ABC operations

EXPOSED and the NSW Coroner’s review regarding the Luna Park fire

The ABC wants justice to be served for the victims of the 1979 Luna Park fire and their families, as investigative series EXPOSED: The Ghost Train Fire makes clear.

The ABC is cooperating fully with the NSW Coroner and NSW Police reviews regarding the fire.

The ABC has not breached an order from the Coroner.

Any suggestion otherwise is unfounded.

The ABC is concerned to ensure that confidential sources in the EXPOSED investigation are protected.

Last week the ABC produced a substantial volume of material requested by the NSW Coroner and NSW Police to assist in the current review of the evidence concerning the cause and origin of the Luna Park fire and the circumstances surrounding the deaths as a result of the fire.

Today the NSW Coroner has granted the ABC’s request for a one month extension to produce further material, with the new deadline agreed to of 21 June.

The ABC is meeting with NSW Police to collaboratively consider the terms of the order and determine how best to proceed with the production of remaining relevant material.

Tonight I am pleased to announce that the ABC has signed letters of intent with both Google and Facebook. When these commercial deals are concluded, they will enable the ABC to make new and significant investments in regional services.

These investments will provide a huge boost to the regions at a time when many areas of regional and rural Australia have experienced a withdrawal of media services.

Sky News are doing their best to continue their berating of the ABC by uploading sections of Senate Estimates to their YouTube page that they think show it in a poor light … quite honestly, if this is the best talent and most incisive questions Liberal senators can come up with, then they’re fighting a losing battle, but I guess their most ardent supporters won’t see that any more than the ABC’s most ardent supporters can see its faults … David in his statement says “When these commercial deals are concluded, they will enable the ABC to make new and significant investments in regional services.”, but we’ve seen and heard these promises before and they are kept just so long as there’s an LNP government that is being cajoled by the National members to ensure that the ABC services the bush as it should … unfortunately, as we have seen before, once such a government is next replaced by an ALP government, those promises disappear like the mist as money is returned to a centralist ABC in Ultimo … maybe everyone should just stop with the posturing and find some way that the mountain of dollars that is forked out to the ABC every three years is divided equitably like the Charter says …

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ABC, AIDC and Northern Pictures announce recipient of Indigenous Documentary Placement

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Award-winning filmmaker Daniel King has been named the inaugural recipient of the Indigenous Documentary Placement, a new initiative co-presented by the ABC, Northern Pictures and the Australian Documentary Conference (AIDC) to fast-track the careers of Indigenous nonfiction screen practitioners.

The placement will enable Daniel, a descendent of the Yuin and Awabakal nations, to develop his skills in documentary, factual development and production and foster greater diversity of voices in the Australian screen sector.

Daniel is a documentary filmmaker, cinematographer and editor who, for more than a decade, has focused on telling the stories of First Nations peoples. He directed the 2020 feature-length documentary Trading Cultures, screened on NITV/SBS, which traced the collaboration between three Indigenous Australian artists and three artists from Makassar in South Sulawesi.

He will start his eight-month placement with the ABC and Northern Pictures in late May, working across the development and production of their respective factual slates.

Daniel said: “I’m honoured and grateful to be given this opportunity to further develop my craft as a documentary filmmaker, which will enable me to tell stories that will enrich the cultural fabric of our society but more importantly better the lives of my people.”

Michael Carrington, ABC Director Entertainment & Specialist, said: “Daniel’s work in documenting the experiences of Indigenous Australians will be a welcome addition to ABC Factual & Culture, which is dedicated towards increasing the diversity of stories and voices on our screens. The ABC has a long history of supporting Indigenous creatives and content and we are proud to partner with Northern Pictures and the AIDC to help build the careers of homegrown creatives through the Indigenous Documentary Placement initiative.”

Natasha Gadd, CEO/Creative Director, AIDC, said: “AIDC is firmly committed to supporting opportunities for new voices and stories in our screen sector. We’re thrilled to co-present the Indigenous Documentary Placement with ABC and Northern Pictures, and are looking forward to tracking what Daniel will bring to the placement, as well as the new skills he will take away from the experience.”

Peter Anderson, Managing Director, Northern Pictures, said: “At Northern Pictures, we pride ourselves on collaborating with talented filmmakers, who produce original factual content which is both relevant and impactful for Australian and international audiences. Together with the ABC and AIDC, it’s with pleasure that we have the opportunity to work alongside Daniel in not only supporting our project slate but also providing him the opportunity to identify new stories to tell in unique and engaging ways.”

As part of the Indigenous Documentary Placement, Daniel will work with Northern Pictures’ Factual team from May to September on the development of their slate, as well as providing production support for current and upcoming projects and assisting the team in identifying and developing diverse on- and off-screen talent.

From September through to next January, Daniel will work with the ABC Factual & Culture team on their upcoming slate for 2022, with a focus on learning the development, commissioning and editorial production process behind the ABC’s distinctive Australian content.

Daniel was awarded the 2018 National Indigenous Music Award for Best Music Video and directed the documentary The Fitzroy Stars for ABC TV’s Message Stick in 2006. His short film Mirror Images (2001), starring Aaron Pedersen, screened internationally at leading events including the Rotterdam Film Festival.

Daniel holds a Master of Film and Television from the Victorian College of the Arts and an Advanced Diploma in Video Production from RMIT.

ABC named ‘gold employer’ at Australian LGBTQ Inclusion Awards

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The ABC has won multiple Australian LGBTQ Inclusion Awards and the coveted title of “Gold Employer”, for its achievements in creating a more inclusive place to work and more diverse content for all Australians.

The ABC was also named Most Improved Employer for substantially increasing the visibility of people of diverse sexualities and genders at today’s annual awards, which recognise Australia’s top organisations for LGBTQ workplace inclusion.

The ABC also won the award for Best External Media Campaign for ABCQueer, an Instagram channel about and for young, queer Australians.

David Anderson, ABC Managing Director, said he was “proud to lead a public broadcaster that enables everyone to feel safe, welcome and able to bring their whole selves to work”.

“Diversity, inclusion and acceptance are not just buzzwords at the ABC, they are at the heart of everything we do,” he said. “The ABC’s LGBTQ Inclusion Awards recognise the multiple initiatives and programs we have introduced to promote inclusion and acceptance among staff, including mentoring programs and gender transition leave. We support our people, no matter who they are or who they love.

“Such initiatives are not obligations but opportunities. A broad range of perspectives, people and stories makes us all stronger, more creative and better able to engage with each other and the wider Australian community.”

The awards are based on the Australian Workplace Equality Index (AWEI), which measures the impact of LGBTQ inclusion initiatives in organisations. The ABC’s annual score out of 200 in this year’s AWEI increased significantly from 105 to 177.

This year, the ABC released Diversity & Inclusion Commissioning Guidelines for screen content, to provide greater access and opportunity to under-represented people and perspectives – including the LGBTQI+ community – on and off screen.


Only a free speech warrior when it suits her.

Do we really need to see hear every fart from anti ABC Liberal politicians on this forum?

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Speaking of farts:

It’s official: the Liberal Party’s Victorian state council next month has an agenda item to turn the ABC into an “opt-in subscription service” in metropolitan areas. This is privatisation. Resolution initiated by IPA delegate. ABC is a taxpayer funded service for ALL Australians.

— Quentin Dempster (@QuentinDempster) May 28, 2021

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The proposal is for metropolitan areas only. Seems like nonsense but I’ve long felt that the ABC should reduce it’s metropolitan presence and lean more towards regional areas anyway.

For example there is no need for the ABC to waste time broadcasting live sport into metro areas if there is already adequate commercial coverage. Double J deserves an FM licenses in regional areas but I’d argue it barely deserves a DAB+ license in metro areas as there is ample DAB+ stations already provided by commercial broadcasters.

Extreme examples above I know! There are plenty in metro areas who would hate to lose the ABC Radio’s Cricket or AFL coverage and be forced to listen to commercial coverage. But a more sustainable media industry in the future is one where commercial and taxpayer funded broadcasters (ABC and SBS) co-exist and compete sustainably. A finely balanced compromise that slowly moves the ABC to be predominantly a regional broadcaster and the SBS to be wholly foreign language (ie. no US/UK English programming) and other ethnic programming is the likely future.

Anything could be put on the agenda. Means nothing nothing much.

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You do realise she was an ABC journalist previously?

Just because she worked there in a previous life doesn’t mean she has its best interests at heart now. She could be a disgruntled ex-employee for all we know but we know once they get into the LNP bubble the ABC is inherently seen as bad.

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the truth is most of the people who “worked there in a previous life” have the ABC’s “best interests at heart” … the problem is that many of the people who work there now only have their own interests at heart …

Didn’t see this coming:

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ABC statement on Christian Porter litigation

Christian Porter has decided to discontinue his defamation action against the ABC and Louise Milligan.

All parties have agreed to not pursue the matter any further. No damages will be paid.

The ABC stands by the importance of the article, which reported on matters of significant public interest, and the article remains online. It has been updated with this Editor’s Note:

On 26 February 2021, the ABC published an article by Louise Milligan.That article was about a letter to the Prime Minister containing allegations against a senior cabinet minister. Although he was not named, the article was about the Attorney-General Christian Porter.

The ABC did not intend to suggest that Mr Porter had committed the criminal offences alleged. The ABC did not contend that the serious accusations could be substantiated to the applicable legal standard – criminal or civil. However, both parties accept that some readers misinterpreted the article as an accusation of guilt against Mr Porter. That reading, which was not intended by the ABC, is regretted.

The ABC stands by our investigative and public interest journalism, which is always pursued in the interests of the Australian community.

The ABC stands by Louise Milligan, one of Australia’s foremost and most awarded investigative journalists, and all our journalists in their independent and brave reporting on matters about which Australians have a right to be informed.

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Michaela Whitbourn in The Sydney Morning Herald getting the story correct.

Meanwhile, The Australian thinks that the ABC backed down.

As if :roll_eyes:

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yep it’s fairly predictable that the ABC spins it one way, the Australian spins it the other and the SMH tries to play it straight down the middle pointing out that both of them have been a little loose with the full facts …