Saturday 20th of April 2024

happy birthday ABC…….

The ABC has launched a new brand campaign in line with celebrations to mark the broadcaster’s 90th year, with four hundred individuals featuring at the heart of the campaign.

Focused on connecting Australians, the creative content pieces will showcase and highlight some of the different communities the ABC engages with across its services.

ABC director, audiences, Leisa Bacon, said, “The ABC has been connecting Australians for the last 90 years and this campaign is a true celebration of our continued commitment. We started with a single radio broadcast in 1932, and now we reach Australians across a multitude of platforms, including radio, television, online, digital, and social.”

Filmed in four different locations across the country, ninety people come together in each spot to perform the iconic song by Bruce Woodley AO and Dobe Newton, I am Australian and, in each scenario, create the ABC Lissajous logo in a variety of ways. 

Led by renowned choir director Morris Stuart, ninety choir singers, including members of the Central Australian Aboriginal Women’s Choir perform on Arrernte Country singing a stirring rendition of the song in Pitjantjatjara language.

Ninety dancers from Sydney Dance Company tell the story of the ABC’s evolution through artistic director Rafael Bonachela’s choreography, culminating in the creation of the ABC logo in a stunning physical form.

An energetic rendition of the song is performed by ninety drummers on a Brisbane rooftop overlooking the city and a choir of ninety school children from Sydney perform a fantastic version which includes signing in Auslan.  

The work was created by the award-winning in-house creative team, ABC MADE who attracted some of Australia’s best talent to be involved.

Musical partners, Uncanny Valley, worked closely with one of the original composers, Bruce Woodley AO, to re-arrange the track in four different ways, even adding a dynamic new chant to the song. 

Diana Costantini, head of creative/creative director ABC MADE said, “there was an enormous amount of energy and passion for this project. At its heart, the campaign is about capturing people doing what they love to do and that is – connecting with each other.  We were there to share that and bring that joy to the screens.”

Explore the ABC 90: Connecting Australia collection on ABC iview.

 

 

SEE MORE:

https://www.mediaweek.com.au/abc-launches-brand-campaign-to-celebrate-90-years/

 

May you get MORE funding from the Federal government in FIVE years cycles as promised..... See the celebrations:

https://iview.abc.net.au/video/RV2124H001S00

 

 

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what's wrong with him?…..

What’s wrong with Tom? Tom Gleeson seems to care more about Tom Gleeson than about the ABC. Fair enough. No organisation is perfect and people in charge of departments have to make difficult UN-PREJUDICED decisions: money, time slots, relevance and popularity of specialist shows such as comedy. Some of us are nearly as old as the ABC. And coming from Europe, we could see (and still see) the importance of the ABC, then and now. The Liberals (Australian CONservatives) wanted (and still want) to scuttle it… Morons.

 

Public broadcasting is a difficult child, even if it’s 90 years old. Most of the people who have been employed there, feel privileged, even if they had to work like dogs to get things done for a pittance. Rather than money people toil for the ideal that with no fear nor favour, bring considerations of purpose: inform, entertain, explain, saves lives by connecting people. In a country the size of a continent, it's a main feat to make sure the ABC happens. 

 

So the ABC indulged last night into a little party to celebrate its youth over 90 years. Times have changed of course. 

 

There was a time when comedy was witty, sharp and pointed to governments shenanigans. And some of it on the ABC, still is. And this brings us back to Tom Gleeson. On a day of honest celebration, with laughter, smiles and great jokes, he had to bring once again (?) that he cares “jackshit” about the ABC. May be they don’t pay him enough to say nice things, or that he means this in an endearing way, but the fact is this kind of wit is smutty and NOT FUNNY. 

 

So, what’s wrong with Tom? May be he grew ten inches too tall on the day he got his “Gold Logie” which in real terms is worth “JACKSHIT”. Without the ABC, he would still be a high-earning privileged white professional bullshitter instead of a “JACKSHIT” half-baked comedian.

 

It’s time for Tom to polish a few new words.

 

GL.....

 

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protecting public broadcasting…...

Workers in France Have Gone on Strike to Save Public Broadcast Media
HARRISON STETLER

French media is ever more prey to billionaire owners and the far-right pundits they promote. Public service broadcasters offer a more balanced alternative — but now Emmanuel Macron’s government is threatening their future existence.

 

If some moves tick all the political boxes, the French government’s plan to eliminate an annual €138 audiovisual tax is surely one of them. Coming at the expense of institutions accused by some of elitism and progressive monoculture, it promises much-needed relief for average French taxpayers trapped in an inflationary crunch. Two weeks after President Emmanuel Macron’s coalition lost its absolute majority in the National Assembly, the move builds an early bridge with the right-wing opposition.

Announced on the campaign trail this spring, the reform is part of a highly anticipated cost-of-living package, as annual inflation in France is expected to reach 7 percent by September. On Wednesday, the government — for now headed by Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne — will present a series of measures aimed at protecting French consumers’ purchasing power. This will include extending a price freeze on heating gasoline, tweaking payroll taxes, and relaunching a one-off stimulus check for essential goods. If it passes muster, the package will be the first major bill to emerge from the fragmented new parliament elected in June.

Paid by households in possession of a television set — and waivable for those without one, alongside low earners — the contribution à l’audiovisual public finances France’s well-developed offering of public service radio and television. Upward of twenty-three million households pay the fee, which provides over €3 billion in annual funding to the three flagship public broadcasting organizations: Radio France, France Télévisions, and France Médias Monde.

But not everyone’s happy. On June 28, journalists and production staff at the networks participated in a one-day work stoppage, with hundreds converging on the National Assembly in rejection of the threat to their funding source. For public media already facing belt-tightening, the elimination of the tax will create a budget hole that jeopardizes their future viability.

Political Coup

“It’s a political coup to say they’re going to eliminate this tax to aid purchasing power,” Renaud Dalmar, union representative for the Union Syndicale des Journalistes (CFDT) at Radio France, told Jacobin. When Macron initially announced the initiative in March, reservations within some unions were undercut by the expectation that a stand-alone law doing away with the tax would be offset by the creation of some new funding valve. At the time, the fee’s fate was up in the air, attached as it was to a phased-out residential tax.

Now, the elimination of this funding source as part of an omnibus anti-inflation law has raised concerns that no replacement tax is coming. Journalists and union representatives fear that this points to a future where public service broadcasting will be the subject of annual (and highly political) budgeting negotiations and forced to undergo a cost-cutting bout of restructuring.

 

Privatization is not yet on the table — though it is an old rallying cry of the French right. But critics of the proposed measure argue that it will leave the service handicapped. On the heels of the government’s announcement to eliminate the tax, a pair of center-right senators from Les Républicains released a report on public service broadcasting, which called for the “fusing” of TV and radio broadcasters under one umbrella network, mutualizing production work and studio use across formats.

Delphine Ernotte, the president of France Télévisions, is said to support a move toward an integrated group, and perhaps the transition toward private ownership, arguing that it would be the only way to digest budget cuts and respond to competition. Workers and management at Radio France are more hesitant, however. “That would entirely disintegrate the radio offering,” Delmar says. Indeed, recent examples of similar moves toward “fusion” don’t augur well for the production of high-quality radio programming. On everyone’s mind is the 2021 hostile takeover of the private radio station Europe 1 by the television network CNEWS, owned by hard-right media mogul Vincent Bolloré, leading to the radio network offering synchronized broadcasts of television news spots and talk shows.

“Fusion” at the national level risks being incredibly costly, however, potentially provoking not only a broad social movement among the staffs at the networks but also incurring the short-term costs of mass restructuring and layoffs. A more likely scenario, sources say, is a fusion between France 3 and France Bleu, branches of the national networks offering locally catered radio and television programming. In a media landscape centered around Paris, which hosts the overwhelming majority of the country’s press institutions, this would threaten a source of reliable coverage of local news and issues.

Bastion of Leftism?

What looks like yet another skirmish over public services and the politics of austerity is in fact a hot-button issue on the Right, which has come to target public radio and television as a bastion of “leftism” in French political culture. Reappropriating the Left’s critique of the conservative “mediatized intellectual,” young right-wing firebrand Eugénie Bastié, now a talking head on the conservative chain CNEWS, laments in her 2021 book The War of Ideas in France that “nobody seems to make any noise about the high level of visibility granted anticapitalist economists Thomas Piketty or Thomas Porcher, or the overwhelming majority of left-wing thinkers invited on public broadcasting shows.”

In fact, many people are making noise. During the presidential campaign, France’s far-right candidates joined in a chorus of criticism against taxpayer-supported broadcasting, with Marine Le Pen calling for complete privatization. “I think we need to cancel the [television tax],” far-right polemicist Éric Zemmour told the private radio network Sud Radio, “so that the public broadcasters stop fleecing us and then spitting in our faces.”

Though public television and radio in France are renowned for high-quality programming, there is no way to possibly claim that they are reserve of post-1968 leftism, as the narrative embraced by the Right clams. For better or for worse, public broadcasters adhere to a relatively pluralistic diet of programming. Take, for example, the radio station France Culture, where listeners can alternate between the weekly ramblings of conservative essayist Alain Finkielkraut, or a five-part shows on the past, present, and future of Marxism.

Macron and the Right’s attack on public broadcasting comes amid a period of profound change and instability in the media landscape. In just the last year, two private media behemoths have emerged in France’s audiovisual sector. One pole, under the control of ultraconservative businessman Bolloré, brings together CNEWS and Europe 1 radio, alongside a host of publishing houses and magazines. Under the encouraging eye of the government, billionaire Martin Bouygues is proceeding with the absorption of the M6 chain by TF1, France’s most watched network controlled by Bouygues since its privatization in the late 1980s.

strong public media pole has become a political priority for France’s left-wing forces, who view it as one possible counter to a concentrating media landscape under the control of large businesses. “Today, who is in control of the production of information? Bernard Arnault, Vincent Bolloré, Patrick Drahi, and Martin Bouygues,” France Insoumise MP François Ruffin told France 3. “To counter that, I think that we need public sector media that can put them under scrutiny as well.”

Several MPs from the left-wing alliance joined the striking journalists on June 28, calling for the maintenance of an audiovisual tax, albeit scaled to income. Judging by viewership numbers, the offering from France Télévisions and Radio France are also highly in-demand services: France 2, the flagship public news station, closely follows TF1 in audience figures, as France Inter radio was the most listened to network in 2021.

“What’s really going on here, is that Radio France . . . is a business that works very well, and has very good results, which frustrates the private sector,” says Dalmar. “Behind all of this is a lobby of private groups that think that [it] takes up too much space and needs to be broken.”

Public broadcasting staff want a major reinvestment to allow the networks to do their jobs, after years without a salary revalorization and as the pressures of layoffs are felt throughout overstretched newsrooms. On June 30, Le Monde reported on rapidly deteriorating working conditions at the public radio service, where short-term contracts and stingily compensated freelancing stints are supplementing cuts in full-time staff positions.

“They cut employment rolls and ask us to keep doing the same job,” says Dalmar, pointing to the general feeling of burn out among journalists and producers. “No longer having the time to think and to do one’s job properly has a major impact on quality. To be able to say to yourself, we didn’t get it right and should start over — that’s what allows you to provide a quality service.”

In the coming weeks, Macron’s plan for the audiovisual tax needs to overcome the tricky new situation in the National Assembly following June’s parliamentary elections. Some union officials retain guarded hopes that local pressure against right-wing MPs from rural areas could dissuade a vote in favor. If not, and assuming that implementing a refashioned tax is politically out of reach, the best-case scenario appears to be multiyear budgeting vehicles such that public broadcasters will not be beholden to annual wrangling and the political pressures that come with it.

“A specific tax is a much better guarantee . . . because it’s much easier to make cuts once its inscribed in the budget,” says Lionel Thompson of the CGT Radio France, arguing that a “budgetization” of public service media risks turning into an “easy way for the government to have leverage over editorial line, knowing that it holds the budgetary strings in its hands.”

 

READ MORE:

https://jacobin.com/2022/07/france-strike-public-broadcast-media-workers-television-radio-macron-taxes

 

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THE BBC AND THE ABC (AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION) HAVE BEEN FIGHTING THE SAME BATTLE....

 

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loosing frequencies.....

Sputnik International News Agency and Radio go on air with a 24-hour broadcast in Arabic from Beirut.

Sputnik Radio has taken over the frequency previously used by BBC Arabic, with users able to tune in on the same dial from today. The BBC completely ceased all of its Lebanon-based broadcasting due to lack of funding in January.

 

 

“Back in 1938, when the BBC first launched its radio in Lebanon, it chose the "This is London" slogan as its opening line. Now the news bulletin starts with “This is Moscow,” said Dmitry Tarasov, the chairman of Sputnik Radio in Lebanon.

 

Sputnik Radio will also extend the range of the dial to the territory of neighboring Syria.

Shows will include talk shows hosted by renowned Arab journalists and programs covering a wide range of topics from Cairo and Moscow.

 

 

“Our main focus will be placed on information and analytical content. We will address the hottest international topics and matters affecting Lebanese society since local audiences resonate with social issues the most," noted Lina Andreichenko, Sputnik Arabic's managing editor for radio and podcast content.

 

Additionally, the Sputnik Arabic frequency will air a number of programs produced by RT Arabic.

Sputnik Arabic began broadcasting on February 4, 2015. The same year, a multimedia hub agency was opened in Cairo (Egypt). Sputnik Arabic includes Arabic website and news feeds. The FM-radio broadcasting is transmitted in Lebanon, Iraq and Syria, as well as on the Sputnik official website and in its mobile apps. Combined Sputnik Arabic outlets have a total audience of three million people.

 

https://sputnikglobe.com/20231002/sputnik-to-take-bbcs-place-in-lebanon-1113828814.html

 

THE SAME BBC DEMISE HAPPENED TO ABC RADIO AUSTRALIA, WHEN JULIE BISHOP AND TONY ABBOTT CANNED ITS TRANSMISSION TO THE PACIFIC NATIONS... APPARENTLY, THE SAID FREQUENCIES WERE PICKED UP BY... CHINA...

 

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