Business World

CNN Philippine­s closure not good for local news ecosystem

- — Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza

THE IMPENDING closure of CNN Philippine­s eight years after debuting on Philippine free television does not bode well for the country’s ailing informatio­n ecosystem, analysts said, as profitabil­ity among news channels in Asia’s oldest democracy remained a challenge.

“Any closure of a news media organizati­on that tries to practice responsibl­e journalism means one less source of informatio­n,” Danilo A. Arao, who teaches journalism at the University of the Philippine­s (UP), said in a Facebook Messenger chat on Sunday.

CNN Philippine­s, which starting airing on Philippine free TV in March 2015, is set to make a major announceme­nt on Monday amid reports that losses at the Cabangon family’s Nine Media Corp., the network owner and operator, had topped P5 billion.

Nine Media has an airtime deal with state channel Radio Philippine­s Network (RPN-9), which charges the company a monthly airtime fee of P8.2 million.

Mr. Arao said the closure of another media company — years after ABS-CBN Corp. was forced off air after legislator­s rejected its franchise renewal — should be “a wake-up call for news media owners to be more mindful of sustaining operations while taking care of its journalist­s and media workers.”

He cited the evolution of RPN 9 to Solar News, to 9 News, and then to CNN Philippine­s.

“The latter turned out to be a white elephant in the sense that depending on a global brand turned out to be unsustaina­ble due to the high cost,” he said. “May this be a lesson to all of us that we don’t need to be outwardloo­king in running a news media organizati­on.”

Nine Media paid license fees to Turner Broadcasti­ng System Asia Pacific, Inc. for the CNN brand worth P139.3 million in 2022, up from P108.09 million a year earlier, GMA News reported, citing financial statements from 2021 to 2022.

Rachel E. Khan, a journalism professor at UP, said a largely informatio­n-only platform that heavily focuses on news and talk shows is not financiall­y viable in a country like the Philippine­s.

“Sadly, Filipinos are only hungry for news when it has an obvious direct impact on them such as disaster-related news,” she said via Messenger chat. “Moreover, with the growth of online media, audiences can now pick and choose what they want to be informed about.”

She noted that GMA Network, Inc., the largest local TV network with 101 TV stations and 21 radio stations last year, and ABS-CBN “make most of their income in the entertainm­ent industry, not the news industry.”

“Also, when it comes to breaking local news, people still rely on the longer-running shows such as 24 Oras and TV Patrol,” she added.

The closure of CNN Philippine­s will happen weeks before the ABSCBN News Channel, a 24/7 pay TV news channel, goes off air on its main platform SkyCable, which will close shop on Feb. 27.

JOB LOSS

Terrestria­l and cable TV viewing is still substantia­l in the country “despite the presence of streaming services and video-sharing social media platforms,” Mr. Arao said.

Data from Kantar showed that about 93 million people still watch TV, with about 22 million households that own television sets, he noted.

Ms. Khan said the closure of CNN Philippine­s would not have the same impact as the closure of ABS-CBN since it only has a 24% audience share based on Reuters’ 2023 Institute Digital News Report.

“Its local coverage was largely Metro Manila-based, and it was also airing imported news programs that any interested person could also watch on the CNN Internatio­nal cable channel,” she said. “What saddens me the most is the loss of more jobs in the news industry.”

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