It’s not often that media industry mag Mediaweek causes this much controversy, but an interview with Margaret Pomeranz has drawn the interest of both the Daily Telegraph’s Tim Blair and the Financial Review’s Joe Aston for a quote in which Pomeranz says the cost of going to Cannes is too prohibitive were it not for taxpayer funding.
Asked what she missed most about being on a public broadcaster, she nominated her annual trip to the Cannes Film Festival. The former host of At the Movies, now on Foxtel’s Stage & Screen, told Mediaweek:
“Cannes is really expensive. How I afforded it when we were at SBS, I’ll never know. A crew over there is US$1000, accommodation is through the roof. It’s too expensive unless you have the taxpayers’ money.”
“Anything is affordable if somebody else is paying,” mused the Daily Tele’s Tim Blair, on a post titled “Thanks for all the good times, suckers”.
The ABC’s trips to Cannes have been the subject of controversy for a few years now. It does cost a lot of money, but the ABC argues that the content it sells to global broadcasters by showing up and pitching its wares is worth many times what it spends to send people there ($150,000 for 10 people in 2015).
Commercial broadcasters send far fewer executives, a point Nine’s Hugh Marks raised at a Senate Committee hearing last month. Aston wrote that Pomeranz’s comment was “tacit confirmation” of Marks’ point (even though Marks was talking about sending executives, while the attendance of At the Movies was an investment in content).
In Pomeranz’s defence, isn’t one purpose of the ABC to use taxpayer funding to do things not seen as cost-effective at the commercial broadcasters? Much of the ABC’s content — hell, the whole of Radio National and most of its regional division — fits this remit. So did At The Movies, Australia’s only dedicated movie show for much of its existence. It built a dedicated and loyal audience (300,000 to 400,000 watched it on TV every week and nearly double that on other platforms, Pomeranz told Mediaweek) through extensive and nuanced coverage of the film industry not provided by the commercial sector (Now that At the Movies has been axed, Foxtel has moved in, something it probably wouldn’t have done while At The Movies survived. But most Australian households don’t have a Foxtel subscription).
Cannes is the biggest and most important film festival in the world — didn’t Australia gain from having one show able to send its experienced film critics to preview what was on offer? And yes, it’s not something commercial broadcasters would pay for. But so what?
If SBS & the ABC hadn’t bankrolled Pomeranz/Stratton’s stints in Cannes there would’ve been no other option for Oz viewers to obtain insight into the annual film event. For cripes sake, most Oz newsreaders & journos can’t even pronounce it correctly let alone report on it credibly.
Surely no-one would suggest commercial network piffle such as ‘Entertainment Tonight’ was capable of covering Cannes…
“there would’ve been no other option for Oz viewers to obtain insight into the annual film event” – other than the hundreds, possibly now thousands, of online sites, blogs, YouTube channels, podcasts and e-magazines that cover the event and its films ad nauseum in detail every day of the festival. You’ve written that online, you’re now reading my comment online, and if you surf over to Jeff Well’s HOLLYWOOD ELSEWHERE site (as one random example) you can read a day by day rundown of one critic picking through the movies there, who links to other critics, and then check out a thread at CriterionForum on the same subject.
Seeing Stratton or Pomeranz mention the name of a movie, show a 30-second clip from the electronic presskit, and then play 45 seconds of whichever random actor or director they could grab for an SBS-friendly soundbite barely qualifies as ‘covering’ anything except the host’s predilection for mooching around on a taxpayer funded junket.
You write with the assumption everybody has access to the internet. Many elderly people do not have the benefit of this technology; it’s only been in the past 10-15 years that most households owned computers & had the luxury of surfing the net.
Prior to that most Australians had access to a TV set with free-to-air content… as do most elderly people nowadays. Hence the Pomeranz/Stratton coverage may have been their sole option to catch even a glimpse of the Cannes event.
Harsh but true.
“Should News Corps and it’s investors foot the bill to prop up Rupert’s vanity fare The Oz”?
The ABC is a public funded entity, not a private entity, so your point is absolutely irrelevant, as you well know.
Oh look, he did it so I can too, and who cares if it is taxpayers’ money paying for my junket and food and probably 5-star accommodation? ABC personnel, when travelling, should stay at the most basic of accommodation, a nice room with some mod cons, clean and tidy, on the bottom floor and not the top floor overlooking some majestic harbour. With maybe about $30-40 for food, which would be ample in most cities around the world.
Nothing much more juvenile than a response like that. When you have nothing bring out that good old strawperson argument. Note how I did not use the extremely offensive strawman, and I did not use it because I did not wish to trigger anybody and send them scurrying off to their safe spaces.
I am such a nice chap.
So how did the crew fly (class-wise) and in which accommodation did they stay – to report on an event staged by a $multi-billion industry (involving Australian players and distributors) – on behalf of paying Australian/world audiences : that the likes of Limited News/21st CENTURY FOX and the rest of our msm didn’t?
Meanwhile has Limited News (“avid” defenders of “freedom of the press” – as long as it fits the Murdoch agenda) ever been able to resist the temptation of mowing down and baling up the ABC on whatever premise – “bound” by it’s Code of Conduct (see “Accuracy”) : whilst “heading” fact, as grist for it’s gossip mill? To pump out it’s product like some grainy spotted dick, with a rich under-currant of half-baked opinion masquerading as news – treating their rubes as suckers?
I was never a fan of Cannes – but I did realise it could appeal to some.
I did like their regular shows otherwise. Being a hay-seed of sparse means they gave my wife and I a rough idea of which movies we could mark down, to put aside our hard-earned to see.
Their divergence of opinion found me more often siding with Stratton’s tastes : realising others would share hers.
Mind you there were exceptions – “Burn After Reading” should have been burned before seeing; and “Lincoln”, while a great history lesson, was as turgid as the prospect as one Ford’s a river of grits.
NB ie the ‘(News Corps) CoC’ baling twine of course.
Just love it how you lefties just love being parasites on the taxpayer teat.
pomeranz has just confirmed what everybody knows, yes, even you lefties know this, that the ABC is a gross waste of taxpayers’ money, especially when it does not abide by its charter of being impartial.
And I could be wrong here but I am pretty sure that the money squandered on this soggy biscuit fest for lefties has never been recouped from on-selling of the product.
Can you imagine Nine running a show like “At The Movies.”?
“1 to 10 Funniest Movie Moments” hosted by Richard Wilkins, is probably as close they would get.