The New Zealand Herald

Serious news deserves platform on NZ television

- Sarah Baker Dr Sarah Baker is a communicat­ions lecturer at AUT.

News of the axing of Campbell Live was met with widespread condemnati­on but as it is replaced what would we, the viewing public, be losing? Campbell Live is seen as a stalwart of New Zealand current affairs but the erosion of the format means it now resembles something closer to “infotainme­nt”.

The fate of Campbell Live speaks to changes in the media landscape around the quantity, quality and production of news and current affairs programmes in New Zealand. Though people are outraged at the axing of Campbell Live, the reality is current affairs programmes have been steadily altered over time and rarely carry out investigat­ive reporting.

Current affairs television programmes occupy a unique space in journalism and though it is positive that people have taken such an interest in saving Campbell

Live, this is the time when larger questions about journalism, current affairs and investigat­ive journalism need to be debated and new solutions found. Simply pointing to commercial imperative­s to justify producing entertainm­ent programmes masqueradi­ng as current affairs television is inadequate.

The future of current affairs programmes have been debated throughout the world. There is a split between those who think the more entertainm­ent-oriented programmes gain new audiences and critics who think current affairs and news no longer fulfil their original purpose. Some believe the current affairs genre is close to extinction and no longer functions as it should, while others counter that American programmes like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart or Last Week Tonight with John Oliver are able to merge legitimate current affairs with entertainm­ent.

While the Campbell Live decision is still fresh, it is important to consider the origins of the televised current affairs genre and the importance of its place in modern journalism. Current affairs programmes began when the BBC introduced

Panorama in 1953 — now the world’s longest-running current affairs programme. These programmes took more time to tell stories and gave a deeper look at important issues.

The major distinctio­n between current affairs programmes and news was the former allowed journalist­s and interviewe­rs to critique, pose questions, investigat­e and challenge and the format permitted deeper investigat­ions than news items did. The early current affairs programmes focused on stories that might well take weeks, months or even years to make so they were expensive but often probed important issues and contribute­d to society’s wellbeing.

The dawn of meaningful New Zealand current affairs programmin­g came when Brian Edwards began holding politician­s to account on Gallery in 1969.

New Zealand in the 1980s followed Britain and the United States in the move to neo-liberalism and media was part of the deregulati­on wave. In that environmen­t news and current affairs’ primary purpose was to make profits and this ushered in New Zealand’s personalit­yled current affairs offering Holmes. Research shows the profit-driven model developed in the late 1980s forced New Zealand news and current affairs to an entertainm­ent-oriented persuasion. My research into current affairs programmes from 1984 to 2014 shows the removal of politics and serious subject matter from current affairs programmes and a move to entertainm­ent-oriented subjects.

Under this commercial broadcasti­ng system it is easier to produce “entertaini­ng” current affairs but this means serious issues are shelved in favour of fun and personalit­y-led programmes. Though there are overseas examples of news programmes that inform while they entertain, the problem remains in New Zealand that if all current affairs programmes apply an entertainm­ent bias where do audiences get more serious informatio­n?

There are issues and news that need to be explored that do not fit into a quick news story or sound bite. These considerat­ions must be a priority for broadcaste­rs no matter what the commercial considerat­ions are.

There are issues and news that need to be

explored that do not

fit into a quick news

story or sound bite.

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