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    1. And the world has moved on from Glossy magazines, thus I stand by what I said. Like VCR’s and CD’s,they are outdated. The expectation of a government bailout, thus enabling blame to fall at the governments feet shows a company with very low integrity and poor personal responsibility in job loss.

  1. Willie Jackson needs to be the new Broadcasting Minister.

    Willie Jackson is the person for this role. Hopefully he’s already giving serious thought to what needs to be done, the changes to be made, to regenerate and reinvigorate the world of broadcasting within Aotearoa. It would be great if, right after the election, he grabs the baton and is ready to hit the ground running.

  2. I agree with Frank here 100%

    I can’t watch TV any more as it is just rubbish, with the constant loud commercials that make my ears ring, and continual mindless chatter on talk shows, is so mindless that it turns a sane man into a screaming idiot.

    So Labour, if you cant get off your arse and as promised bring back the TV7 channel you constantly promised before the last election, then forget it and just trash the bloody lot.

    1. We are a poor country Cleangreen. Be careful about smashing broken toys, there might not be any more of the same. The analogy here is to be like Rekindle that arose in Christchurch, they build things using cast-off timber out of broken earthquake homes.
      https://www.rekindle.org.nz/

  3. It takes a long time to grow a spine when you don’t have one. And some people are just not able to do it.

  4. Frank the Tank – I bloody won’t let you roll over me without a fight. Everything is not TINA. We make our lives by accepting what we are presented with – or thinking what we want and pounding the table till we get it. All without violence, but the controlled anger of people who see the spectrum available, and know what is important to have.

    Radionz has reduced itself to RNZ because that is the current hegemony, but it still has the idea of being an informer to us of what is happening here and in the world, bringing people forward who can explain what they have found or done etc. Television seems to have gone into lala land. I would watch Maori Television if I still watched at all. And bert I thought you were wise but you disappoint me. The idea of compressing different media with different zeitgeist is facile and neoliberal. Things are what they are, and mixing two disparate things, is likely to end up in one lesser outcome.

    One good thing has happened – stuff NZ is in NZ hands and is looking to its future. Keep the newspapers in the loop of whatever co-operation government and media have. And didn’t we have a NZPA source Reuters-like? I suggest hold onto our gambling, food? chips as long as we can, and protect against some seagull financier spotting and whipping it out of our hands.

    The New Zealand Press Association (NZPA) was a news agency that existed from 1879 to 2011 and provided national and international news to the media of New Zealand. The largest news agency in the country, it was founded as the United Press Association in 1879, and became the New Zealand Press Association in 1942. Following Fairfax New Zealand’s withdrawal from NZPA in April 2011, NZPA told staff that it would be wound up over the next four to six months,[1] and ceased operation on 31 August 2011.
    NZPA was superseded by three new services, all Australian-owned: APNZ (on-going), Fairfax New Zealand News (on-going as Stuff), and NZ Newswire (folded in April 2018). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Zealand_Press_Association

    But to digress – see how Anahila Kanongata’a-Suisuiki progresses, she has been trying in politics for a while, comes from Tonga to here with a background of determination, sticking with the task and inclusiveness of family. Which is what we need here in NZ, and which her National competitor lacks. Whether she will turn out to be a hard-line evangelistic christian I do not know.
    In the 2020 New Zealand general election, she will contest the Papakura electorate, challenging Judith Collins, the Leader of the Opposition. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anahila_Kanongata%27a-Suisuiki

  5. I think this about sums it up! All in one beautifully crafted sentence.
    The NZ population has always been too small for advertiser funded journalism, it has ALWAYS needed State support, add a broken market where vulture capitalists use media profits to pay the interest on their debt and you have a hollowed out Fourth Estate that can’t be a watchdog to anything other than their self interest and it has eroded trust in the media which is being exploited by Facebook and unscrupulous politicians.

  6. Sadly 95+% of the media, probably in most OECD countries, is nothing but pure right wing propaganda. The presstitutes have no shame and have seemingly willingly sold their soul for their ’30 pieces of silver’.
    I don’t know what the solution is, so I lean towards the TDB’s suggestions as the ‘let them rot’ option seems more worrying than the present ‘FUBAR’.

  7. Bomber’s brilliant brain strikes again!
    Love this blog.
    The trust is goneburger.
    Long gone.
    And with it has gone the country we once thought we loved. Not all is lost….just most of what matters.
    Just as well the poor bastards who’ve been thrown under the bus are a damn sight more civilised than the savages who threw them under.
    There is still yet hope.

  8. “Facebook, an International Corporation who makes money by emotionally manipulating readers into staying online by prompting users with more and more outlandish content.”

    Facebook doesn’t provide the content on Facebook. The users of Facebook provide the content. If the content is bad, it’s because of the person sharing it, not Facebook. I share really good content, none of it from Facebook. All of it from the best independent media in the world, plus quality music, thoughts etc. Lots of others share crappy content etc

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