There are three major problems confronting Australian journalism — and the good news about the media inquiry announced this week by Senator Stephen Conroy is that it contains a specific mandate to address each of them.
The first problem is credibility. Very few Australians trust or respect journalists. The revelations about News Corp’s illegal phone hacking in Britain have reinforced that mistrust and, because News Corp dominates Australian journalism, acted as the key catalyst for this inquiry.
The second problem is the collapse of the business model that currently funds quality journalism in the commercial sector, mainly the journalism produced by four newspapers (SMH, Age, Financial Review and The Australian).
The third problem is the concentration of newspaper (and therefore journalism) ownership in the hands of News Limited — a problem that has actually been compounded by the arrival of the internet as a news source, which in terms of audience size is dominated, as in print, by News and other newspaper publishers.
The government media inquiry has been instructed to investigate journalistic credibility by addressing the effectiveness of the Press Council, ostensibly the body that regulates the behaviour of newspapers.
Many people refer to the Press Council as a toothless tiger, but that grossly exaggerates its importance. In reality, it is a meek pussy cat funded primarily by the newspapers it purports to regulate. Its wisps of hot air represent the self-regulation you have when you don’t want any regulation.
If the inquiry can formulate a regulatory structure with teeth — one that compels newspapers (and websites such as this one) to correct their editorial misdemeanours prominently (not buried at the bottom of page two) and quickly (within hours or days, not months) and therefore shames media companies into acting responsibly — that will be a major achievement.
Then there’s the collapse of the funding model for quality journalism, which is explicitly addressed in the terms of reference. The inquiry’s panel — former Federal Court judge Ray Finklestein and journalism lecturer Matthew Ricketson — have been given the task to investigate “how such activities can be supported … in the changed media environment”.
This allows them to evaluate a whole range of alternative funding and subsidy models, as well as how start-ups and entrepreneurs are encouraged and fostered in all kinds of industries in all kinds of countries, to recommend relevant mechanisms that potentially provide replacement funding for existing quality journalism as its revenue sources erode. And to encourage mechanisms to fund alternative journalism start-ups that would expand the 30% of the market that News Limited doesn’t own.
As for the unaddressed issues of bias and of News Limited’s dominance of journalism — these are red herrings. How could any inquiry possibly recommend anything in these areas other than rhetoric? News Corp and bias (often co-jointly) are permanent fixtures on the Australian media landscape, and short of forcing News to divest mastheads or trying to regulate bias — both ridiculous propositions — there is nothing an inquiry could do and therefore no point in putting such spurious topics on its agenda.
Don’t listen to the cynics and the vested media industry interests. The truth is that a retired judge known as The Fink, and former reporter who loves essay-writing, have been handed a grand opportunity by the federal government to make valuable reforms to the fraying institution that is Australian journalism.
Trust in journalists is certainly an issue and the lack of trust is due to a number of factors. One reason is the lack of will by journalists to have a good look at themselves. Let me give you an example.
The Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA) is the national journalist’s professional association and trade union. The Australian Journalist Association (AJA) is part of this union.
In the most recent ‘Future of Journalism (2010) report published by the MEAA
the results of a telephone survey of 881 members of the general public about their attitudes towards journalists and journalism, are detailed.
In the opening comments to the segment about the survey results, the following statement can be found. “Journalists regularly find themselves languishing towards the bottom of the list when it comes to surveys of “most trusted professions” … ”
yet the only survey questions which actually related to journalists and trust were:
“ Who do you trust to tell you the news?” and “Who do you trust online?”
Not one question investigated the reasons why the public have such a poor perception of the journalistic profession? Perhaps, the MEAA didn’t want to know!
By the way, can anyone tell me why the AJA’s Judiciary Committee/Ethics Panel is not listed under the Complaints Section on the Media Watch’s ‘Resources’ Web Page?
The Australian Press Council, is and so to is ACMA. Could it be that Media Watch has a problem with the way this complaints panel operates? I have asked Media Watch, twice in fact, but I have not been blessed with a reply.
As a freelance journalist where our article word rate has not increased in at least a decade, and whose union, the MEAA gives absolutely no support to the expanding freelance sector of their membership, let me nonetheless wonder aloud why the government has shrugged off a real inquiry into the future of manufacturing where we could hope for real support for real innovation rather than the usual government submission to calls for protection.
In other words do we have a government and opposition which does not know how to move away from the status quo in the face of considerable international manufacturing, trade, political, economic changes. You betcha. The inward focus of our politicians, with admirable exceptions, is mindboggling. Maybe it is just a reflection of us.
Music, publishing, radio, TV, film has gone/is going through astonishing changes post-digitisation. The value of digitisation is its democratisation in the use and distribution of production. There are efforts worldwide to find new models for quality journalism and its distribution. Crikey is one such example, and its unique approaches to news reporting/think pieces is why I support it.
My concern with the impetus of this inquiry is the bad relationship this government has with News Limited. No question that Australia is, in the end, a small market which News can dominate and cross-subsidise to ensure it does.
As a freelance journalist where our article word rate has not increased in at least a decade, and whose union, the MEAA gives absolutely no support to the expanding freelance sector of their membership, let me nonetheless wonder aloud why the government has shrugged off a real inquiry into the future of manufacturing where we could hope for real support for real innovation rather than the usual government submission to calls for protection.
In other words do we have a government and opposition which does not know how to move away from the status quo in the face of considerable international manufacturing, trade, political, economic changes. You betcha. The inward focus of our politicians, with admirable exceptions, is mindboggling. Maybe it is just a reflection of us.
Music, publishing, radio, TV, film has gone/is going through astonishing changes post-digitisation. The value of digitisation is its democratisation in the use and distribution of production. There are efforts worldwide to find new models for quality journalism and its distribution. Crikey is one such example, and its unique approaches to news reporting/think pieces is why I support it.
My concern with the impetus of this inquiry is the bad relationship this government has with News Limited. No question that Australia is, in the end, a small market which News can dominate and cross-subsidise to ensure it does.
However, Australians are showing they will buy offshore via online. And many of us are reading overseas news sites for specialist and international business, economic and cultural news because we don’t find the breadth in Australia.
An inquiry won’t fix journalistic quality or reputation, it may have invite and get some useful innovations/models for suppporting quality journalism. However, attempts to regulate markets in the past through cross-ownership restrictions collapsed in the face of the digital revolution. The change process will take time and involve not just media but the creative industries, journalists, academia, copyright organisations. There are already some lessons there – particularly in music.
[ it is a meek pussy cat ]
Comment moderated.
[This allows them to evaluate a whole range of alternative funding and subsidy models,..]
Subsidise Mr Murdoch’s income?
Let me think about subsidising, for example, ‘The Australian’s’ systematic assault on climate science…
Or subsidising Mr Bolt by way of subsidising the ‘Herald Sun’…?
But wait, subsidising Mr Akerman…?
Um, no thank you.
Next, please.