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The ABC chases its fountain of youth despite stagnant funding

With the first two Albanese government budgets improving the outlook somewhat, operational funding will total $1.015 billion by 2025-26, compared to a forward estimate of $919 million in the last Morrison budget, Ward says.

Former Media Watch host Jonathan Holmes.

Former Media Watch host Jonathan Holmes.

However, Liberal senator Andrew Bragg isn’t convinced funding is the ABC’s biggest challenge, saying that the perceived cuts to the broadcaster’s budget occurred during a decade of massive disruption for the media industry, during which “the ABC’s funding had remained pretty much the same”.

“The ABC is able to fund traditional television and online journalism in a way that others would dream of,” says Bragg, adding the broadcaster by and large does a “pretty good job” with the funding it receives.

The Albanese government moved last week to kickstart a review into the funding terms of the ABC and SBS, as well as the governance of the two broadcasters, including the composition of their boards. Ward warns that inadequate funding remains a critical policy issue despite the federal government restoring $83.7 million in indexation cuts made under the Morrison government, as well as moving to five-year funding terms in place of three.

One senior source close to the ABC, who requested anonymity so they could speak freely, said the Albanese government had got away with a “sleight of hand”, replacing the loss of $83.7 million yet keeping funding at a level below predictions, should the indexation pause not have taken place.

Ward says an additional $40-50 million in funding annually is still required to return it to its 1983/84 funding levels.

With the ABC announcing job cuts and shifting focus from TV and radio to digital in a bid to win younger audiences, former host of Media Watch and ABC journalist for 35 years Jonathan Holmes says even with a refreshed strategy getting younger Australians to connect with the ABC will be an uphill struggle.

“The biggest challenge for the ABC has always been being a visible part of young people’s media habits. It has always skewed old, with Australians coming back to ABC television in their 40s.”

The difference now, Holmes says, is that young people aren’t watching TV at all, with streaming services baked into their media habits.

Sport appears to be the anomaly for linear television. Of the 1.974 million Australians who tuned into the Matilda’s opening game of the Women’s World Cup last Thursday, 20.6 per cent were under 40, with 41.5 per cent under 55.

Experienced TV executive Chris Oliver-Taylor was recently hired as the ABC’s first chief content officer.

Experienced TV executive Chris Oliver-Taylor was recently hired as the ABC’s first chief content officer.Credit: Fremantle

ABC’s content division arguably faces an even bigger battle, with ABC iview facing stiff competition from local broadcast video-on-demand (BVOD) services, as well as premium streaming players in Netflix, Amazon Prime, Disney+ and Stan (owned by Nine Entertainment, the owner of this masthead).

Former executives from streaming outfits are now littered across the ABC. Its new content division head, Chris Oliver-Taylor, was hired from the company earlier this year. Meanwhile, Rachel Okine arrived from Stan as head of scripted this month, and Susie Jones as head of factual, also from Netflix.

Last week, Oliver-Taylor hired Ben Latimer from Nova as his new head of audio content, overseeing both the ABC’s radio and audio teams. The appointment sees Oliver-Taylor move to get ahead of the looming radio review, after veteran capital city head Warwick Tiernan resigned earlier this month.

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The ongoing radio review is touted to bring sweeping changes to the ABC’s output, which in metro markets operates four stations. None of these stations have breached the 6 per cent share mark in the most recent survey in Sydney (ABC Sydney 5.6; Radio National 1; triple j 4.3; NewsRadio 1.4).

As well as shifting its news operations team from being linear-led, ABC managing director David Anderson said last month it was freeing up funds for investment in “high-quality distinctive Australian content” by reducing the number of ABC executives “involved in the commissioning and production process”.

In the 10 years from 2011-12 to 2021-22, first release Australian content broadcast on the main ABC channel declined by almost 40 per cent from 964 hours to 610 hours, according to past reporting from Ward, based on annual report data. First release Australian content (non-news) now accounts for just 10 per cent of total broadcasts on the main channel, down from 15 per cent a decade ago.

William McInnes as newsroom boss Lindsay Cunningham in the ABC TV drama series The Newsreader.

William McInnes as newsroom boss Lindsay Cunningham in the ABC TV drama series The Newsreader.Credit: ABC

Sandra Levy, a prominent figure in Australian television and film, and former head of television at the ABC, says the broadcaster needs to address the decline in scripted content.

First-run drama, comedy and Indigenous scripted content on the ABC has been between 38 and 44 hours in the past few years, she says, referencing ABC annual report data.

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Levy says between the years of 1988-90, while head of drama, she delivered 100 hours of scripted content, this figure excluding comedy or Indigenous drama, which is now included in reporting.

In each of these years, operational funding sat between $291-307 million annual the previously stated “real terms”. This is between $40-55 million above the ABC’s 2023-24 budget, per Ward’s earlier calculations.

Should the ABC want to compete for younger eyeballs effectively in a saturated market, Holmes says it needs to be equipped with a budget appropriate to produce more scripted content “than the pathetic amount it produces now”.

The radio review will be the next indication of how the broadcaster seeks to strive to survive, competing to challenge in its growing web of services, despite a stagnant stream of funding facilitating it to do so.

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