The New Zealand Herald

What the new govt means for television

RNZ will have to be at least as lean and resourcefu­l as they have been to this point to make RNZ+

- Duncan Greive

The elevation of Jacinda Ardern to Prime Minister has led to torrents of words being typed — about her youth, her gender, her impact on national sporting teams.

And about what the new government might mean for very important issues like housing, child poverty and public transport.

But what about the telly?! After an exhausting day curing the nation of what bedevils it, what kind of content does the new Government envisage us watching of an evening? I have read the broadcasti­ng policies of Labour, The Greens and NZ First, and thus feel comfortabl­e presenting the below propositio­ns, in tiers according to how likely they are to happen.

Near inevitable RNZ+

Labour likes building new TV channels almost as much as National likes building roads. Last time it was TVNZ 7 and Heartland.

This time, tellingly, Labour has so little trust in TVNZ that it’s decided to teach its radio station (albeit one with an increasing­ly strong digital presence) to make television, rather than convince its state-owned network to make public-spirited TV. RNZ+ is budgeted at around $40m, a sort of tantalisin­gly in-between number. It’s more than twice the $16m it takes to run Maori Television, and more than the $30m or so it takes to run RNZ currently. Yet TVNZ currently spends over $300m on its operations, so RNZ will have to be at least as lean and resourcefu­l as they have been to this point to make RNZ+ — which will also be tasked with significan­tly expanded digital output — more than a cute curiosity.

Increase in captioning via default medium of internet

Both Labour and the Greens make reference to captioning to increase accessibil­ity as being a priority. Helpfully, the rise of the smartphone, and captioned videos watched on silent, makes this case even stronger.

Maori Television and NZ on Air to stay

All parties make mention of support for the NZ on Air model, while both Labour and the Greens express support for Maori Television in its current format.

Probable Some form of regulatory increase

Collective­ly Labour, the Greens and

NZ First mention variations on regulation 20 times across their policy documents. All express serious concerns about issues ranging from violence on TV (the Greens have a whole section devoted to this quaintsoun­ding concept) to violence on the internet (NZ First, curiously). There are frequently expressed desires for a utopian-sounding media environmen­t which is independen­t, predominan­tly NZ-owned and pluralist, without a lot of detail about how that might be accomplish­ed.

The general vibe is that there might be some effort made to make the internet less of a hellscape (good luck with that) and TV less violent (seems like it’s mainly home reno shows, so . . . ), while also likely dealing with the backed up issues around the heavy oversight of broadcast media (through the BSA and ASA) contrastin­g with the near-complete absence of any such consumer protection­s online.

Reform of NZ on Air

Our near-unique outsourced model of funding public good content is safe — but reform is near-inevitable. The most likely scenario seems to be greater effort made to direct its actions. The Greens want more drama; NZ First a five yearly review cycle; Labour more effort to engage with the digital environmen­t. Some combinatio­n of the above, with the first funding boost in some time, seems likely. The biggest change, however, might be the removal of RNZ from its nominal NZ on Air oversight and funding to make it a standalone and nominally independen­t entity — something all three parties broadly agree on.

Possible but unlikely TVNZ goes commercial free

NZ First want a commercial free TVNZ 1, and the Greens express interest in more commercial-free media, but the cost of doing that to TVNZ 1 would be well over $100m, and it seems likely to be replaced by the similarly intentione­d RNZ+.

Sport free-to-air

Both Labour and the Greens make specific reference to drama in their policy; neither make reference to sports — in its own way shocking, and illustrati­ve of their worldview. So the big-ticket NZ First policy to mirror Australian “anti-siphoning” legislatio­n and mandate that major sporting events be live and free-to-air is unlikely to be passed, again largely due to its prohibitiv­e cost. The only caveat being that Sky is in a slow crisis, and might make overtures at some point to place more of its content on its free-to-air channel Prime, if the government chipped in.

Impossible TVNZ gets sold

TVNZ is safe. Despite its CEO Kevin Kenrick recently opining “I think the whole thing around public service . . . is an outdated concept”, the statist instincts of the coalition mean that the state broadcaste­r is likely to be left alone. Labour wants it to provide back-end broadcast support for RNZ+ — the channel it seemingly wishes TVNZ 1 was — but otherwise it will largely be left alone.

 ??  ?? Jacinda Adern’s Labour Party want to provide back-end broadcast support for RNZ+.
Jacinda Adern’s Labour Party want to provide back-end broadcast support for RNZ+.
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