CBC
Part 1
October 19th,
2005
Ottawa - This will be the
first in a two part instalment on the CBC.
Although the
recent dispute between CBC management and the Canadian Media Guild
is over, the public broadcaster's
problems are not.
Before I
dissect the CBC's
problems and suggest potential solutions, let me tell you where I
stand on the CBC. I am committed and always have been to the CBC's
role as a public broadcaster. Indeed, in 1932 it was a Conservative
government under Prime Minister Bennett that created the Canadian
Radio Broadcasting Commission (CRBC), the forerunner to the CBC.
The CBC has had a historical role in promoting Canadian voices and
linking the disparate and often remote parts of the country
together. It is a role today no less vital.
However,
while many parts of the corporation are meeting their public
broadcasting mandate, others are not. RDI, the CBC's
French language network, is generally meeting its mandate; French-Canadian
programming is pervasive on both the radio and television side of
RDI (although the recent "dumbing
down" of French
language programming, exemplified in the decision to replace its
supper time newscast with lighter programming is cause for
concern). CBC Radio One and Two are also generally meeting their
mandates as public broadcasters;
while one may take issue with editorial direction and a
"Toronto-centric"
bent on Radio One and Two, both deliver non-commercial Canadian
programming to a wide audience. Likewise with CBC Newsworld;
it too is generally meeting its public mandate to provide news and
information from a Canadian point of view.
However, the
biggest part of the CBC, CBC Television, is also its biggest
problem. CBC Television accounted for 40% of the $873 million that
Parliament gave the CBC last year, and despite this money CBC
Television is clearly not meeting its public broadcasting mandate.
There are too many commercials and not enough relevant programming.
These commercials are needed to pay for expensive Hollywood shows
(like
"The Simpsons"
which has nothing to do with Canadian culture and content) and for
expensive sport broadcasts like Hockey Night in Canada (which
private broadcasters resent, since the CBC outbids them for hockey
rights using taxpayer dollars). As a result, CBC Television has
been acting like a private commercial broadcaster: chasing ratings
and advertising dollars in a vicious cycle that produces mediocre
programming no different than any other station on the dial. For
these reasons, CBC Television needs to be overhauled so that
it can meet its public
broadcasting mandate.
In our next
column, we'll
look at some solutions to fix these problems.
Toll Free: (866) 878 5556
Email:
Chong.M@parl.gc.ca
http://www.mikechong.ca/
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