It should be no surprise that Lachlan Murdoch is taking an axe to Channel Ten. He told everyone that there was a “difficult cost cutting program” ahead only a couple of months ago.
And only a couple of weeks ago, head of news Jim Carroll resigned. He, of course, was the man who had presided over revamping the network’s bulletins and creation of the George Negus current events program.
The plan had been to make Channel Ten a serious player in news and current events, but now it is reported that a fair swag of 100 redundancies to be handed out on Monday will be to jobs created as part of the brave new push into news.
I understand, though, that Negus himself is feeling secure. The ratings for his show are on the rise and management regards it as value for money.
The bigger picture, and the reason for Murdoch’s interest in Channel Ten in the first place, is the current view that free-to-air television might have a better long-term future than pay. This is a reverse of the thinking of most of the past two decades.
In the United States, cable television subscriptions began to drop last year for the first time in recorded history. The reason is the increasing availability of substitute services, such as Apple TV and Netflix, that provide access to similar content cheaper and without the requirement to pay for inflexible packages.
The flight from cable, or “cutting the cord” as it is tagged in the US, is yet to really gather steam, but the threat to established players from streaming video companies is clear.
In Australia, pay television has never gained the same grip as it has in the US, and for the past six months or so local media investment analysts have questioned the long-term health of pay television once the National Broadband Network makes downloading video content faster for all.
Telstra has introduced the T-Box, which delivers free-to-air and pay-TV content, as well as owning part of Foxtel. It is hedging its bets
Meanwhile, Murdoch and Packer bought into Channel Ten, giving them a foothold in free-to-air television after a decade when their main game seemed to be pay.
But the theory that there is a brightish future for free to air TV can only work if the costs are low. These will be lean and mean operations. Hence, cut, cut and cut again, while trying to target profitable audiences with the new digital multichannels. Hence the recent relaunch of Ten’s all sport digital channel One as a more general male-oriented channel.
In this context, the current federal government convergence review of broadcasting regulation is crucial.
Free-to-air television stations are arguing for cuts in licence fees and “more flexibility” in quotas for local content, to put free-to-air broadcasters on a more equal footing with cheap-as-chips oversees-based internet content providers.
At present, different regulatory regimes apply to free-to-air TV and pay TV, and content delivered over the internet is not regulated as broadcasting at all, due to then communication minister Richard Alston’s 2000 decision that “streaming is not broadcasting”, now looking distinctly short sighted.
So, can it all work? Nobody really knows. A great deal depends on the convergence review, and most players are hedging their best.
But regardless of the outcome, low cost and tightly targeted are clearly the way of the future.
Its interesting that the one thing that would make this work for Murdoch Jnr is the the thing that Murdoch Snrs newspapers are so against, the NBN. As I sit here in California the family is, Skyping to Granparents in OZ, listening to Dylan on Sirius, streaming a Netflix movie and watching a baseball game on MLB live all on an internet connection that costs $55 a month. The same thing on Telstra would use up its usage allowance within a day or two.
andrew bolt should be the first to go
I can’t wait to hear the wildly imaginative way in which Tony Abbott will link this 100 job loss to the Greens having the balance of power in the Senate and putting a price on carbon polluters.
Channel 10 programmers have not had a clue for years.
This is painfully clear with the appearance of two neanderthal idiots fouling our tv’s on Channel 10 from 4.00 p.m. in “the Couch”. What a dreadful waste of money, and hardly the stuff for youngsters to find after school.
Return to comedy. “Cheers’ & ‘Roseanne’ have a strong following.
Bring us the “LAUGH-IN”tapes – it taught happy, pleasant humour with funny skits and lots of giggles for all.
Today’s audience needs a return to laughter & ‘Laugh In’ would do it well.
A strong cult following the first time – Channel 10 may succeed again with the second.
Sorry to the 100 who lose their incomes but really what has Channel Ten ever done to justify it’s existence. It’s programs are so bad the bring in old George who has never been the sharpest tool in the shed. As a business it doesn’t work either why else are they laying off workers.
Make it an under thirty channel but legislate that no program staff can be over 30. We have all this rubbish on Tv can’t we have something interesting. Make it Labour biased one week the Libs next week long weekends for the greens. We could pro and anti foreign ownership programs. Wow it coul be good.
While we are at it let’s get rid of SBS and just have the World movies channel instead.
Even the Abc has sunk to new levels of blandness.
Crikey wake up Ustraya and get a new set of channels have ten of them.