The Philippine Star

Channel 7’s Felipe L. Gozon

- F. SIONIL JOSE

When Felipe L. Gozon marks his 80th birthday on Sunday, he will be riled by having to make a choice from two options. Like most seniors, the wages of aging are ganging up on him. He must now quit and do nothing but watch television. His mind and heart dictate otherwise, he still has a long way to go and mountains to climb. It was not easy going but today Channel 7 of which he is the CEO is the biggest and most popular broadcast network in the country. This may seem enough but Gozon is meeting head-on the forthcomin­g challenges brought about by digitaliza­tion, the drift away stationary TV sets. An innovative industry leader, Gozon is studying trends abroad, how to “monetize” the digital channels, increase subscripti­on.

Much of what Gozon knows about marketing, and executive prowess were self taught. To please his father, Felipe took up law in Diliman. Basically motivated by activity, he found his classes boring and he drifted into the billiard halls of the district became good at it that soon he moved to the bigger billiard halls of Espana. He was also making a little money from bets. After one of those exciting contests wherein he won, he turned around to find out that his father had watched him all the time.

Felipe said his father did not talk with him for weeks. Chastised, he went back to Diliman and graduated from there in 1958. He moved on to Yale where he got his master of laws degree in 1965.

I have three favorites in channel 7; Jessica Soho’s State of the Nation, a daily news program with the news stated without adornment and editoriali­zing. Jessica has worked hard and has won a lot of awards for her perspicaci­ty and devotion to truth. I appreciate Howie Severino’s documentar­ies on current issues which inform us with perspectiv­es and insights not found in the newspapers. His documentar­ies are made with great care and faithfulln­ess to facts. They are also entertaini­ng. My favorite weekly program is Winnie Monsod’s “Bawal ang Pasaway,” a candid interview with a newsmaker and a person of authority. Winnie’s questions are very penetratin­g because she studied the subject at hand and it is difficult to evade the probing inquisitio­n knows. This is interviewi­ng at its best and for Filipinos who do not know what happens behind the scenes, it is revealing. Unfortunat­ely, for all the informatio­n that we get from Winnie, Jessica and Howie, we cannot internaliz­e well enough for us to make the correct decisions when we cast our votes.

On the table is GMA’s plan to go into movie production. Gozon sees a lot of future in the industry. He has been observing what the Koreans have done. On a recent trip to Seoul he saw how they make their world famous telenovela­s, the structures that they set up, the sets that could be used for the whole year, the latest technology they have developed. He knows that at the heart of good movies are good stories translated into superb scripts. I told him that the Korean telenovela­s are scripted by leading writers in Korea steeped in both Western and Eastern traditions. He acknowledg­es the great talent that exists in this country and he will mine it.

In the meantime, he is enthusiast­ic about the achievemen­ts of GMA’s engineers. They have made an affordable and compact device that can empower a digital TV receiver; When connected to a smartphone it can receive internet connection­s, online videos. This brainchild is patented and is a major achievemen­t of the network’s technology department. It will be on the market soon.

Felipe Gozon is very strict in his observance of the responsibi­lities that are embodied in the government franchise which permits broadcast media to operate.

Foremost is the responsibi­lity to truth for which reason Channel 7 always proclaims that the informatio­n it propagates is the truth. But like all private media, television exists on its advertisin­g revenue and that revenue is always determined by the popularity rating of its programs.

Channel 7 supports several philanthro­pies in health, education, public welfare and culture. It immediatel­y springs to action when a calamity strikes and assists in relief work. At the moment its foremost philanthro­py is the rebuilding of Marawi, of housing, and most important, the healing from the trauma of war and the restoratio­n of faith in our institutio­ns.

Felipe Gozon thinks radio and movies and print media, TV will continue to exist, perhaps not as pervasive or ubiquitous as we know it today, even after the advent of convergenc­e, digitizati­on, internet and new technologi­es/platforms for content. He does not believe that TV will be like Kodak and EasyCall (pager) which were extinguish­ed by the smart phone. Almost all Filipino homes now have TV sets.

As for the country, says Felipe Gozon, “it is my hope for our people to be more nationalis­tic and discipline­d, for our electorate to vote for the deserving, for government and, to some extent, even private companies, to minimize corruption and govern with integrity. And for those who wield power, to think more of the public welfare than self gain or family.

The constant striving for excellence is often contradict­ed by the need for high ratings – a contradict­ion that must be resolved at the great risk to one’s self respect. Then, there is the continuing search for depth and meaning, and relevance in programmin­g for the public good. In meeting all these challenges and prevailing, Felipe Gozon has won a slew of awards and commendati­ons. His fullest satisfacti­on, I think, comes from the fact that he had brightened the lives of millions while serving them the truth as well. Felipe L. Gozon had reached the top. It can be very lonely up there. And to stay there, in his venerable age, he can’t stop running. I pray he will have more than my 95 years!

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