Sunday Star-Times

TVNZ, RNZ merger a ‘watershed’ amid misinforma­tion And media fragmentat­ion

- Paul Thompson Radio New Zealand chief executive and editor in chief

The Government last week unveiled the creation of a new public media entity that will incorporat­e RNZ and TVNZ. It will pave the way for digital innovation as well as adding new capability and services.

This is a big shift and is a lot to get your head around. In particular, the public media focus of the new entity is a watershed.

New Zealand has had various combinatio­ns of public and publicly owned commercial media entities in the past, but this takes the public media remit to a new level.

The new entity is designed to ensure New Zealand has one wellresour­ced, comprehens­ive public media entity that can weather the ongoing disruption­s caused by the almost unbridled power of the FANGs (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google).

Over recent years the media sector has been in flux, with commercial models under strain and audiences fragmentin­g and often favouring the products provided by the FANGs. This has contribute­d to increased misinforma­tion and polarisati­on.

The Government hopes the new entity will be strong and flexible enough to adapt to those challenges in a way a stand-alone RNZ and TVNZ would not be able to achieve.

To understand what the Government is trying to do, it is useful to focus on four key building blocks it is putting in place.

First, the new public media entity will be exactly that – an organisati­on that is centred on public media services that inform and connect the nation, celebrate our culture and identity and equip people to participat­e in our democracy. Commercial activity will play an important role and will be required to support this public media focus.

Second, the entity will operate under a public media charter that will enshrine in law its editorial independen­ce. The Charter will be the north star for the organisati­on, requiring it aspire to and deliver the best attributes of public media. The draft charter that is proposed in the Cabinet paper looks promising. This, more than anything else this, will ultimately determine the direction of the new entity, its tone and culture and the services it provides.

Third, the policy places a strong emphasis on the new entity’s obligation to support and recognise the ‘‘Ma¯ ori Crown relationsh­ip’’. This is another big change. Indeed, the purpose of the new entity will require it to contribute to a ‘‘valued, visible,

The only way to ensure trust in the media is to ensure people have a range of sources and perspectiv­es to choose from.

and flourishin­g te reo Ma¯ ori me nga¯ tikanga Ma¯ ori’’. This is vital as the new entity, from day one, needs to capture what makes Aotearoa New Zealand unique, including Te Tiriti. The new entity’s board will include at least two members with Te Ao Ma¯ ori and tikanga Ma¯ ori expertise.

And fourth, the new entity will be required to collaborat­e with other media and support the overall health of the wider media system. This recognises the critical importance of sustaining a plurality of media sources and perspectiv­es in the years ahead.

Trusted, independen­t news and current affairs underpin our democracy. The only way to ensure trust in the media is to ensure people can choose from a range of sources and perspectiv­es.

The new entity will need to support that diversity in meaningful ways, for example, by training the next generation of reporters, producers, presenters, and programme makers for the benefit of the wider industry.

Public media institutio­ns around the world have been on the back foot recently.

In many countries publicly owned and funded broadcaste­rs have been reined-in, leaned on and co-opted to serve political ends.

This is happening to a shocking degree in Hong Kong, Turkey, Slovenia and Hungary, and in southern Africa as authoritar­ian regimes flexed their muscles.

But even in Australia and the UK it has been tough for the ABC and BBC with attempts to question the pivotal role played by feisty, independen­t public media in a time of crisis and heightened polarisati­on.

This all points to the value of strong public media to our democratic processes. Both RNZ and TVNZ carry strong reputation­s internatio­nally. The rebuilding of our public media mandate will enhance that.

Much is still be determined, including funding levels, and no doubt there will be intense public debate when the draft legislatio­n is opened for public submission­s.

RNZ is up for the challenge and will work hard to contribute our valued services and our public media ethos and expertise to the new entity.

The bottom line will be ensuring all the people of New Zealand benefit.

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