McKenzie Wark on 29 Jun 2000 07:53:03 -0000 |
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It's back to ABC for Aunty Tony Moore McKenzie Wark from the opinion page of the Sydney Morning Herald http://www.smh.com.au Date: 29/06/2000 The Australian people needs to seriously examine the performance of it's national broadcaster, the ABC. This should be an open public debate, a new Dix-style inquiry, not rushed through like the (now seemingly ignored) Mansfield inquiry, nor presented as a fait accompli imposed through executive decree. The Left side of politics should encourage this - Labor and Democrat supporters love the ABC, much as the Right may have loved the Queen, but it's time to look at what it needs to be this century. Cultural rejuvenation of public media requires extreme measures. Radical surgery is necessary to secure relevance for a public broadcaster and narrowcaster in the decades to come. Many younger program-makers who have worked at the ABC were opposed to the creatively stifling Hill/Johns corporation and are clamouring for sweeping changes to end its bureaucratic constipation so that it might better reflect 21st-century Australia and draw on the talent of its citizens. The Left side of politics, alongside the Friends of the ABC, ignored this option, preferring a conservative defence of the status quo. Conservatives have been the most trenchant critics. However, it will probably take a Labor government to reform the ABC, as the Liberals describe it as "our enemies talking to our friends". A Beazley government should not be afraid to radically reform an ABC that's failing to deliver. The challenge for the industrial age corporations entering a new century is to change the way they have traditionally controlled their assets, to move away from top-down coercion. The industrial era was very much about hierarchies within hierarchies. There would be elite and popular broadcasting, there would be broadsheets and tabloids, and so on. It was just assumed that one was better than the other. A cultural divide was institutionalised that was inherently anti-democratic, but it was also the enemy of real excellence. "Quality" became just a matter of class prejudice, rather than something that had to be tested. There's only one real broadcaster left and that's Channel 9; everything else is already narrow-casting. Channel 10, for example, has very effectively adapted to a niche role. In a quite different way, so, too, has SBS. The ABC has been the Mosman and Toorak Broadcasting Corporation for a while now. It has sacrificed even the pretence at real quality to being a class-based broadcaster. It is the broadcaster of respectable junk, aimed at a middle class that only feels comfortable watching a soap opera if it's disguised as costume drama or given the alibi of a "classic" novel. But this is not a very sophisticated way to think about what "quality" might be in broadcasting. It is time to look at the ABC charter and think about what new roles a national broadcaster might adopt. The BBC soap operas so beloved by the Mosman demographic can just as easily be delivered by pay-TV. Why should a national broadcaster just subsidise the tastes of people who can well afford to pay for those tastes? Now we are in a broadcast world beyond broadcasting and the industrial model with its two standard products catering to majorities - "high" versus "low", is starting to split up. What you now get is cultural multiplicity. What works is not the one thing that means the same thing to the majority. It's the one thing that can be read completely differently by completely different audiences. Broadcast culture is good at enforcing the tastes of majorities and not good at opening space for minorities. In practice, the ABC charter and those of many other public cultural bodies is usually ignored for a sectoral appeal to the Anglo-Celtic upper middle class. The problem occurs when terms like "public interest" or "quality" or "non-commercial" are masks for personal taste, class prejudices or outmoded aesthetics. Taxpayers and consumers have a right to say how their cultural dollars are spent. At present, these institutions are run as if they are the property of those who are in fact our servants. It is a far cry from the sort of cultural democracy that we should be promoting. The ABC spends a lot of money making its TV boring - chopping, changing, recutting, rejecting. It took special talent on the part of ABC management to lose smart people such as Julie McCrossin, Richard Fidler, Paul McDermott, Ellen Fanning and Mikey Robins. The ABC followed on the BBC model of a senior civil service structure reporting to a commission of politically appointed representatives. But now we have to talk about public broadcasting as a new matrix of creative networks stretching deep into the freelance community and operating to a public charter. There should be certain benchmarks, but freed from top-heavy bureaucratic control and conservative commissioning criteria. At the time of writing, the ABC chief, Jonathan Shier, has made the right noises, encouraging creativity to break through the bureaucracy and bringing an increased audience to the ABC as "light" consumers rather than playing to a dedicated upper-middle class club. But he has taken the wrong actions: employing old-fashioned commercial producers and executives steeped in corporate hierarchy. The craven hierarchical structure that makes the ABC a plaything for whoever sits as managing director is itself the problem. Simply changing the people who wield control in a top-heavy corporate hierarchy will not change things, especially when these personalities are "veterans" of 1970s and '80s commercial TV - the high watermark of formulaic "mass taste". Rather than use ratings as absolute numbers as a benchmark for the ABC, it would be far better to use the spread of demographics as a measure of its success or failure. Something for the old, something for women, something for the country, something for Perth, and so on. The challenge is to develop meaningful "niche indicators" that measure how effectively the ABC satisfies Australian media consumers in their diversity. A true restructure would radically flatten management, liberate commissioning to truly reflect aesthetic and demographic diversity and strip commissioners and sundry managers of the power to meddle in what goes to air. Inevitably this means jettisoning paternalistic managers who cut their teeth on a "quality" public broadcasting model that basically disguised personal class tastes. Rather than the top-down approach of reforming, perhaps it is a question of starting again and going back to the grassroots. It's a radical solution - but perhaps its worth considering. Let's admit that the ABC is now substantially failing to fulfil its charter. Let's take a hard look at the existing public broadcasting institutions and ask whether we can free up that money to start again, building new kinds of institutions. Shier has revived that old chestnut of the ABC swallowing up SBS. But what if SBS were to develop as the primary, rather than the supplementary public broadcasting service? Grow SBS and wind back the ABC. Of the two existing models of public broadcasting, SBS has done a much better job already of adjusting to the post-broadcast, multichannel, culturally plural world. That, we suggest is a much better starting point for a future public media sector. * Tony Moore was a documentary maker at the ABC from 1988-1997 and was on the ABC National Advisory Council. * McKenzie Wark is senior lecturer in media studies at Macquarie University. This is an edited chapter from a new book, E-Change, edited by Peter Lewis, to be published by Pluto Press in August. http://media.socialchange.net.au/pluto/ __________________________________________ "We no longer have roots, we have aerials." http://www.mcs.mq.edu.au/~mwark -- McKenzie Wark _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list [email protected] http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold