[NUJ Bristol] With a US-owned ITV.....

Tony Gosling bristol@nuj.org.uk
Tue, 23 Sep 2003 11:17:49 +0100


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<font face=3D"Book Antiqua, Bookman" size=3D5>&quot;The only television
executives you hear arguing in favour of a US- owned ITV are those who
stand to grab some of the dollar bills that come fluttering in their
direction when CBS or whoever begins waving its wallet.&quot;<br><br>
<br>
</font>The Media Column: 'With a US-owned ITV, Britain will become, in TV
terms, the 51st state'<br><br>
<a href=3D"http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/media/story.jsp?story=3D446197"=
 eudora=3D"autourl">http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/media/story.jsp?story=
=3D446197<br><br>
</a>By Vincent Graff<br><br>
23 September 2003<br><br>
Greg Dyke had two things to get off his chest at the close of the Royal
Television Society's convention in Cambridge at the weekend. The first
was the &quot;bullshit&quot; - his word - that lay behind the
Government's decision to lay open ITV to predators from America. (CBS,
care of its parent company, Viacom, will be able to own ITV, but no
British firm is allowed to own CBS.) The BBC director general is still
raging about the two- month-old Communications Act. British broadcasting
has been protected from American ownership for decades; the decision to
throw that protection away - &quot;I don't think it came from anywhere
except a small c=F4terie in Downing Street&quot; - was
&quot;nonsense&quot;.<br><br>
He is right; of course he is. The only television executives you hear
arguing in favour of a US- owned ITV are those who stand to grab some of
the dollar bills that come fluttering in their direction when CBS or
whoever begins waving its wallet. The idea that Americans, seemingly just
by virtue of being American, will be able to sprinkle a bit of magic
management juice on to ITV and turn it into a super whizz-bang company is
insulting.<br><br>
Worse than that, any American owner will be straining at the leash to
offload its biggest brands on to its latest market. With an American ITV,
Britain could easily become, in TV terms, the 51st state.<br><br>
Rather than choose to invest more heavily in programming, as the
Government insists will happen, any US broadcaster who has just spent a
fortune on buying the company is likely to take money out of ITV's pot,
not put more in.<br><br>
What followed Dyke's comments was a predictable outburst from the
Downing- Street-c=F4terie-member Ed Richards - the Prime Minister's former
special adviser on media - and some robot-speak from the Broadcasting
minister Lord McIntosh. Lord M is a member of the Government who knows
his buzzwords off by heart and may even believe one or two of them.
&quot;We have the protections&quot;, he said, &quot;that are necessary to
maintain the standards of public-service broadcasting, to maintain our
quality and diversity and to protect plurality.&quot; And Graham Norton
has plans for a remake of The Ascent of Man.<br><br>
But that is all history now. The law is in place, and no one is in a
position to undo it.<br><br>
There is, however, another worry for Dyke: the &quot;scary&quot; prospect
of a new general- entertainment, terrestrial &quot;Channel 6&quot; from
Sky, which will compete head-on with ITV and Five. The new channel - it
will be called Sky This or Sky That, certainly not C6 - will be launched
if Freeview continues to take off in a big way.<br><br>
There are two broad reasons for Sky's plan. First, if people in the
future are moving to multichannel television but without getting a Sky
dish, BSkyB wants a piece of the advertising action. At present, Freeview
viewers get just three Sky products - Sky News, which is excellent, Sky
Travel, which is irrelevant, and Sky Sports News, which is just a tease
for the company's real sports channels. If 25,000 Freeview boxes continue
to be sold every week, Sky does not want to be left out.<br><br>
Also, any Sky channel on Freeview acts as a shop window for the company's
other products - on sale at a dish-store near you. If you watch Sky
Sports News for long enough, you may just want to see the whole match -
for a fee, on satellite - on Sky Sports 1.<br><br>
Any new channel is not going to happen tomorrow. By the end of the year,
Freeview is likely to be in up to 2.5 million homes (Sky says it is
aiming to have seven million UK dishes by then). There are now 3.3
million households with access to Sky channels via cable. Sky is saying
it will act when Freeview gets to the eight-million mark - but why would
it choose to give its commercial opponents precise advance warning? The
launch will likely come long before then.<br><br>
There is also the issue of rights to consider. Currently, Sky bids only
for permission to broadcast entertainment shows to satellite and cable
customers. The right to broadcast programmes on terrestrial is sold
separately, so it would not be able merely to whack its biggest Sky One
hits on to its new channel, even if it wanted to.<br><br>
Dawn Airey, managing director of Sky networks, can continue to insist
that any new channel is &quot;hypothetical&quot;. None of her colleagues
will say where the new channel, which will also run on satellite, will
leave Sky One. But there were no doubts in Cambridge that her plans were
real. Dyke said: &quot;I think you have to take this very seriously...
Sky has the spare cashflow and could easily do it.&quot;<br><br>
Carlton's chairman, Michael Green, for whom the problem is very much more
local, called it &quot;a real concern&quot;. If Sky &quot;starts putting
serious money into [original] programming,&quot; he said, &quot;that is
going to change the balance of broadcasting.&quot; ITV - British or
American - ought to be very worried.<br><br>
v.graff@independent.co.uk<br>
<x-sigsep><p></x-sigsep>
Bristol branch - National Union of Journalists<br>
10-12 Picton Street<br>
Montpelier<br>
BRISTOL<br>
BS6 5QA<br>
England<br>
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