All hail Ita Buttrose! The new chairwoman of Her ABC has been chosen, and she is a fierce second-wave feminist full of fresh ideas. The founding editor of Cleo, former editor of Women’s Weekly and current blonde woman on breakfast TV is ready to make some big changes to the commercial, I mean, national broadcaster.
The decision was handed down from the government on Wednesday, after smartly ignoring an independent panel we taxpayers already paid for, and then randomly pointing in the direction of someone who might not hate them. Unfortunately, they picked a woman, but besides that, Prime Minister Scott Morrison is thrilled.
There’s speculation that this bold appointment might signal too much influence from the government, with whispers that the ABC might fall into corporate hands. We at Crikey want you to pop a bottle of Jacob’s Creek chardy and put these worries to rest, as we give you an exclusive look at the brand new ABC line-up.
Get Krack!n
Created by Kates McLennan and McCartney, this breakfast show featuring two white women co-hosts is regarded as one of the ABC’s best satires, but Buttrose thinks it has more to give. This will become the flagship program for the ABC, extending to a full six hours every weekday morning and changing nothing but the guest list, the number of jokes allowed (two), and the colour of Kate McCartney’s hair. She’s a blonde now! Buttrose is in talks with Danoz Direct to sponsor.
The (Women’s) Weekly
This reimagining of Wednesday night news satire program The Weekly is for women, and men (if their wives aren’t looking). Charlie Pickering will stay on as host, giving weight-loss tips, touring us through gardens and interviewing important figureheads like Dino from Married at First Sight. Feminism!
Royal Watch
Buttrose famously quit her co-hosting job with Studio 10 after the network overlooked her for their royal wedding coverage. Holding onto this resentment like a pit-bull with lockjaw, Buttrose will host a nightly program in which she watches members of the British Royal Family from various balconies, elevated platforms, treetops and neighbourhood windows. This will replace ABC News on the main channel at 7pm.
All ABC radio station broadcasts will also be replaced with droll narration of what each member of the royal family are doing at any given time.
ABC news
The ABC News channel will be reformatted as a live stream of an all-day panel discussion featuring white people giving their opinions on the Northern Territory Intervention and what colour lawn chairs you should use in your backyard. Elevating Indigenous voices is paramount to the government’s, I mean, Buttrose’s vision, which is why parliamentary special envoy for Indigenous affairs Tony Abbott is being brought on as a regular guest.
Q&A
This beloved Monday night staple will remain unchanged.
Question time
Our national broadcaster is unique in its wide coverage of parliamentary affairs, and this will continue with a reinvigorated question time in which our politicians are sat down and asked the tough questions, like “What is the capital of Venezuela?” And “Who stars in the titular role of the upcoming film Captain Marvel?”
Midsomer Murders
All weekend programming will be replaced with a Midsomer Murders marathon. Buttrose is quoted as saying “just give them what they want”.
So Bert Newton turned them down, eh?
“All weekend programming will be replaced with a Midsomer Murders marathon.” Can’t it be alternated with “Death in Paradise”? Then Q&A could be replaced (please, pretty please) with a Monday night quiz called “Body count” where contestants try to calculate how many deaths occurred in each program, describe those that were the least lifelike and predict next weekend’s toll for each series.
Thank you for a good laugh (admittedly after some serious interest)!! I am not at all sure what will happen to the ABC and am deeply concerned.
I love the idea of Get Krack!n becoming the official flag-ship of the ABC. How good is Kerri-Anne Kennerley as Kate McLennan?
‘All weekend programming will be replaced with a Midsomer Murders marathon. Buttrose is quoted as saying “just give them what they want”. ‘
Satire, or sad reality?