water resolution

Posted by Brendon Burns on July 29th, 2010

Is access to clean water a basic human right? 124 nations at the UN General Assembly thought so today and supported a resolution affirming this (and sanitation too.)

NZ was among 41 abstentions, with MFAT arguing it hadn’t had time to assess, wasn’t consensus on the issue.

Labour as government would almost certainly supported the resolution. Former Prime Minister Peter Fraser was an architect of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948. With a world population of perhaps a billion then, the crucial importance of access to water wasn’t seen as ncessary. With 6 billion on the planet and growing, about a billion people already live without safe water. Little wonder as many people die each year of water-borne illness, most of them children,  as the population of greater Auckland.

Ironic abstention when one in six New Zealanders doesn’t have tested safe water, when the Government has frozen assistance to small communities to make water safe for a year, and Rodney Hide’s bill to privatise council water supplies for 35 years is before us.

Filed under: Auckland, water

Brownlee bagged

Posted by Brendon Burns on July 29th, 2010

You need no further confirmation of the latest hole Brownlee has dug for himself than this blog from DPF…all credit due of course to David Parker

The wage gap

July 29th, 2010 at 11:00 am by David Farrar

Claire Trevett reports:

A war of statistical tables in Parliament left National red-faced after even its own figures showed the gap in earnings between New Zealanders and Australians had increased since it took office in November 2008.

Economic Development Minister Gerry Brownlee had said in Parliament on Tuesday that the gap was less than it was when Labour was in power  but yesterday the statistics proved him wrong no matter how they were presented.

Prime Minister John Key produced a table which he said most accurately compared average earnings because it took into account purchasing power parity.

But his own figures showed the gap had increased by $22 in the two years since National took over in 2008. Instead, he said it showed the gap was less than it was at the “maximum point” of Labour’s reign  when the gap peaked at $187.60 in 2005.

But it subsequently shrank to $137.89 by Labour’s final year in 2008 and had since increased again to $160.25 under National.

Of course the wage gap has increased. We went into recession, and Australia did not. In a recession you have little wage growth.

I am surprised that a Minister would claim the gap has not increased. Rather than try to push dodgy comparisons, they would be better to outline policies which will help reduce the gap.

Tags: ,

u know Gerry B has stuffed up big time when you see posts like this on DPF’s blog..


Great Leche Forward?

Posted by Brendon Burns on July 21st, 2010

(Actually he’s over the place on dairying, against sale of Crafar farms to Chinese but for a liberalisation of foreign investment laws and  for a doubling exports to China.)

Cartoon taken down – Trevor


Milk ahead of water

Posted by Brendon Burns on July 20th, 2010

Synlait, the Canterbury corporate dairy farmer, has been hunting for capital since it began making milk powder two years ago. It’s already an unmistakeable site on State Highway One about 30 mins south of Christchurch. The plant handles 300 million litres of milk from its own farms and supplies from rival Fonterra, as required under the dairy industry deregulation that spawned Synlait.

Synlait has now secured an $82m injection from China’s Bright Dairy,  taking a majority stake in the company, already  22 percent  owed by Japanese coporate Mitsui. Subject to regulatory and shareholder approval, Bright Dairy’s capital will see Synlait’s milk powder output doubled by 2011/12 .

This lines up neatly with the Government’s announced agenda to see new water allocations flowing in Canterbury next year, long before any tough new environmental controls can be put in place. You can’t help but believe the Synlait injection wasn’t in Government’s mind – Ruth Richardson is on the Synlait board – with its axing of Environment Canterbury’s elected councillors who were among those concerned at the deteriorating water quality, most particularly in the area around where Synlait’s milk plant is centred.

Dunsandel township, just up the road from the existing plant, has had e-coli in its water supply for the past year. Synlait wants to double production and later double it again. Little wonder it has invested in the Central Plains Water project, which, despite occasional attempts to mask its purpose, is designed to create more water for dairying. Fonterra is also intent on using the CPW scheme to create milk for a brand new $100m plant it is planning at Darfield,  to the norwest of Dunsandel.

So a new wall of milk is coming fast, with little prospect of tough new environmental rules in the same timeframe. Little wonder, water is now identified as the number one issue in Canterbury. Nick Smith is in Christchurch tomorrow for a major announcement on water issues, so perhaps he comes with soothing words.  Trouble is, milk comes ahead of water as far as his Cabinet colleagues are concerned.


Billy at home in the House

Posted by Brendon Burns on July 8th, 2010

41662_100000851554935_2775_n I’ve just rung my youth MP Billy Clemens to commisserate with him about the vagaries of media – this is the photo in today’s Press of him in the House yesterday. No need. Billy has already put the photo on his Facebook page and was quick to say the big yawn snap could only have been taken when Gerry Brownlee was speaking!

 And, he reckons he was able to use his supplementary question to Stephen Joyce to get a commitment to dealing with recidivist drunk drivers as well as being tough on under-20s. Billy is a natural, a credit to Papanui High School and clearly one of to watch. Though having met a bunch of them at Parliament on Tuesday, he’s got company.


Churnalism

Posted by Brendon Burns on July 7th, 2010

TVNZ is wrapping up further staff cuts in silk stockings with its ‘biggest changes to television news and current affairs in 20 years’ announcement yesterday.

The ‘multi-media’ approach will see reporters become their own video editors and sometimes camera operator, as well as working for programmes from Breakfast through to late news bulletins and the web too boot. All very ‘efficient’, extracting the most from staff as a  resource and assisting our state-owned television network to maximise its returns to the government, now the only requirement of TVNZ. The last line of the media release identifies the drive: annual savings of $3m.

And yes, it parallels what is happening in other news operations where falling revenues have seen newsrooms decimated and reporters required to file incessantly for a variety of outlets including web services and blogs.   All of these changes are turning too many journalists into churnalists. Where once there was a capacity to dig, do the research, speak to a variety of sources, check the facts – now there is constant pressure to meet another deadline. The head of an aid organisation I spoke to this week complained without prompting that journalists no longer ring and ask her a series of questions – they just want her to voice a grab so they can get it to air or on-screen.

So it will increasingly become with TVNZ. The reporters it still has that could, until now, expect the time to work on a story for a dedicated programme, will now have to file for a range of programmes and platforms.  And edit (and increasingly) film their own stories too.

All of this will mean TVNZ scatters its resources more thinly across an increasing range of platforms. My pick is that some core viewers will notice the lesser fare and the audience-pull that TVNZ gets from One News, Sunday, Fair Go will diminish.  That ultimately is bad news for TVNZ and for those of us who believe it has a crucial role to play in ensuring New Zealanders are truly well-informed.


We don’t need your education

Posted by Brendon Burns on July 6th, 2010

National standards for education – and proof-reading – are slipping. Rangitata’s Nat MP Jo Goodhew has sent out a survey asking : What issues are most important to you (rank in order 1-7) Health. Education. Environment. Education. Economy. Law and order. Other

Hope plenty of Rangitata voters double-tick the environment box and educate Goodhew. She’s never denied revving up Timaru’s mayor to complain about ECAN- along with Christchurch’s Bob Parker – setting in train the loss of local democracy and the Government’s agenda to rush new water allocations into place next year in Canterbury without new environmental rules. Extraordinarily, Parker is now calling for earlier new ECAN elections than scheduled. E for consistency.


Static spectrum

Posted by Brendon Burns on July 1st, 2010

Two weeks ago, John Key hopped into the digital space of his Communciations and Broadcasting Ministers Joyce and Coleman and said a total switchover to digital transmission for broadcasting was unlikely before 2015. Until then, a date as early as 2013 was being suggested.  One senior telco exec told me his company was gobsmacked by  the announcement.  Yesterday at Govt Admin Committee on broadcasting estimates, Dr Coleman put a figure on that delay of around $90+ m. He spoke about the need to balance a number of things. One of the things that has to be balanced is the ongoing cost to free-to-air broadcasters, including state-owned TVNZ, of maintaining two delivery platforms. Sky, which went digital in March, is saving $7m a year.

The near $90m+ cost of the delay – which may be understated - doesn’t include any assessment of the cost to TVNZ and Maori TV. It is the reduced value of the UHF spectrum to telecommunications companies as time goes on and technology advances. (Including the capacity to compress more and more info onto existing spectrum.)

Meanwhile, Australia (with whom we must catch up – Govt mantra) goes fully digital in 2013. Yesterday it launched its first digital-only region – Mildura/Sunraysia. The Aussie Digital Switchover Taskforce seems to be in full swing. No signs of life here.


Broadcast news

Posted by Brendon Burns on June 28th, 2010

TVNZ’s programme on 50 years of television news last night was better than the earlier and awful game show – but sorry,  no cigar.

Our (still) state broadcaster was given the opportunity do a documentary series to mark half a century of the medium it has dominated. The series was funded by NZ On Air but TVNZ turned it down only for it to be picked up by Sky’s Prime channel. The first Prime doco appeared as TVNZ was handing over its  vaults of programming to Sky for its new Heartland channel; short-term cash over long-term strategy. The same week as the launch of Heartland, TVNZ ran its game show look at NZ television. It rated – and that’s all that counts these days – even if many of us, including TVNZ’s Paul Henry as reported yesterday, thought it truly ghastly. 

 TVNZ then put together last night’s programme to screen last night at the 8.30 timeslot,  directly competing with Prime’s ‘Fifty Years’ third episode which was also to be centred around news and current affairs. Prime moved this programme forward in the schedule to avoid the head-to-head competition.

Ah, the benefits to viewers of  ratings-driven television.  

For all that, good to see some of the best of TVNZ’s news/current affairs talent back on screen last night – unforgettable images of Simon Walker trying to ask questions of Muldoon, Liam Jeory on the tumbling Berlin Wall, methinks a young Rod Vaughan on Seatoun beach on Wahine Day. And Paul Henry co-hosting the show and promoting the importance of balance!

Filed under: Television

Ruddy hell

Posted by Brendon Burns on June 24th, 2010

Big question of the day. Will Kevin Rudd be here next week for the state luncheon and address to our Parliament ?

Had intended to head homewards as Parliament under urgency approached its midnight finish last night. Then news started coming through about possible challenge to PM Rudd courtesy of ever-alert Darren Hughes. (He is devastated that he may not be first ginga Australasian Prime Minister!)

More seriously, Rudd’s fighting performance when he faced the media about 12.30am our time on Sky (yes I do watch it sometimes) was impressive. Question is, was it  too little, too late.  Rudd gave up on the ETS – losing liberal credibility – and now appears to have lost the support of right and left factions. Some mining-linked trade unions have been funding a campaign against him because of his mining tax ! And we think politics here can be brutal at times. All eyes now on ALP caucus room.

Filed under: Australia

Shortest day all over?

Posted by Brendon Burns on June 23rd, 2010

A lower than usual flow of energy today made me think, aha, it must be the shortest day.  But apart from hoping to farewell the hardy lads at Shirley Boys High in my electorate who are doing a belated mid-winter swim at Brighton this coming Friday,  I haven’t seen much mention this year of the winter solstice.

A quick Google shows it is usually falls June 20 or 21. The Southland Times reported that some from the province of shieldholders and shellfish braved the chilly waters down there last Sunday – which perhaps was the actual shortest day.

Little matter, except usually media seem swamped with such stories. Have I missed it? Or has Matariki taken over in importance? (Though have not seen too much mention about that this year. ) Or perhaps I am not putting enough energy into being observant…A mid-winter swim does jolt one. I did one once at Breaker Bay, followed by a spa bath to recuperate (though truth tell, water temps don’t vary that much on Wellington’s south coast.)

The good news is, that from here on, the days get lighter and brighter. Of course, we do still have to get through our traditionally coldest month (s) of July and often August…

Filed under: events