| Advanced Search |
The CI PartnersClassifiedsAbout Us |
Average Rating: 5 out of 5 (1 ratings submitted)
Television Across Europe: More Channels, Less IndependencePublication DateJanuary 1, 2008
Summary
The Open Society Institute (OSI)'s European Union (EU) Monitoring and Advocacy Program (EUMAP) and the Open Society Foundation's Media Program has released a new set of monitoring reports assessing changes in broadcasting legislation, policy, and markets and their impact on the independence of television. The 453-page report focuses on the latest changes in 9 countries: Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Italy, Lithuania, the Republic of Macedonia, Poland, Romania, and Slovakia. These countries also featured in the OSI's original Television across Europe project (2005), which covered 20 countries. The new reports are sequels, measuring the progress - or lack of it - in improving the independence and pluralism of broadcasting in the previous 3 years. Recommendations to governments, international organisations, media, and regulatory bodies aim to ensure that television can play its role as a "pillar of democracy and open societies". As stated in the document: "change is sweeping through television, and its future has never been so hard to predict. Surveys in several of the countries in our sample have found that traditional ways of watching television have seen a steep decline, especially among younger viewers, aged 16 to 25. The largest channels in each country have seen their ratings fall. Public service television, in particular, saw a decline in ratings – in most countries, a substantial decline. Although it increased its aggregate revenue across Europe, over the past three years, the public broadcasting sector has seen a drop of more than 4 percentage points in its total market share, while the commercial sector (both radio and TV financed by advertising) has grown modestly....As they attempt to keep pace with their publics' changing preferences, traditional broadcasters in Central and Eastern Europe, as well as those in Western Europe, are offering video content via the internet to keep up with the trend. Meanwhile their output is made available by the 'aggregators', which stream channels and programmes from multiple sources all over the world, over the internet." Among the effects of new technologies is the lowered start-up cost because there is no need for traditional infrastructure. Because this rapid start-up possibility exists, there is a need of business models and professional standards to sustain new models. Disbursed advertising revenues have resulted from this transformation, causing financial challenges at a time when there is high demand for new content. Online access means that citizen journalism is growing alongside traditional journalism. However, the internet may encourage audience distraction and superficial habits of news consumption. "...[I]f these fears are valid, we may be growing less able to absorb the more demanding (and expensive) genres of journalism - the same genres which broadcasters are anyway less inclined to provide, for economic reasons." Key patterns include: fragmentation in consumption; ownership consolidation - reducing the number of suppliers of media content; broadcast licensing relaxation; broadcast regulation contraction; and technology convergence - merging of telecommunications, cable, satellite, mobile operators, and traditional broadcasting. For public service broadcasters (PSBs), the key trends described here are over-extension, under-funding, and self-doubt. The trend in advertising is towards redistribution, as budgets are reallocated from traditional media to the internet. Key findings include:
ContactMarius Dragomir
Open Society Foundation (London)
Cambridge House, 5th floor
London
W6 0LE
United Kingdom (UK)
Tel: 44 207 031 0200
Fax: 44 207 031 0201
Mark Thompson
Open Society Foundation (London)
Cambridge House, 5th floor
London
W6 0LE
United Kingdom (UK)
Tel: 44 207 031 0200
Fax: 44 207 031 0201
Related SummariesSourceEmails from Csilla Tóth and Marius Dragomir to The Communication Initiative on February 26 2009 and July 18 2009, respectively; and OSI News on March 18 2009. Placed on the Communication Initiative site March 24 2009 Last Updated July 20 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below): |
Special FocusJournalist/Reader Connection
What are the best possibilities for journalist-readership connections? (you may choose more than one; please add clarifying comments)
|