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In the war on public broadcasting, last week felt like the moment when its enemies simply stopped pretending to care. But, in the middle of the cross-fire, a tweet by ABC 702 presenter Richard Glover suggested a deeper problem.
Increased viewer and listener criticisms prompted Glover to tweet that he’d “never seen this level of abuse” directed at the ABC. He was quickly backed up by television presenters Virginia Trioli and Leigh Sales.
There’s a real fear, Glover says, that in the midst of partisanship, we risk losing the media as public square — a role that, now, only the ABC and SBS can play. Most complaints, he says, centre around just three programs – Q&A, The 7.30 Report and AM, the centre of the public square where the ABC rigorously tracks and enforces balance.
The complaints are largely exclusionary: why this person? Why that view? What are they doing in MY public square?
At the same time, as the faces of the ABC have become more female, it’s attracted sexist attacks; whether on MD Michelle Guthrie for being a Murdoch clone or on Leigh Sales for, well, not being Kerry O’Brien.
But most Australians experience the ABC through radio. Over the past 30-odd years, as ABC radio shifted from light entertainment to news and current affairs, most presenters (like Glover) came from journalism, not presenting.
The programs, particularly breakfast and drive, worked to become the public square for their city or community. That approach has encouraged a deliberate inclusive nice-ness, in direct contrast to the culture of resentment that drives much of commercial talk radio.
The criticisms of this inclusion are weaponised in the more serious existential attacks. In just the past week, we saw a Daily Telegraph “opinion” on SBS presenter Lucy Zelic’s “showing off” in her respectful pronunciation of foreign names; followed by the indecent haste with which News Corp jumped in after the Nauru government refused a visa to the ABC (matched with federal ministers mealy-mouthed assertion that this was just the Nauruan equivalent of “we decides who comes etc”); and then, on Friday, the leak that the ”efficiency” review “to assist” the ABC and SBS announced in the May Federal Budget would be headed by former Foxtel boss Peter Tonagh.
Partly, this is business: the ABC or SBS are providing for free what the traditional media are trying to persuade readers and viewers to pay for. The “efficiency” review — like the competitive neutrality review before it — is just another forum to promote commercial interest.
The challenge for the ABC and SBS is that with paywalls, this terrain of struggle has come to mean news and current affairs.
But as a front in the culture wars, News Corp needs the ABC and SBS as their punching bag of choice where hits advance both their cultural and commercial interests.
Glover’s tweet suggests there are plenty of people on left and right who are keen to agree with them, eager for the ABC to be the anti-News, to be a voice that agrees with them. As Glover said: “No enthusiasm for our attempt at balance; none for our desire to reach out to all, and not be hunted into niche broadcasting.”
A day later, Glover retweeted himself, describing the thread on his post as “amazing, feral, compelling” — saying it effectively proved his point. Plenty of likes and retweets, but almost none of the replies agreed with him.
Last century, the economics of media forced organisations to the centre, guided by balance and fairness. Like the economists’ ice-cream sellers on the beach, you needed to position in the middle to draw customers from both sides. So powerful was the business model, it became an unquestioned ethical principle.
This century, as the media eco-system is fragmenting, the market lies in picking spots up and down the beach and flavouring the ice-cream to the specific needs of the group in front of you. News Corp was the first to recognise this shift and built their business model accordingly.
In this world, the curated public square that democracy relies on demands an independent public broadcaster. As Glover concluded, “My fear: only when it’s gone will they realise what’s been lost.”
How badly did democracy work, before the advent of the wireless, and with it the public broadcaster? Much as I like the ABC and believe that it has an important role to play in ensuring an informed public, it’s a lot younger than democracy, even in our young-ish country. We somehow managed to form the Federation and its voting institutions without it.
A century ago there was no domination of the print media by a Murdoch equivalent. There were plenty newspapers with varied opinions, healthy circulations…. & different owners. Nobody had 70% of the market back then. That’s why an independent ABC is so vital now.
Agree Zut; living outside of the NSW (Newcastle, Sydney. Wollongong) orbit ABC radio is indispensable in our house.
Yes, the ABC is all that stands between us and annihilation by commercial media. Including ABC Radio
The ABC is fine. While I don’t watch it religiously or listen to live radio broadcast much, I do enjoy its podcasts. However, ABC TVNews which is the front line and public face of the ABC seems to me to have too many commentators and not enough reporting from the field. I have not done any surveys so I am not sure if my hunch is correct. Is this because it’s cheaper to have talking heads than having someone out in the burbs of Sydney or rural Western Australia or the APY lands or Afghanistan; New York; Tierra del Fuego etc etc…
Are these defenders, of the way the ABC is going now, seriously suggesting there isn’t an overt bias in the way presenters from Sales, to Alberici (one “report” aside), Jones, Baird, Fanning, Barron, Lane, Trioli even Grant are all smiles when reporting Labor woes : whereas they might as well be at a funeral when the Limited News Party is in the poo?
The different “Sweet & Sour” demeanour and tolerance adopted by presenters dribbling along party lines – the sort of “opinion as news” we can get from Limited News if we wanted?
The rate that stories embarrassing to the LNP go missing – or the rate “Labor did the same thing or worse” isn’t reciprocated (recounting similar LNP cock-ups) in relation to Labor embarrassment?
7:30 last week – “Timor-Leste”? …. Not big enough?
This week The Dum will be “compered” by that Murdoch Muppet van Onselen – filling in for the usual conservative bricks – yesterday he was on Insiders telling us that the complicitous Limited News going to Nauru (to carry Turnbull’s Nauru baggage?) was just a red herring in this banning of the ABC from the trip?
If we want advertising for Murdoch’s conservative PR empire, or where to find such chronic outpourings of myopic, one-sided political bile, we know where to go. We don’t need the ABC doing the advertising for Limited News.
And since when was “journalism” more about partisan, prejudiced reporting of events, seen through the prism of the politics of the presenter – where “opinion as news” is the norm? Negativity on the Left, amity on the Right?
Trying to persuade punters to get with their preferred party, to vote for the “more fit to govern” party as they see it – to influence electoral outcomes?
Most of the news we get has “passed through” Limited News at least once. Too afraid to call out what Team Murdoch (with “70”% of our hard-copy news, SKY and their shock-jock dependents) has been doing to politics and the media through it’s dominance of the market – as if “the media” is seperate from society?
“Lost”? Don’t look now …..
Murdoch muppets, you’re to kind. Murdoch maggots feeding on the ABC.
It is rare for klewi to write at such length, in prose/blank verse.
Passion, indeed.
Seriously, we are in the position to have to barrack for, and support, garbage.
Slightly less offensive garbage but still pretty crappy.
BTW – “it’s attracted sexist attacks; whether on MD Michelle Guthrie for being a Murdoch clone how is that anymore sexist than “the ”efficiency” review “to assist” the ABC and SBS announced in the May Federal Budget would be headed by former Foxtel boss Peter Tonagh.“?
Once upon a time, not so very long ago, the ranters and abusers had to make do with shouting on street corners and poison pen letters.
Universal access to “larnin” and information technology has got a lot to answer for.
…. Was Kerry O’Brien ever “attacked” for being Kerry O’Brien?
Why is it “sexist” to criticise Guthrie for being a “Murdoch clone” , or Sales for not being “a Kerry O’Brien”? What does gender have to do with anything?
Is the contention that :- “If they were men such perceived “disappointments” would be different, if not overlooked”?
Seriously?