(First published in the Nelson Mail and Manawatu Standard, November 20.)
There’s an “under new management” sign, figuratively
speaking, outside Radio New Zealand’s head office in Wellington.
Paul Thompson, former editorial chief of the Fairfax media
group, recently took over as RNZ’s
chief executive.
Thompson is a stranger to the public broadcasting culture
from which RNZ’s bosses have traditionally been recruited. His predecessor, Peter
Cavanagh, came from Australia’s state-owned ABC. The incumbent before that,
Sharon Crosbie, had been a high-profile RNZ broadcaster, though she had also
done time in private radio.
A former editor of the Christchurch Press, Thompson was well-regarded in the newspaper business. I have misgivings about the editorial course Fairfax charted under his leadership, but a former
editor whose opinion I respect once described him to me as the most complete journalist, in
terms of ability, that she had ever worked with.
As an outsider, he is likely to be regarded with
suspicion by some of his new employees. Not only does he come from a print
journalism background, but he previously worked in the private sector.
Public broadcasting has its own culture and ethos. Some of
the people who work at RNZ consider the private sector to be intrinsically
tainted by the profit motive. Many wouldn’t dream of working for a commercial
broadcaster, and the appointment of a CEO from outside the public broadcasting
culture will have come as something of a shock.
But we can only assume RNZ’s board of governors wanted an
infusion of new blood, and I think they’re probably right. (In fact I’ve been
wondering recently whether it would be good for the police too, but that’s
another story.)
Thompson is accustomed to working in a difficult
environment, having spent several years grappling with the crisis in the
newspaper industry. He will face different challenges at RNZ, the first of
which will be winning the confidence of staff.
I would be very surprised if alarm bells had not rung
internally over his arrival. Consider the following.
The board of governors, chaired by former prime ministerial
PR man (and Nelson resident) Richard Griffin, has a strong private-sector bias.
Griffin was RNZ’s political editor for many years but later worked for Jim
Bolger and is seen as close to the National government.
The deputy chair is a former boss of Radio Hauraki, the
Auckland rock station that challenged the state monopoly on broadcasting in the
1960s and opened the way for private radio. Another board seat is held by
former National cabinet minister Paul East.
National is not favourably disposed to RNZ and has kept its
funding capped since 2008. Steven Joyce, one of the most influential figures in
Cabinet, made his money in private radio and is not thought to be warmly
sympathetic to public broadcasting.
Moreover, RNZ employees could be excused for feeling increasingly
isolated, having seen state-owned Television New Zealand stripped of its public
service obligations and reduced to a wholly ratings-driven operation. RNZ is
the last standard-bearer for commercial-free public broadcasting.
Put all these factors together and you can understand why
many in RNZ might be feeling nervous. Yet the time has probably come for a few
changes.
They don’t need to be radical. RNZ National claimed to be New
Zealand’s highest-rating station last year, with a nationwide audience share of
10 per cent. Morning Report is the
country’s highest-rating radio show, with an average audience of 342,000. Obviously
it’s doing something right.
In fact I would argue that RNZ does most things pretty well.
A stocktake would find much to be positive about, especially considering that
its funding has been static for five years.
The government would risk a fierce backlash – and not just
from Labour voters – if it tried to hobble the broadcaster, as I suspect some
ministers would secretly like to do. Most people I know have their radios permanently
tuned to RNZ National.
I would go further and suggest RNZ has never been more
important, especially as a source of news and information. At a time when the
newspaper industry is in a state of disarray, the state broadcaster has gone some way
toward filling the vacuum left by the killing off of the New Zealand Press
Association. In doing so it has become the national newspaper we never had.
Still, I get the sense that a degree of institutional
inertia has set in. Under Cavanagh’s watch RNZ lost some of its forward
momentum. He was known as the invisible man by some RNZ employees and seemed
content to take a hands-off approach – hardly adequate at a time of upheaval in
the media.
Many of RNZ’s senior managers have been with the
organisation a long time. Thompson may encounter resistance to change – but as
an outsider, he’s unlikely to be persuaded by the age-old argument that “this
is the way we’ve always done things”.
RNZ has come a long way since the stuffy era when its
programming department depended heavily on BBC hand-me-downs, the presenters
were stiff and formal and the music played was mainly of the bland, light
orchestral variety, but some of its programmes have begun to sound a little
tired. It could do with some rejuvenation.
Coming from a background in journalism, where editorial
balance is a core principle, Thompson might also want to tackle the pronounced
left-wing bias that persists in parts of RNZ.
I have no idea what his own political views are, and
certainly don’t think he was a political appointment. But he needs to point out
firmly to some RNZ employees that the organisation is owned by the taxpayer and
has an obligation to be even-handed in its treatment of political issues.
The announcement that Sunday morning host Chris Laidlaw is
retiring at the end of this year is a good start, although RNZ insists the
decision was entirely Laidlaw’s own.
A less partisan approach by other hosts such as Kim Hill might
even soften the government’s antipathy towards the organisation, though that’s
not why it needs to be done.
I find it quite sad that you say that most people you know have their radios permantently tuned to RNZ. I used to be like that but increasingly in the last few years I look for other broadcasters and in fact other things to listen to.BBC is an example. RNZ has some of the worst broadcasters in the business and while you may listen to RNZ simply to avoid commercials even that means that there are other choices.
ReplyDeleteOne of my biggest irritants on RNZ is the low level of music variety. People like Jim Mora have a musical IQ well below someone like Wayne Mowat and most broadcasters under about 50 think music = rock/pop .............
I listen to National Radio a lot, while driving. I prefer advert free and I find the rapid-talking style of commercial broadcasters irritating. But I am depressed by the left-wing bias it shows. With rare exceptions, the Panel, for example, has a left- lean. Extraordinary statements are allowed with no rebuttal and no balance. At least the ghastly Bomber Bradley has been exiled, presumably to a comfortable retirement in his beloved Siberia, but the problem continues almost every day.
ReplyDeleteDavid Cohen has a great piece on this issue in last week's print edition of NBR
ReplyDeleteI couldn't agree less. I find National Radio right leaning from the very name onwards. Kathryn Ryan, Jim Mora are so right leaning they cannot stand up. National Radio is o quality non commercial broadcaster left in NZ. Totally disgraceful and unacceptable. RNZ needs a revamp and more intelligent material. The budget cuts are showing and it is becoming less relevant to Kiwis that want quality. Jim Moras program is getting sillier by the week. I've switched of and go onto the blogs for informed information. This is a very sad and disturbing situation. We need to be better informed in NZ.
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