The ABC has flab to be cut

nero_bolt
Community Member

 

 

This is but one story of the waste.

 

I fully support the cuts.... Time the ABC ran leaner and stoped being a cess pool of left leaning types 

 

The ABC is supposed to be impartial and take the middle ground NOT the far left line as it does.

 

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"Good luck trying to change anything around here, there are too many lifers."

 

This was the advice given to me when I started as manager at ABC's Radio National last year.

 

It seemed like a dream job. I love the ABC and relished the opportunity to help steer RN.

 

 But having previously worked as a journalist, foreign correspondent, editor and managing editor at lean, efficient and editorially robust media companies including Australian Associated Press, Fairfax and News Corp for over 20 years, I was shocked by the culture, waste, duplication and lax workplace practices exercised in some pockets of Radio National. I was even more shocked by the failure of the executive to want to do anything about it.

 

One problem, as one insider pointed out, was the so-called lifers, a pocket of predominantly middle-aged, Anglo-Saxon staff who had never worked anywhere other than the ABC, who were impervious to change, unaccountable, untouchable and who harboured a deep sense of entitlement.

 

They didn't have a 9-5 mentality. They had a 10-3 mentality. They planned their work day around their afternoon yoga class. They wore thongs and shorts to work, occasionally had a snooze on the couch after lunch and popped out to Paddy's Market to buy fresh produce for dinner before going home.

 

They were like free-range chickens, wandering around at will, pecking at this and that, content that laying one egg constituted a hard day's work.

 

They knew they couldn't be sacked or officially sanctioned because there was no appetite among the executive to make waves, take on the union or make a case for any more redundancies. So the lifers just thumbed their nose at any attempt at performance management. Managers came and went, but they were there for life.

 

The RN budget was another shock. It was predominantly tied up in wages for 150 people. There was precious little budget to do anything new or innovative and you couldn't turn any program off, no matter how high its costs and how poor its audience share and reach.

 

The executive would pander to the whims of celebrity presenters because they gave the ABC "edge and credibility", yet would take for granted journalistic giants like Fran Kelly and Geraldine Doogue who present world-class programs.

 

While online rules the media world, trying to get some RN producers to repurpose on-air content for online was like pulling teeth. Plus the systems they were using were archaic, due to a failure to invest in efficient, integrated content-management systems that worked across divisions and on multi platforms, especially on mobile devices.

 

There was also blatant waste. Taxi dockets were left in unlocked drawers for the taking and elephantine leave balances had been allowed to accumulate. When programs shut down for Christmas, staff would get approval from their executive producers to hang around for a week or two "to tidy things up". One editor asked for his leave to be cut back by a week because he'd need to pop into work during the holidays to "check emails".That constituted work.

 

Yet attempts to tighten basic oversight of taxi use and leave, controls that are the norm in the corporate world, were frowned upon by the ABC executive and actively discouraged as "not the main game".

 

Programming and content generation was another shock. While other media organisations live and die by their ratings, circulation and readership figures, some ABC programmers considered ratings irrelevant. Some producers strongly resisted editorial oversight and locked in segments that lacked editorial rigour and relevance. So the weekly Media Report went to air discussing foreign press freedoms while hundreds of Australian journalists were being made redundant just down the road.

 

The ABC can be leaner and remain editorially strong and independent as ABC's NewsRadio proves. With less than 20 per cent of RN's total budget, NewsRadio employs brilliant broadcasters including Sandy Aloisi and Marius Benson and produces 5000 hours of robust original content each year that reaches a bigger national weekly audience than RN.

 

That's why these ABC budget cuts announced by Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull are not just necessary but vital to the ongoing health of the corporation.

 

Pockets of the ABC have been allowed to get too fat, flabby, wasteful and unaccountable.

 

The doors have to be prised open so that the winds of change that have swept through media companies around the world can reinvigorate our ABC.

 

The same efficiencies and workplace practices that are the norm in corporate Australia need to be front and centre at the ABC so that it remains a strong, independent voice that is both editorially robust and reflects who we are - a culturally, geographically and socio-economically diverse nation that doesn't believe anyone is entitled to a job for life at the taxpayer's expense.

 

Louise Evans is a former manager at ABC's Radio National and former managing editor at The Australian.

 

 

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/the-abc-has-flab-to-be-cut-20141122-11rtki.html#ixzz3JyCvJZ2f

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Re: The ABC has flab to be cut


@icyfroth wrote:

@gleee58 wrote:

@icyfroth wrote:

Actually, Hubs and I watch ABC a lot.  Love 4 Corners, Australian Story, Ticky Fullarton on Business, their excellent crime shows on Friday nights.

 

Hubs thinks the Chasers is hilarious, but, well you know how I feel about it.

 

Sometimes we watch Media Watch if it's a follow on to what we'd been watching.

 

Have watched a bit of Q&A. Stephen Fry's show.

 

So yes, I do have some idea of what I'm talking about when it come to matters of the ABC, thanks, Glee.


Well how can you seriously say they are biased?


It's blatantly obvious.


Actually it's not and it's been proven many, many times.  

The content is analysed more than any other outlet and it's been shown repeatedly that the bias story is a myth and a oft repeated lie.

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Re: The ABC has flab to be cut

Then there's all the right wing commentators (half of them are employed by you know who)
that appear on Q&A.How many left commentators appear on Bolt's or Jones' show and aren't cut off or talked (yelled?) over mid-sentence (a very common ploy on PoxNews in the US)?
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Re: The ABC has flab to be cut

 

 

Here's just one example of how wasteful and inefficient the ABC is.

2GB Ray Hadley employs 5 staff to produce 18 HOURS a week

ABC Media Watch employs 9 staff to produce 15 MINS a week.

The mind boggles at what the total figure of waste would be.
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Re: The ABC has flab to be cut

How often do we hear ABC stars saying they donโ€™t choose to work at the ABC for the money?

 

In fact:

 

THE ABC spends vastly more of its budget on wages than its commercial counterparts, reinforcing the governmentโ€™s belief that the public broadcaster should be able to extract 5 per cent through efficiencies rather than programming cuts.

 

A breakdown of costs at the ABC โ€” contained in the unpublished Lewis efficiency review, commissioned by the Coalition โ€” reveals the public broadcaster spent 46 per cent of costs on wages last year, compared with 10.7 per cent for the free-to-air commercial television industryโ€ฆ

 

SBS spent 31.2 per cent of its budget on wages, according to the leaked IBISWorld report, published last Decemberโ€ฆ

 

The ABCโ€™s annual report reveals its spending on wages and salaries rose 6 per cent โ€” twice the rate of inflation โ€” to $368.1 million in 2013-14 despite total staff numbers rising just 0.3 per cent, to 4679 full-time equivalent positions....

 

As government agencies, the majority of ABC and SBS employees are members of various Public Service

Superannuation schemes, which can pay more than the 9.5 per cent provided to most private sector workers.  

 

The ABC and, to a lesser extent, SBS employ a significant proportion of staff on the more generous defined benefit PSS and CSS schemes. These schemes have superannuation employer contributions of approximately 17-20 per cent.

 

 

 

Miranda Devine:

 

Last year, after more than 1000 jobs had been slashed from Fairfax and News Corp, Julia Gillard ... found an extra $10 million for Aunty on top of the $1.1 billion it gets from the taxpayer every year.

 

โ€œThere is no better place to be if youโ€™re a journalist than the ABC,โ€ news director Kate Torney declared at the time.

 

Ainโ€™t that the truthโ€ฆ

 

Of course, the governmentโ€™s modest โ€œefficiency dividendโ€ has provoked the usual hysteria from ABC luvvies. Quentin Dempster railed about โ€œTony Abbott-Rupert Murdoch **bleep**ryโ€ and ABC News 24 has been tweeting what look like paid ads for the ALP, which is promising to increase funding.

 

So the lesson for the Abbott government is this: You are going to be smashed just as much for making little cuts as you are for big ones, so stop pussyfooting around and cut the ABC budget by 10 per cent, like John Howard did.


Shouldnโ€™t Dempster be railing against Mark Scottโ€™s โ€˜**bleep**yโ€™? The loss of 7.30 NSW is a result of Scottโ€™s diversion of funds from programming to digital, not the result of the ABC funding cut.

 

 

Even if all ABC funding was restored, it wouldnโ€™t bring back 7.30 NSW under Scottโ€™s plan.

 

 

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Re: The ABC has flab to be cut

A bit like comparing a Commodore with a Bugatti Veyron,nero.One an extraordinary work of engineering.The other's a POS. ๐Ÿ™‚
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Re: The ABC has flab to be cut


@nero_wulf wrote:

 

 

Here's just one example of how wasteful and inefficient the ABC is.

2GB Ray Hadley employs 5 staff to produce 18 HOURS a week

ABC Media Watch employs 9 staff to produce 15 MINS a week.

The mind boggles at what the total figure of waste would be.

HAHAHA which spin doctor did you get this pearler from Nero?

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Re: The ABC has flab to be cut


@nero_wulf wrote:

 

 

Here's just one example of how wasteful and inefficient the ABC is.

2GB Ray Hadley employs 5 staff to produce 18 HOURS a week

ABC Media Watch employs 9 staff to produce 15 MINS a week.

The mind boggles at what the total figure of waste would be.

The mind boggles more that you can't tell the difference between a radio shock jock's program which promotes the newscorpse line and a TV product that researches questions posed by consumers of media products, or that you take the newscorpse mantra as gospel.

 

 

 

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Re: The ABC has flab to be cut


@gleee58 wrote:

@nero_wulf wrote:

 

 

Here's just one example of how wasteful and inefficient the ABC is.

2GB Ray Hadley employs 5 staff to produce 18 HOURS a week

ABC Media Watch employs 9 staff to produce 15 MINS a week.

The mind boggles at what the total figure of waste would be.

The mind boggles more that you can't tell the difference between a radio shock jock's program which promotes the newscorpse line and a TV product that researches questions posed by consumers of media products, or that you take the newscorpse mantra as gospel.

 

 

 


Btw, Do you know how many hours each staff member works per week and do you know if they also work on other programs?

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