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Brad P's avatar

Missing from your analysis of SBS is the online offering: the SBS News website was the 10th most visited news website during the recent Federal election and provides analysis and information for multicultural audiences that they simply can't get reliably from overseas sources.

The ABC has been overstepping it's remit by heading into SBS territory for a few years now: China Tonight being an obvious example. Modern technology has enabled parallel/siloed societies to exist comfortably within Australia for about a decade now but that means a strong and well funded SBS that provides specific and targeted programming to defined migrant communities to assist them in understanding, and subsequently integrating into, Australian society and culture is more essential than ever.

Simon Nasht's avatar

Dan, not sure the ABC MD was talking about "Compass" in his musings about what programs that seem to be rusted on to the schedule. A low-cost, often very innovative slot, Compass is one of the very few areas of the ABC open to films that are created outside the the ABC group-think bubble, and also one of the few entry points left for new and emerging filmmakers to get an airing on the network. Might be more likely Hugh Marks was referring to Australian Story which has become very tired, doesn't gather much YouTube traction and rarely if ever deviates from its formulaic approach for fear of offending its aging audience. Compass does a much better job of surprising and challenging viewers. Last year Compass cleaned up virtually every award at the Australian International Doc Conference - while Oz Story hasn't broken new ground in years

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