Margaret Simons on Media

Caroline Overington Gives Some Hints on Rupert’s Plans (and tangles with Annabel Crabb)

   

UPDATE. Is this what Overington meant? Thanks to @MikeDobbie for the hint.

A session at the Media 140 conference just concluded in which The Australian’s Caroline Overington not only defended what she referred to as “her” media organisation, not only took some shots at the ABC boss Mark Scott, but also just possibly gave a hint about what News Limited is planning in its efforts to put content behind pay walls. In the process there was an entertaining tangle with the Sydney Morning Herald’s Annabel Crabb.

But first to the news, or the hints of news. Overington said that News Limited had many wonderful plans of which they were very proud, and they could not be unveiled yet, but she believed they would lead people to pay for content.

Then in the closing stages of the session, she referred to i-tunes, and how people had turned to paying for music that they could get elsewhere for free because of the entry of a “cool new toy” in the i-phone.

She added: “That’s kind of what we are thinking about.”

So what is it, I wonder? Some kind of deal with Apple, soon to release its new electronic reader? A competing product? Very intriguing.

As for the shots at Mark Scott (who was once, many years ago, Overington’s boss at Fairfax) Overington said she was frightened by what she described as the ABC’s pitch for domination in new media.

The position of of The Australian was secure, she said, because it relied on a benevolent proprietor in Rupert. It was not dependent on the “rivers of gold” of classified advertising. The Daily Telegraph was not vulnerable because of its robust circulation. But the Sydney Morning Herald and Fairfax – they were in real trouble. “Believe it,” said Overington.

Overington had previously noted that she was the only representative of News Limited speaking at the conference, even though “we” owned seventy per cent of the nation’s newspapers. This provoked the response from conference organiser Julie Posetti that senior News Limited people had been invited, but had either declined or failed to reply.

Overington described the potential dominance of the ABC as “scary” because if commercial media fell over, then that would leave the ABC as the only news source. Countries that had only one government funded news source were generally not the kind of places she would want to live in.

Then came the fightback from Fairfax’s Crabb, who shot off with “at least we are still profitable. We are not in as much trouble as you will be once your great leader drops off the twig.”

And later Crabb added: “I think it is wonderful that your survival strategy depends on the robust genes of a 78 year old.”

General laughter.

But the truth, of course, is that they are both right. Both News Limited’s The Australian and the Fairfax broadsheets are in long term, or even short term, trouble. And the ABC is looking increasingly important and dominant – as well as being the main threat to any pay wall news media models.

And it is also true that there is something worrying about this. I like the ABC and believe in an increased role for public broadcasting. But there is a legitimate point behind the several speakers at Media 140 today who have asked how the profession of journalism will survive if so many outlets, not least the ABC, increasingly solicit content from the audience, gathered for free.

The point I made in my session this morning is that while journalism will become more of a practice and less of a profession, and something that many more people will do, there are some kinds of journalistic dirty work that we will have to find ways of supporting if they are to be done consistently and with experience and expertise.

While Overington’s apparently uncritical  intense identification with her employer took me by surprise, there is no doubt she is entitled to talk about the difficulties and expense of professional journalism, having done many of the hard yards behind the breaking and pursuit of the Australian Wheat Board story at a time when that brought a heavy cost in antagonism from the Government. Could any organisation other than a large, powerful journalism factory have pursued and broken and backed that yarn in the teeth of attacks from the most powerful in the land? I doubt it.

And let’s not forget that it is a long while since the ABC broke a story that big. Let’s not pretend that all is well with the ABC’s journalistic culture, even as its boss emerges as an impressive industry leader.

9 Comments

  1. 1
    Posted November 5, 2009 at 4:19 pm | Permalink

    Overington described the potential dominance of the ABC as “scary” because if commercial media fell over, then that would leave the ABC as the only news source. Countries that had only one government funded news source were generally not the kind of places she would want to live in.

    Correlation doesn’t imply causation. Most countries that have one government funded media organisation are typically like that because they also have authoritarian governments who restrict competition and seek to control the news. If Australia’s commercial herd is thinned because they don’t get their act together for the 21st century, the safeguards on Aunty’s quality and impartiality don’t disappear. Not that I’m saying an ABC-only landscape is something I want – just that it’s not going to turn us into Myanmar.

    I missed this session on the live stream, so thanks for sharing your perspective Margaret. A very interesting reflection on both what News Ltd might have in mind, but also the mindset that seems to drive some who write for the company.

  2. 2
    Durutticolumn
    Posted November 5, 2009 at 4:36 pm | Permalink

    Hard to think of overington being among the inner sanctum of News Ltd when it comes to pay walls and Rupert is flagging second thoughts here http://tinyurl.com/y9l4p5j
    Once again we obsessing about news ltd’s problems and not cutting through to the main game which is where will our stories be published . At the moment the ABC BBC and Al jazeera seem to be the best games in town so we will play with them Once the private sector comes up with a workable model they can head hunt us back at inflated salaries. At the same time we should be exploring other ways of getting published. We are journalist who want our stories out there. We aren’t printers, sellers of advertisers or owners of large printing presses

  3. 3
    Posted November 6, 2009 at 9:23 am | Permalink

    ...] readers of previous posts, and the Australian Financial Review (which I am sure picked up the story all on its own and not by [...

  4. 4
    RICK68
    Posted November 6, 2009 at 6:19 pm | Permalink

    Rupert Murdoch who sold his citizenship for the Yankee dollar, and to suit his business there, is also trying to change media laws here to his requirements. Andrew Bolt and Murdoch have a lot in common, both are supporters of Bush’s Iraq war. Surprised the Taliban have not had a chat at this pair of war mongers.

  5. 5
    Posted November 7, 2009 at 11:10 pm | Permalink

    ...] Margaret Simons of the Content Makers, reports how Caroline Overington, senior writer and columnist with The Australian (part of Mudoch&#82… [...

  6. 6
    shepherdmarilyn
    Posted November 8, 2009 at 4:39 am | Permalink

    Poor Caroline, when her book Kick Back came out she slagged off on John Pilger’s writing and was forced to admit she had never read a word of it.

    One always is a wee bit suspicious of people who behave this way I think. I have read her work and Pilger’s. His wins in a canter for the very breadth, depth and honesty of his work.

  7. 7
    Posted November 9, 2009 at 8:39 am | Permalink

    ...] as readers of this blog will know, the best lines came just after that.  Crabb went on to say: We are not in as much [...

  8. 8
    Posted November 18, 2009 at 9:12 am | Permalink

    ...] Then there is the idea of new online products sold to tightly targetted niche audiences for a subscription, bundled with freebies and specials, as outlined by Mark Day a while ago, with the latter probably linked to  the “cool new toy” anticipated by others. [...

  9. 9
    Posted December 3, 2009 at 11:09 am | Permalink

    ...] for those who have been intrigued by talk of a “cool new toy” as part of News Limited’s plans to seek payment for content, Rupert spelt it out: Already we [...

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