The Press

TVNZ confirms plans to drop Fair Go, Sunday, news shows

- Tom Pullar-Strecker TVNZ's Fair Go team

TVNZ chief executive Jodi O’Donnell says the Government is “very quickly being aware” of the situation confrontin­g the media, in the wake of cuts at TVNZ and television channel Three.

The state-owned broadcaste­r confirmed yesterday that it is proposing to bin current affairs shows Sunday and Fair Go and its Midday and Tonight news bulletins as part of its plans to axe up to 68 jobs in a cost-cutting move.

This came eight days after TV3 owner Warner Bros Discovery announced consultati­ons on the complete closure of its Newshub news and current affairs arm and any other local programmin­g that was not supported by partners or funding bodies.

O’Donnell said it had been a difficult day for TVNZ staff yesterday, “with some incredibly tough conversati­ons for many around the business, including the newsroom”.

Staff had been “pretty sad and upset” at meetings, and she was also very upset and angry that they had first learned details of the cuts through other media.

However, O’Donnell said she did not believe TVNZ could have handled the announceme­nt differentl­y, given the legal process it had to follow.

TVNZ’s Fair Go team posted on the show’s Facebook page that they were devastated to learn of the plan to axe their show.

“For 47 years we've been battling for New Zealanders, and we are not ready for that to end. Our next challenge is working out how to keep going for you,” they said.

“For 47 years we've been battling for New Zealanders, and we are not ready for that to end."

Former prime minister Helen Clark tweeted that it was “disgracefu­l” that Sunday and Fair Go were going, suggesting that cuts could be made instead to management or office space.

Midday, Tonight, Fair Go and Sunday were programmes with “a long and celebrated legacy”, O'Donnell said.

“The proposals we have presented in no way relate to the immense contributi­on of the teams that work on these shows and the significan­t journalist­ic value they’ve provided over many years.

“Unfortunat­ely, we need to reduce our costs to ensure the business remains sustainabl­e. These aren’t decisions we make lightly, and significan­t analysis has gone into the proposals.”

TVNZ remained committed to delivering the most trusted and watched news and current affairs, but what this would look like would change as it shifted to “a digital-first model”, she said.

“Our priority is our people and supporting them through this process.”

O’Donnell told The Post last month that TVNZ planned to become “digital first” in four or five years’ time, and was also preparing for the time it would be online-only.

But she said TVNZ’s decision about which shows to cut was not related to a digital-first strategy, but reflected its current challenge was to reset its cost base.

“Unfortunat­ely, long-form investigat­ive journalism is incredibly expensive.”

The state-owned broadcaste­r said just under half of the overall proposed job cuts were in its news arm.

For context, 40% of TVNZ’s staff were employed in its newsroom, a spokespers­on said.

“We won’t be providing a breakdown by department or team, out of respect for individual­s’ privacy,” she said.

There are continued reports that its Re: News online platform may also be axed.

But TVNZ has said that cutting its 6pm news bulletin from an hour to 30 minutes is not something it is considerin­g “at this stage”.

TVNZ has been projecting a loss of $15.6 million for the year to end of June, but that was prior to the current consultati­ons on redundanci­es.

O’Donnell said in relation to its current financial guidance that the situation was volatile.

“All media organisati­ons are really impacted with the economic conditions.”

Media and Communicat­ions Minister Melissa Lee said on Thursday that she was preparing a paper for the Cabinet that would look at “ways that potentiall­y we could help the media sector”.

She would not say whether funding TVNZ was one of the options.

 ?? ?? High-profile shows like Fair Go, hosted by Hadyn Jones and Pippa Wetzell, above left, and Sunday, hosted by Miriama Kamo, right,are among the casualties of cost-cutting at TVNZ.
High-profile shows like Fair Go, hosted by Hadyn Jones and Pippa Wetzell, above left, and Sunday, hosted by Miriama Kamo, right,are among the casualties of cost-cutting at TVNZ.

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