Sunday, May 03, 2009

Gangsters and G-rated primed for gong glory, by Melinda Houston - The Sydney Morning Herald - 3rd May 2009

They're coiffed, they're primped, the Hollywood tape is in place and they await your judgment.

In mere hours, television's glittering luminaries will make their way down the red carpet, ducking and weaving to avoid Jules Lund, and arrive in the Crown Casino ballroom for their domestic bubbly, chicken or lamb, and the chance to take home a 3D chunk of television history.

Some pundits reckon Underbelly will scoop the Logies pool. But while it has rated its pants off (and, with 2 million-plus viewers, captured a broad demographic), when it comes to the "most popular" you have to look at the competition.

Underbelly versus Packed To The Rafters? It has to be Rafters. Kat Stewart versus Kate Ritchie (or Jodi Gordon or Rebecca Gibney)? No contest. The dark horse might be Gyton Grantley, whose fabulous portrayal of Carl Williams is fixed in popular culture.

When it comes to the Gold, it's an eclectic mix, including two much-loved women we've hardly seen this year: Ritchie (Home And Away) and Simmone Jade Mackinnon (McLeod's Daughters).

While it's not unheard of to win a Logie posthumously, this time we think not. Rove? No. That would just be greedy. We'd love Ian Smith to get it; he is the sentimental favourite. But on balance? It has to be Gibney.

Not just the mother we all wish we had (or were), and not just the face of one of the year's top-rating shows, but surely the sweetheart of TV Week-reading Logies heartland.

Other categories are more interesting, and might give Underbelly what it deserves. For Most Outstanding Drama, it has worthy opposition in both the Ten crime series Rush and the underrated Nine telemovie Scorched. But it'll win.

For outstanding actor, it has the field sewn up, with three nominations. You'd hope Vince Colosimo scores this one for what must be the performance of his life.

But for best actress, it'll be interesting to see if some industry types can get past a certain horror of the popular to see that Gibney, too, is doing the best work of her career. (If not, the wonderful Kat Stewart is equally worthy.)

For Most Outstanding Comedy, we like Hollowmen. Review With Myles Barlow was sensational, but perhaps just a bit too niche, even for a panel of insiders.

When it comes to Most Popular, in lieu of comedy you get a choice of factual, lifestyle, reality, and light entertainment - all of which turned up some quality shows in 2008.

Just why So You Think You Can Dance is categorised as "reality" while Australia's Got Talent comes in as "light entertainment" remains a mystery. But at least it gives both of them a chance to win. (Credit: The Sydney Morning Herald)

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Ten Network Encouraged by First Week of Ratings - Gambling911 - 20th April 2009

The Ten network is encouraged by its first week of ratings for its new high-definition sports channel, One, although the figures show humble and inconclusive beginnings.

The highest-rating program for the week was the AFL panel review show One Week At A Time, which attracted 59,000 viewers.

This compares with subscription TV's own AFL panel show, Fox Sports' On The Couch, which averages about 60,000-70,000 viewers each week, and Nine's Footy Classified, which had 242,000 viewers across three markets on Monday night.

Yet Ten's AFL coverage of the Easter Monday match or Saturday matches (Ten's night telecast averaged 655,000 viewers this weekend and its Easter Monday match 681,000) is likely to have attracted far more viewers to the HD start-up than any other program this week.

But in instances of such dual programming (where the network broadcasts matches on both One and Ten), the figures are combined and the One audience will not be released.

One's raw figures, on the surface, are weak.

Saturday night's first IPL Twenty20 Cricket match averaged an audience of 54,000, a figure which compares to a normal result for late-night English Premier League telecast on Fox Sports.

Some IPL matches on the Ten network last year drew between 200,000 and 300,000 viewers.

Nevertheless, One's initial audience reach promises to place it ahead of ABC2 and ahead of any subscription TV channel.

Among surprising good performers for the week for One were Tread BMX with 53,000 viewers (and 41,000 in repeat) and Poker: Asia Pacific Tour with 45,000.

This week's audience figures will give networks a far better idea of One's audience against subscription television's Fox Sports, ESPN and Setanta Sports as FA Cup semi-finals, key English Premier League matches, the NBA play-offs and as more IPL matches are broadcast live. (Credit: Gambling911)

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Stars turn out for Astra Awards, by Michael Idato - The Sydney Morning Herald - 21st April 2009

Feathers flew, tantrums flared and champagne flowed - television's other night of nights, the 7th annual Astra Awards.

The red carpet swelled with the likes of Magda Szubanski, Underbelly stars Gyton Grantley, Kat Stewart and Matt Newton and radio duo Merrick Watts and Tim Rosso.

"We got a laugh, and that's more than we were hoping for," Watts told an appreciative audience of television industry executives, personalities producers and actors.

In a room which at times seemed full to bursting, comedian HG Nelson complimented Foxtel for "inviting every viewer to be here with us tonight."

The cable kids channel Nickelodeon was named Channel of the Year.

The hit reality series, Project Runway Australia, which drew favourable comparisons to the international versions of the show, won outstanding light entertainment program.

The Lifestyle Channel dominated the audience-voted "favourite" award categories, taking out favourite program (Selling Houses Australia), international program (Grand Designs) and international personality or actor (Gordon Ramsay).

The provocative cable drama Satisfaction, which tells the story of a group of women who work as high-class escorts in a brothel, won outstanding drama and outstanding performance by an actor (female), for its star Alison Whyte.

Other notable winners included the critically acclaimed documentary Beyond Kokoda, which screened on The History Channel, and An Aussie Goes Bolly, the irreverent FOX8 cricket series which won outstanding sports program.

The awards, now in their 7th year, are held annually to acknowledge excellence in subscription television programs, program marketing and technology.

Pay TV industry executive Debra Richard, who heads the industry body ASTRA, said the winners displayed a broad selection of genres.

"Practically each of our genres shone ... with awards going to kids, comedy, lifestyle, sport, music, history, news and business," she said.

A telecast of the awards can be viewed "on demand" on Foxtel IQ consoles from Thursday, April 23. (Credit: The Sydney Morning Herald)

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Sunday, April 05, 2009

WWE WrestleMania 25 Tomorrow

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Monday, March 23, 2009

Foxtel boss enters TV funding war of words, by Miriam Steffens - The Sydney Morning Herald - 20th March 2009

Foxtel boss Kim Williams has weighed in on the war of words between the ABC and the subscription television industry, sparked earlier this month when the pay TV channel Sky News said public broadcasters should have to compete with the private sector for government money for new channels.

"The ABC sees itself as a solution to every content issue and editorial issue in Australia," Mr Williams said yesterday. "Well, who says? I don't accept that."

"The ABC is the one which is vigorous in its own defence, we make no apology for being vigorous in pushing forward our own case. Contestability is a good public principle in relation to content issues."

Sky News, which is shown on Foxtel and its regional counterpart Austar, argued that funding for a proposed new commercial-free children's channel or education channel should not automatically go to public broadcasters, but that there should be an open tender.

Sky intends to contest the ABC's $20 million contract next year to run the overseas TV station Broadcast Australia, which is airing throughout Asia for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

The managing director of the ABC, Mark Scott, had fired back that the Government shouldn't "outsource its broadcasting diplomacy to Rupert Murdoch's media empire."

Mr Williams made his comments yesterday after addressing a subscription television industry conference with Austar's chief executive, John Porter.

Both claimed that pay TV would prove resilient in the economic crisis as people went out less and looked for entertainment at home, with viewing levels up 10 per cent from a year earlier.

They also lashed out at the free-to-air broadcasters over their new digital channels. Network Ten will launch a digital sports channel next week, with Channels Seven and Nine following suit with their own new digital channels later this year.

Free-to-air TV will ultimately offer 15 channels in total, including those of the ABC and SBS.

Mr Williams accused the networks of making "false claims" advertising 15 new channels, arguing a dozen of those existed already and were on air.

Seeking to increase its market penetration beyond 30 per cent of Australian households, subscription TV is desperately pushing for changes to the anti-siphoning list, which gives free-to-air broadcasters exclusive rights to more than 1300 sporting events for their main channels.

While the communications minister, Stephen Conroy, has indicated he wants to prevent the free-to-air networks from hoarding events they don't broadcast through a "use it or lose it rule," the industry fears he may amend the list to let free-to-air show big ticket events on their new digital channels, weakening the appeal of subscription TV.

"We have to increase our level of lobbying, public relations and enlisting participation of stakeholders in this debate," Mr Porter said. "If we don't do that, we could get steamrolled."

Mr Williams said that pay TV and the football codes had to coordinate their lobbying "in a much more reliable fashion." Rupert Murdoch's News Ltd, which holds 25 per cent of Foxtel and 50 per cent of Fox Sports, also part-owns the NRL.

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Online Bingo TV

Online bingo websites spent over £7million on TV advertising in 2008 according to Nielsen Media Research.

With more than 230 different online bingo sites in the UK, the competition for players’ hearts and minds has become more intense and this trend is borne out by more than £7m spent during 2008.

Leading the spending in 2008 was Foxy Bingo with more than £2.25m spent on TV advertising. The second largest spend was on the new launch of Tombola during 2008, with a spend of £1.75m. Only these two sites spent more than £1m on TV advertising.

Two other sites spent more than £500k; Think Bingo spent more than £750k and Party Bingo spent in excess of £640k. In the £400k+ bracket were Crown Bingo (£427k) and Jackpot Joy (£414k), while the Daily Mail’s 2008 launch of Coffee Break Bingo was backed by a £330k TV campaign. One other bingo site (Littlewoods Bingo) spent more than £100k on TV advertising, spending £193k.

The full list of TV advertisers is completed by seven more online bingo sites which between them spent a further £300,000.

The exact spends according to Nielsen Media Research are as follows;

Foxy Bingo - £2,255,128
Tombola - £1,746,989
Think Bingo - £786,311
Party Bingo - £641,053
Crown Bingo - £427,275
Jackpot Joy - £414,217
Mail Online - £336,786
Littlewoods - £193,925
Bingos - £98,947
Bingo Scotland - £63,370
Love Bingo - £52,070
32 Red Bingo - £39,663
Bingo Palace - £37,435
ScotBingo - £8,390
Mikes Bingo - £4,725

Total £7,106,284

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Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Broadcast TV Profiles Updated

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Poker, d'oh - Fairfax - 17th March 2009

Making money in commercial TV is always a bit of a gamble. Especially for a network whose parent company is playing Russian roulette with its bankers. So good luck to Ten's Nick Falloon. Talk is he's replacing Big Brother not with just a cooking show but a new reality concept: live poker. And we were looking forward to repeats of The Simpsons.

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Monday, February 23, 2009

Underbelly Series to Continue Says Channel Nine Exec - Gambling911 - 22nd February 2009

In its second season, Australia's Underbelly franchise has witnessed massive viewership. More than 2 million people tune in nightly.

Channel Nine Direct Sales Manager, Ian Sheppard, told Gambling911.com's Senior International Correspondent, Jenny Woo.

"Underbelly is based on real events," Sheppard said, and these events have had viewers on the edge of their seats each Monday night. "The name Underbelly is really just a franchise to dramatize real organized crime in Australia so it really is a question of what else they can go to work on. Another great story out of the 1970's and 80's are of the biking gangs in Australia or New Zealand, the Hell's Angels and the Commancheros; they basically ran the drug trade. So there's probably a good episode story there, which could be branded Underbelly. It's really just a question of how many interesting and real stories they can dig up from the past in terms of organized crime in Australia."

Media Man, Greg Tingle, agrees.

"There is enough material for the next few years," he said.

Tingle also told Gambling911.com that another network was in the midst of airing a similar series to that of Underbelly.

That said, a number of networks back in the United States tried and failed to copy HBO's ground breaking series, The Sopranos. Like the Sopranos, Underbelly is based on real events taking place in a sort of underworld society.

When asked if the series is exaggerated, much like the Sopranos could be at times, Sheppard said he wasn't fully certain.

"I think that's a hard one to answer. The only thing I can say to that is that the first two episodes in the current series dealt with the murder of a guy called Donald Mackay, who was an anti drug campaigner in a part of Australia where a lot of Italian families were growing cannabis. He disappeared and they found his truck with empty bullet casings in a puddle of blood but they never found out who actual killed him. They reckon beyond any doubt who it was and Underbelly ran with this particular story where they actually showed the guy shooting him. But I suppose historically the records show that no one was ever charged with his murder."

Last week, the series touched on the Underbelly casino elements.

"There will be more casino themes upcoming," Tingle informed us, though Sheppard would not elaborate on the subject. "It's an area that has quite a bit of history in Australia."

What's really gripped Australians, perhaps more than anything else, is the amount of violence depicted.

"I think that people are both shocked and fascinated to know that all this was happening here in our city, Sydney and Melbourne," Sheppard said. "We've always been shocked when we hear about violence coming out of Los Angeles, Miami or New York. We've always viewed ourselves as being away from all of that. I think it sort of shocked a lot of people here. We weren't naïve to think that nothing happened but I think a lot of people were shocked thinking the worst of the worst." (Credit: Gambling911)

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Thursday, February 12, 2009

Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities to Employ Gambling Theme - Gambling911.com - 12th February 2009

Gambling911.com has learned that upcoming episodes of Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities will feature "some casino and gambling themes". The show's second season was the highest rated launch in Australia's history.

George Freeman, played by Peter O'Brien, ran a number of Australian casinos (gambling houses... "with no name" and unadvertised, sort of the opposite of casinos to that of the James Packer's Crown Casino (which is all above board and advertised, mainstream and is legal etc).

As we have come to learn, the world of casinos and bookmaking in Australia is quite fascinating to say the least, and this should play in superbly with the Underbelly: A Tale of Two Cities theme.

Media man, Greg Tingle gives us a taste of the old school gambling lifestyle in Australia:

"My grandfather, Eric Fraser Cameron Tingle ran a SP bookmaker operation from Newport Beach plant nursery which also doubled as a barber shop... tripled as a SP hangout. Today Newport Beach TAB is next door. A decade ago I used to regularly have a punt at the TAB with the late, great (and notorious) Big Time Bristow.

"I caught up with Tim at his home at Newport, just around the corner from my old home at Pittwater, 3 weeks before Tim's unfortunate (and natural) death. I pointed to Chris Master's book entitled 'Not for publication' and the chapter entitled, Guilty Buildings'. I recalled to Tim, ‘That's you isn't it Tim?' TB replied, ‘You nailed it in one Greg'. That's the scoop... its never been published or put in the public domain before." (Credit: Gambling911.com)

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Monday, January 12, 2009

Ferguson dumped as Nine scrambles for No. 1, by Conrad Walters - The Sydney Morning Herald - 12th January 2009

The Nine Network, conceding the need to rebuild its 6pm news bulletin if it is to have any hope of dethroning Seven's ratings supremacy, has dumped the newsreader Mark Ferguson in favour of the 60 Minutes journalist Peter Overton.

Last night it began trumpeting the journalistic background of its new frontman, who claims ownership of the anchor desk at Channel Nine tonight, with Mark Ferguson remaining as reader of the weekend news.

The promotional shots featuring footage of Overton in some of the world's hot spots is a clear attempt to distinguish him from Seven's frontman, Ian Ross, also a former Nine news reader.

Media analysts yesterday gave the network cause for optimism, saying Overton was likely to be well received and respected.

"For Nine to start to get a bit of traction of Seven, this is where they've got to make the inroads," said an analyst at PHD, Barry O'Brien.

"They've given Mark Ferguson the opportunity. It hasn't quite worked out. So I suppose in 2009 you've got to try things. Overton's got appeal, [but] television is always a roll of the dice."

Another media analyst, Greg Tingle, agreed that Overton's appeal would help Nine. He predicted an initial boost as curious viewers tuned in. He believed that community work done by Overton and his wife, Jessica Rowe, would extend the appeal.

"I would definitely expect the ratings to boost up, and I think the Australian public is ready for the change," Mr Tingle said.

The move was a "calculated risk", he said of the station that once seemed unassailable in the ratings. "Because, let's face it, Channel Nine can't afford too many more stuff-ups."

Nine Network executives yesterday stressed Overton's journalistic credentials. "[Overton] is the undeniable choice for us," said the director of news and current affairs at Channel Nine, John Westacott.

For the past eight years Overton has been a presenter on 60 Minutes, where he has reported from Afghanistan, Iraq, and Indonesia and as anchor of the September 11 coverage in 2001. He will continue to file stories for the network's flagship current affairs program.

The change in personnel is directed at Channel Seven, where Ian Ross has consistently won the 6pm competition for viewers. "As commercial television always is, we're locked in a very demanding fight for ratings," Mr Westacott said.

"The combination of Peter Overton and Mark Ferguson gives us the best crack at rebuilding our 6 o'clock news." (Credit: The Sydney Morning Herald)

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Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Unless TV networks adapt they will be eaten alive by the internet, by Allan Fels and Fred Brenchley - The Sydney Morning Herald - 3rd January 2009

The commercial television networks are quietly delighted by Telstra's exclusion from the $10 billion national broadband network (NBN) tender.

As both an owner and content provider to the NBN, Telstra would have given the networks two things they dread - competition, and a gatekeeper to the largely unexplored world of broadband television.

Using its new Telstra Media arm, the carrier could have effectively become a fourth commercial TV operator. The NBN operator will have some 100 digital channels to play with, opening the potential of multiple plays in home broadband free to air and pay TV.

Telstra's exclusion (at least in the initial stage) highlights the mega-stakes for television networks, not just in the broadband tender but the big shoe that will drop right behind it - analog spectrum switch-off and the return of old spectrum.

This is the so-called "digital dividend". Viewers get the snazzy new world of digital choice and viewing quality by the analog cut-off in 2013, while taxpayers get what the Communications Minister, Stephen Conroy, estimates could be worth $1 billion from reselling old spectrum.

But viewers and taxpayers shouldn't be holding out for any dividends just yet. Spectrum return and the resale dividend threaten an even bigger commercial and government wrangle than the NBN tender. At least a three-way tussle is looming.

Conroy wants to maximise resale, possibly "restacking" the old analog broadcasting services band to clear larger blocks.

Communications companies, Telstra included, are keen for new spectrum to meet demand for wireless broadband. The analog spectrum is ideal.

As expected, the networks are not only reluctant to hand back spectrum until they get all sorts of assurances about no new competition, but they actually want more.

Their argument is that, unlike analog where picture signals simply fade over longer distances from transmitters, digital signals fall off a cliff, requiring more, not less, spectrum to maintain.

The networks' real dilemma, however, is that they urgently need a new business model. And not just for digital multi-channel broadcasting, but for the even more threatening world of broadband, with its consumer promise of many different methods of utilising video content via internet protocol television (IPTV).

The networks - ABC and Seven excluded - cling to the 1950s mass market control model they have sold to advertisers for decades. But viewers - and advertisers - are fragmenting into pay TV and the internet. Unless networks adapt, they face a similar fate to newspapers: being eaten alive by the internet.

Foot dragging on digital multi-channelling illustrates the reluctance to change. They have created Freeview, promising 15 channels, but only the ABC has rolled out a new channel. Ten has unveiled a sports channel for next year. Nine and Seven are yet to reveal plans.

These are all standard definition digital channels. The networks have declined the opportunity to expand their digital high definition simulcast broadcasting into full channels, which government rules now allow. This exposes the much-touted HDTV as just a spectrum land grab by the networks, which now realise its high costs.

But territorial grabs will be standard fare as the NBN rollout folds into the analog spectrum return and its digital dividend. Telstra could even be a claim-jumper if it quickly rolled out its own broadband network, forcing the government-subsidised successful bidder to follow.

The networks want immunity from competition. They have it until 2012. They also want added digital spectrum space, but really crave subscription services to upset Foxtel/Austar's continuing inroads. Competing services must be a real issue for Conroy now that pay TV has snared about a quarter of the total viewing market.

Of all the clamouring parties in the new media landscape confronting Conroy, the networks will wield the biggest stick. Australians still like their free TV, no matter how much it has been dumbed down. Conroy will want to hand-pass them on into both digital and broadband while also gaining his digital dividend.

At the same time, he has wider business, social and consumer interests to protect as broadband impacts everything from video conferencing to delivery of government services. This means maximising open access to the NBN.

Crucially, the networks need a broadband strategy. After being dragged into digital multi-channelling they now need to understand that high speed broadband will attack all home video markets - particularly network TV.

Allan Fels is dean of the Australia and New Zealand School of Government and a co-author of the Urban Taskforce report. Fred Brenchley is a former editor of The Australian Financial Review. (Credit: The Sydney Morning Herald)

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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Launch into 2009, by Michael Ida - The Sydney Morning Herald - 29th December 2008

Every year is a lottery of hits, misses and masterpieces. Michael Idato looks into the crystal ball to preview some of 2009's most anticipated new and revamped shows.

ALL SAINTS: MRU (Seven)

The long-running and much-loved medical drama gets a facelift. More action-oriented storylines are promised with a shift of focus out of the Emergency Department and into the Medical Response Unit.

BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE (most likely ABC)

Jonathan Harvey (Gimme Gimme Gimme) adapts the rich and colourful memoir of Barneys window dresser Simon Doonan into a musical comedy. Samuel Barnett and Luke Ward-Wilkinson play adult and teenage Simon but it is the overly theatrical Kyle (Layton Williams) who steals the show.

CARLA CAMETTI PD (SBS)

A smart, intriguing drama about a street-smart detective (Diana Glenn) who is grappling with a family full of gangsters and a relationship with the dashing Detective Luciano Gandolfi (Vince Colosimo).

THE CONTENDER (FOX8)

Local cable television has delivered some of the best format adaptations on the box, including Australia's Next Top Model - which returns for a fifth season with new host Sarah Murdoch - and the flawless Project Runway. Next is this US boxing series, a local version of which will launch mid-year.

THE CUT (ABC)

In a world where sports achievement is as much about medals as it is about money, this is a timely drama from writer John Misto (The Damnation Of Harvey McHugh) that delves into sports management.

DRUGS, DEATH AND BETRAYAL (ABC)

The inescapable impact of Nine's peerless 2008 drama Underbelly has even reached the ABC. Crime writers John Silvester and Andrew Rule, who wrote the book Leadbelly, on which Underbelly was based, will explore police corruption in this documentary series.

GANGS OF OZ (Seven)

Another crime-themed series but this one is an observational documentary about Australia's real-life gangs.

HOME RUN (Nine)

Nine will try to regain its mojo with this renovation-competition format from Julian Cress and David Barbour, creators of The Block. The pedigree is solid but observers remember Ten mounting a similar show (The HotHouse), which failed.

JOHN SAFRAN'S RACE RELATIONS (ABC)

Absent for too long from television screens, the original enfant terrible, John Safran (Race Around The World, John Safran Vs God), tackles the very grown-up subject of race relations.

LITTLE MOSQUE ON THE PRAIRIE (SBS)

An illuminating sitcom about a small town, Mercy, Saskatchewan, on the Canadian prairies, where the local Christian community and their new Muslim neighbours are settling in - sometimes nicely, sometimes not.

MAD MEN (SBS)

While the West Wing set were talking up the brilliant US drama The Wire, the really cool kids spent most of 2008 chatting about Matt Weiner's deliciously brilliant series set in the 1960s advertising world. It has spent a year on cable but next year comes to free-to-air.

MASTERCHEF (Ten)

Originally just a replacement for Big Brother, MasterChef has become Ten's great white hope for 2009. Based on a BBC format, the local version will be produced for Ten by FremantleMedia.

MISSING PIECES (Nine)

No doubt kicked from development into production by the astonishing success of Seven's very teary, very compelling Find My Family. This series tracks down lost friends and relatives for their loved ones.

THE PAM ANN SHOW(Comedy Channel)

Australian comedian Caroline Reid brings the nation's favourite flight attendant, Pam Ann, back home for a series of studio-based shows. Each episode jets the audience to a new destination, with celebrities packed on the trolley like little Vodka bottles.

THE PHONE (Foxtel)

Justin Melvey does his best Matt Damon impersonation in this Bourne Supremacy-on-a-budget series, which sends unsuspecting members of the public on a mobile phone-guided race through the city.

PRISON SINGS (ABC)

Choir Of Hard Knocks maestro Jonathan Welch assembles a choir of female prisoners and trains them for several months for a Christmas concert.

PROJECT NEXT (ABC)

A sort of Gruen Transfer for big issues, producer Andrew Denton will entice "original thinkers, movers, mischief-makers and cage-rattlers" into a room to "to create an irreverent program about serious things".

RANDOM ACTS OF KINDNESS (Nine)

The charitable work of Nine's Domestic Blitz came in for a kicking from Seven's Outdoor Room this year but emerged a winner. This series, described as "heart-warming and feel-good, making dreams come true for deserving Australians", expands on the concept.

RESCUE SQUAD (Nine)

Maybe Nine was a little too clever for its own good with The Strip (cops on a too-cool Gold Coast) and Canal Road (legal-medico-murder mystery). It's back to basics with Rescue Squad, a "high-octane drama" that will focus on the professional and personal lives of rescue squad cops.

SPIRITED (Nine)

Packed To The Rafters proved that nice shows can come first, so Nine may be on a winner with this - a modern version of the 1960s classic The Ghost And Mrs Muir from Claudia Karvan, who will produce and star. It is rare for a show to sound this perfect on paper.

SUNDAY NIGHT (Seven)

Hoping to replicate Nine's long-running success 60 Minutes, Seven is launching a one-hour Sunday-night current affairs show (imaginative title, no?) though it will likely do so in the earlier timeslot of 6.30pm which could steal Nine's thunder.

TEN YEARS YOUNGER IN TEN DAYS (Seven)

Sonia Kruger helps challenged couples reverse the age cycle using a variety of non-scalpel techniques, including a revamped lifestyle, health and fitness, and a dash of new hair and make-up.

THANK GOD YOU'RE HERE (Seven)

Don't expect too many changes to the rules but front and centre is a change of channel. Easily one of the most successful commercial TV show launches in recent memory, Seven has acquired the rights and will re-launch the series next year.

30 SECONDS (Comedy Channel)

A scripted comedy from Andrew Denton's production company, Zapruder's Other Films, this sounds infinitely harder to imagine than it will be to watch. The surreal world of an ad agency's egomaniacal creative director will "lay bare the truth behind the ads that surround, manipulate and influence us every day".

UNDERBELLY 2 (Nine)

Easily the most anticipated drama of 2009, Underbelly: A Tale Of Two Cities will be set in the 1970s and 1980s, exploring the dope trade in NSW and the lives of two infamous drug lords - "Aussie Bob" Trimbole and Terry "Mr Asia" Clark. Same writers, same directors, new cast - we're expecting a hit.

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THAT GUY? (Comedy Channel)

A comedy mockumentary that asks the very compelling question - whatever happened to comedian Peter Moon, once a radio and TV star and now in the wilderness occupied by so many. Directed by Ted Emery (Kath & Kim).

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Saturday, December 27, 2008

Bumper television line-up for 2009 - The Daily Telegraph - 27th December 2008

The nation's appetite for local television productions has been whetted and audiences want to taste more.

While Australian content all but destroyed overseas programming this year, thanks to high-rating TV gems such as Packed To The Rafters and Underbelly, networks risk taking has led to a record number of homegrown programs hitting the small screen next year.


New pictures: Filming of Sydney's Underbelly and its stars

Gallery: The stars of the original Underbelly
More sex, nudity, swearing in Underbelly prequl

Local production boasted a bumper season, with more than $256 million invested in Australian drama and an extra 75 hours of TV made this year.

With the mayhem of Channel 7's Packed To the Rafters, mystery of City Homicide (also on Seven) and the blood-shed of Channel 9's Underbelly returning in the New Year, networks have invested heavily in local-produced TV shows.

``We've got Australian drama more spot-on than we have for a long time,'' Seven's head of programming Tim Worner says.

``Television drama and comedy are possibly the healthiest we have seen in the last 10 years and looking forward it will just get better.''

Tapping into Underbelly's ratings triumph, Seven will premiere new docu-drama series Gangs of Oz, exploring the violence and deceit of Australia's ganglands, as well as unveiling makeover show 10 Years In 10 Days.

To counter-balance the violence of the original Underbelly and the wild antics of wayward girls in the first Australian version of Ladette to Lady, uplifting programming will dominate Nine next year with shows including Random Acts of Kindness, Bert Newton's When I Grew Up and Missing Pieces premiering.

New high-action Aussie drama Rescue Squad, is also expected to give the second series of Ten's Rush a run for its money.

``We are making more shows than we ever have,'' Nine chief executive David Gyngell said.

``Financially, we have got ourselves into a better position than we were. It gives the schedule a bit more variety.''

Vince Colosimo and Diana Glenn lead an ensemble cast for SBS's Carla Cametti PD, while new factual series Food Detectives and the drama series starring Claudia Karvan, Saved, will also debut.

Ten hopes to bounce back from a rough year with new seasons of Natalie Bassingthwaighte-fronted So You Think You Can Dance Australia and Biggest Loser Australia. MasterChef Australia, Bondi Vet and Recruits, a glimpse at the inner-workings of the NSW Police College in Goulburn, will also premiere.

ABC TV's director of television Kim Dalton says the public broadcaster's main vision for next year new is locally produced programs including The Cut, Project Next, a new development by Andrew Denton, Darwin's Brave New World and after a year off a new series of The Chaser's War On Everything.

Australia's Next Top Model, Project Runway Australia, plus new reality competition program The Phone and satirical Denton offering 30 Seconds will show on subscription TV.

``Our Australian production slate is more extensive than ever,'' Foxtel's Brian Walsh said.

(Credit: The Daily Telegraph)

Media Man Australia Profiles

Television

Media Companies

Saturday, November 29, 2008

60 Minutes Airs Report on Online Poker Cheaters November 30th, by Dan Cypra - 26th November 2008

Poker News Daily has confirmed that the story by CBS News program “60 Minutes” concerning the cheating scandals on Ultimate Bet and Absolute Poker will air this Sunday, November 30th. The story serves as the finale of a four month-long investigation by 60 Minutes as well as Washington Post newspaper correspondent Gilbert Gaul. The piece is entitled “How Online Gamblers Unmasked Cheaters” and will hit the airwaves at 7:00pm ET on CBS.

A teaser video posted by 60 Minutes features an interview that correspondent Steve Kroft conducted with Todd Witteles, an online poker player who is better known as “Dan Druff.” Witteles commented on the Absolute Poker scandal, “This GRAYCAT person was new and at first he seemed like a live one. He seemed terrible. He was raising just really, really bad hands against very good hands. He seemed to play crazy. He seemed like he was giving his money away, except the only thing was, he wasn’t losing.” Witteles explained why the run-in with GRAYCAT on Absolute Poker was out of the ordinary: “He was playing in a style that was sure to lose, but he was killing the game day after day.”

The teaser video explains that Graycat was winning at 15 standard deviations above the mean, “which was approximately equivalent to winning a one in a million jackpot six consecutive times.” The POTRIPPER account was the proverbial stone that broke the camel’s back, making a famous 10-high call against Marco “CrazyMarco” Johnson in a $1,000 tournament in September of 2007. Observing POTRIPPER in action was Absolute Poker user number 363, which was later traced back to the company’s headquarters in Costa Rica.

The Kahnawake Gaming Commission released the following statement about the cheating scandal that plagued Ultimate Bet, which is owned by the same parent company as Absolute Poker: “The Commission found clear and convincing evidence to support the conclusion that between the approximate dates of May 2004 to January 2008, Russell Hamilton, an individual associated with Ultimate Bet’s affiliate program, was the main person responsible for and benefiting from the multiple cheating incidents.” In July, the Ultimate Bet account “sleeplesss,” which was one of the user names associated with the cheating scandal, was positively linked to a home owned by Hamilton in Las Vegas.

On Tuesday, the player bases of Ultimate Bet and Absolute Poker merged to form the CEREUS poker network. The delay in its launch may have been due to an ongoing legal battle in Canada between Tokwiro (the current ownership group of Ultimate Bet and Absolute Poker) and Excapsa (the former ownership group of UB). Tokwiro was awarded $15 million in the case, which was used to pay back players who had been affected by the cheating scandal.

In a press release from November 5th, Tokwiro COO Paul Leggett stated, “Now that the main perpetrator has been named, the settlement with the previous owners is behind us, and players have received refunds, it should now be apparent that Tokwiro had no involvement in this cheating and that we have fought to correct it with every tool at our disposal.”

The other two stories slated to air on 60 Minutes this week are:

The Silver Star
Monica Brown, only the second woman to ever win the Silver Star since World War II, describes saving two wounded men during a firefight she wasn’t supposed to be near - while she was only 18 years old. Lara Logan reports.

Michael Phelps
He swam into history at the Beijing Olympics and now the 23-year-old phenom tells CNN’s Anderson Cooper what his life is like as hundreds of endorsement opportunities roll in to make this U.S. Olympic superstar a marketing millionaire.

Read the story and watch the preview video by visiting the 60 Minutes website. (Credit: Poker News Daily)

Media Man Australia Profiles

Poker News

60 Minutes

Casino News

Thursday, November 27, 2008

CAP TV Premiering December 3

Leading Online Casino Affiliate Marketing Resource to Launch New Weekly Interactive Online Video Channel in December, Beginning with Exclusive Recap of CAP Down Under Conference

November 19, 2008 -- CasinoAffiliatePrograms.com ("CAP"), the world's leading online marketing resource and community website for Internet casino affiliates, announced today the launch of CAP TV, a new online video channel to be integrated into its family of Internet-based marketing and communications resources.

CAP TV will consist of weekly videos that focus on affiliate marketing and online gaming news, as well as promotions, interviews, opinions, and industry updates that directly concern the CAP community -- which currently numbers more than seven thousand members, and is rapidly expanding.

In addition to weekly news updates, viewers of CAP TV can expect to receive exclusive information regarding special promotions, advance information on leading industry players, on-location reporting of key online gaming industry events, and previews and recaps of the many popular CAP conferences (including CAP Euro, CAP Spring Break, and the new CAP Down Under).

"In this age of rapidly developing online media, CAP is proud to take the initiative to step up and deliver the kind of video resources that this industry demands," stated Lou Fabiano, President and Founder of CasinoAffiliatePrograms.com. "It's an effort to not only ensure that we at CAP hold our position as the leader in the Internet gaming affiliate marketing industry, but also that our clients, members, and even casual visitors to CAP enjoy every benefit of our unique, advanced position in this industry."

"As the largest and longest-running community serving the online gaming affiliate marketing world, we feel it's our responsibility to continue to lead the way into new venues," continued Mr. Fabiano. "And we're confident that the incredible people within the CAP community will embrace this latest effort to do just that."

CAP TV will premiere on Wednesday, December 3, with a special edition offering a recap of the first annual CAP Down Under Australian conference, according to company officials. New videos in the CAP TV series will be released every week on Wednesday following the December 3 premiere.

Media Man Australia Profiles

CAP Down Under

Casino News

Television

Casino News Media And Media Man Australia Director Interviewed By CAP TV

Casino News Media and Media Man Australia director and founder, Greg Tingle, was interviewed today by CAP TV at the CAP Down Under event in Sydney, Australia.

Tingle mentioned the exciting developments and the great work by Alex, Lizzie and team in putting together CAP Down Under, and how it sets the stage for more great developments with CAP including in Australia.

Casino News Media Profiles

CAP Down Under

Media Man Australia Profiles

CAP Down Under

Casino News

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

TV Game Shows

Media Man Australia Profiles

TV Game Shows

Game Shows

TV Shows

Television

Thursday, November 20, 2008

CAP TV Premiering December 3

Leading Online Casino Affiliate Marketing Resource to Launch New Weekly Interactive Online Video Channel in December, Beginning with Exclusive Recap of CAP Down Under Conference

November 19, 2008 -- CasinoAffiliatePrograms.com ("CAP"), the world's leading online marketing resource and community website for Internet casino affiliates, announced today the launch of CAP TV, a new online video channel to be integrated into its family of Internet-based marketing and communications resources.

CAP TV will consist of weekly videos that focus on affiliate marketing and online gaming news, as well as promotions, interviews, opinions, and industry updates that directly concern the CAP community -- which currently numbers more than seven thousand members, and is rapidly expanding.

In addition to weekly news updates, viewers of CAP TV can expect to receive exclusive information regarding special promotions, advance information on leading industry players, on-location reporting of key online gaming industry events, and previews and recaps of the many popular CAP conferences (including CAP Euro, CAP Spring Break, and the new CAP Down Under).

"In this age of rapidly developing online media, CAP is proud to take the initiative to step up and deliver the kind of video resources that this industry demands," stated Lou Fabiano, President and Founder of CasinoAffiliatePrograms.com. "It's an effort to not only ensure that we at CAP hold our position as the leader in the Internet gaming affiliate marketing industry, but also that our clients, members, and even casual visitors to CAP enjoy every benefit of our unique, advanced position in this industry."

"As the largest and longest-running community serving the online gaming affiliate marketing world, we feel it's our responsibility to continue to lead the way into new venues," continued Mr. Fabiano. "And we're confident that the incredible people within the CAP community will embrace this latest effort to do just that."

CAP TV will premiere on Wednesday, December 3, with a special edition offering a recap of the first annual CAP Down Under Australian conference, according to company officials. New videos in the CAP TV series will be released every week on Wednesday following the December 3 premiere. (Credit: CasinoAffiliatePrograms.com)

Casino News Media Profiles

CAP Down Under

CasinoAffiliatePrograms.com

Casino News

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Will Foxtel's free iQ offer prove a smart, by Jesse Hogan - The Age - 17th November 2008

Foxtel is making an audacious attempt to attract new customers and dissuade money-conscious existing customers from cancelling subscriptions.

The pay TV operator is offering subscribers a year's free use of one of its iQ digital video recorders, waiving the usual $10 monthly fee.

It is the second major revamp of Foxtel's offers in the past month, which began with the company offering free installation to new customers and cutting the contract period from two years to one year.

"We've made no secret of the fact that our objective is to see an iQ for every subscriber," chief executive Kim Williams told BusinessDay.

"We listen to customers and they've told us what they think, and on the iQ there's a substantial body of people who want to try it, so we're saying 'OK, we hear you'."

Foxtel's primary incentive for wanting to expand the penetration of its iQ recorders, which made up almost a quarter of its 1.54 million subscribers as of June 30, is the positive impact it has on subscriber loyalty.

While Foxtel's latest reported churn (disconnection) rate was 13.4%, the rate for subscribers with iQs — which can simultaneously record across multiple channels — was below 5%.

Existing subscribers who have basic set-top boxes can upgrade to an iQ and not pay any monthly fees for the first year, although they will need to pay an $100 installation fee. They can also get the high-definition iQ2 recorder for $200, which includes seven months' free access to Foxtel's five HD channels. Mr Williams denied the offer would inevitably result in higher capital expenditure and customer acquisition costs (because iQs cost more than basic set-top boxes), or lower average monthly revenue from Foxtel forfeiting the usual $10 fee for iQ.

While acknowledging that "some people in the company were a little bit nervous" about the offer, Mr Williams insisted it was "all absolutely within budget".

"I'm certainly confident it will deliver good results," he said.

Regional pay TV operator Austar also has a personal video recorder, called MyStar, although the company said it would not attempt to match Foxtel's offer.

Mr Williams said he did not believe the offer would be resented by existing iQ customers, who will continue to pay for the service.

"I think people understand that we're … always taking different initiatives to activate growth," he said.

(Credit: The Age)

Media Man Australia Profiles

Foxtel

Television

Packer's PBL stake slips again as CVC pours in $25m, by Nick Tabakoff - The Australian - 19th November 2008

Private equity firm CVC Asia Pacific has been forced to agree to pump a further $25 million into the debt-riddled PBL Media.

The move is set to dilute the stake held by James Packer's Consolidated Media Holdings in the vehicle below 10 per cent.But The Australian understands the major banks in the syndicate backing the private-equity joint venture are close to throwing the troubled media group -- which owns the Nine Network and ACP Magazines -- a lifeline.

The additional $25 million has been offered by CVC in exchange for the banks agreeing to relax debt covenants. With CVC's total injection into PBL Media reaching $325 million, rather than the previously offered $300 million, the banks are likely to agree to PBL Media generating reduced operating profit for the next 18 months.

The syndicate includes Australian banks such as ANZ and Westpac, as well as UBS, Royal Bank of Scotland and Credit Suisse.

CVC's relaxed debt covenant requirements for PBL Media would come in a period when advertising is expected to fall sharply.

The Packer-controlled ConsMedia had until last month controlled 25 per cent of PBL Media, while CVC had owned 75 per cent. With its decision not to join CVC in pumping more equity into PBL Media, ConsMedia's stake had been expected to fall to 10 per cent.

But with CVC's new $25 million injection, it is now expected that the stake of Mr Packer's group will fall below this level.

In PBL Media's 2007-08 annual accounts, audit firm Ernst & Young said it was "not likely to meet all of its financial covenants for the next 12 months" without a debt restructure.

Financial debt commentator Debtwire said last week that PBL Media's bankers had been concerned the vehicle could fail its covenant test for the December quarter, having "barely passed" its September-quarter covenant test.

Under the new arrangements for 2008-09, the base case for operating profit (EBITDA) for PBL Media fell by $105 million, or 22 per cent, from a current $480 million to a minimum of $375 million, Debtwire said.

Similarly, the base case for 2009-10 falls by more than a quarter, from $525 million to $390 million.

Another covenant calls for the company's operating profit to at least equal PBL Media's interest payments for the next 18 months.

Debtwire has indicated that part of the proposed capital injection by CVC would be used to buy back a proportion of PBL Media's debt that is currently trading at 52c in the dollar.

In exchange for relaxing their covenants, the banks will receive a 25 basis point fee from PBL Media.

(Credit: The Australian)

Media Man Australia Profiles

James Packer

Network Nine Australia

Monday, November 10, 2008

Rupert Murdoch's second Boyer Lecture, by Roger Coombs - The Daily Telegraph - 9th November 2008

NEWS CORPORATION Chairman and Chief Executive Rupert Murdoch has called on workers to embrace "a lifetime of learning" to take advantage of the opportunities on offer as technological change revolutionises the world.

Mr Murdoch said the world was on the threshold of a technology-driven "golden age" of prosperity, but the benefits would be realised only by those who "cultivate a spirit of learning and flexibility and achievement".

Murdoch's challenge to Australia in first Boyer Lecture


Edited version: Rupert Murdoch's first Boyer Lecture

Delivering the second of the six 2008 Boyer Lectures last night, Mr Murdoch said the global transformation from "an industrial society to an information society" offered vast opportunities for business and the world community.

But changes in technology would not work on their own to deliver the improvements on offer, he said.

"Technology is making the human side of the business equation - skills and knowledege - more valuable than ever," Mr Murdoch said.

"But technology will do you no good unless you have men and women who know how to take advantage of it.

"In plain English, if you run a business, you need good people more than ever.

"That's because computers will never substitute for common sense and good judgment.

"To be successful, a business needs people who see the big picture ... who can think critically and who have strong character."

The obligation to foster talent and education was not confined to business operators, Mr Murdoch suggested.

Changes in technology meant workers now had "a greater incentive to invest" in themselves.

"As technology advances, the premium for educated people with talent and judgment will increase," he said.

"In future, successful workers will be those who embrace a lifetime of learning. Those who don't will be left behind."

Mr Murdoch said historical improvements in information technology - "beginning with Gutenberg's press and continuing with radio and television" - had opened up access to news and entertainment for millions of people.

"There's no reason to think the trend will be different this time," Mr Murdoch said.

"Except that this time, the access will be universal - and the impact will be more profound."

He said adapting to the changes that technology was bringing would force most people to move out of their comfort zones.

"Moving out of comfort zones begins with education," he said.

"If we want to build an Australia where people are not left behind, we need to recognise that a first-class education is no longer a luxury.

"In our age, it's a fundamental civil right and a necessity."
# The third in this year's Boyer Lectures will be broadcast on Radio National at 5pm next Sunday.

(Credit: The Daily Telegraph)

Media Man Australia Profiles

Rupert Murdoch

News Corporation

ABC

Sunday, November 09, 2008

Boyer Lecture #2 - A Golden Age of Freedom series, delivered by Mr Rupert Murdoch AC

Who’s Afraid of New Technology?

A Golden Age of Freedom

The 2008 lecture series, A Golden Age of Freedom is presented by Mr Rupert Murdoch, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, News Corporation.

On a wall in Rupert Murdoch's Wall Street Journal office in Manhattan hangs a Russel Drysdale painting. It has travelled with him around the world. The Stockman and his Family depicts a pioneering Australia, steely and resilient in the face of solitude and hardship. Values which he feels have taken us to where we are today - one of the most prosperous and peaceful nations on Earth. But will these values see us through the times ahead?

Rupert Murdoch beholds a period of great transformation that will bring prosperity to billions around the world. This golden age of freedom will unleash a new global middle class. Markets, media and technology will all play their part.

But to reap the rewards we must make some drastic changes. A ballooning welfare state, failing state schools and full reconciliation among all Australians head his list.

The 2008 Boyer Lectures will be broadcast during Big Ideas on ABC Radio National at 5pm each Sunday between 2 November and 7 December 2008 (repeated the following Saturday at 7pm.) The lectures will be available as audio on demand, podcast and mp3 for download from this website.

The first Lecture in the series will also be broadcast on ABC1 on 2 November 2008 at 10.15pm - a special presentation of ABC FORA.

For more details on the lecture series, see this 2008 Boyer Lectures press release.


The 2008 Boyer Lecture series is presented by Rupert Murdoch.

Rupert Murdoch is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of News Corporation, one of the world’s largest diversified media companies. News Corporation’s operations include the production of major motion pictures and television programs, cable, satellite and broadcast television, newspaper, magazine and book publishing, and internet and mobile news, information and entertainment services, spanning the United States, Europe, Asia, Australia and Latin America.

In 1954, Mr Murdoch took control of News Limited whose only key asset at the time was a majority interest in The News, the number-two daily newspaper in Adelaide. Since then News Corporation has become a worldwide organisation with more than 50,000 employees working in 130 companies in 60 countries.

Mr Murdoch has been appointed a Companion of the Order of Australia (AC) for services to the media and to newspaper publishing in particular. Throughout News Corporation’s history, he and his family have been closely involved with, and made generous contributions to, various educational, cultural, medical and charitable organisations.

(Credit: ABC The 2008 Boyer Lectures)

Media Man Australia Profiles

Rupert Murdoch

News Corporation

ABC

Friday, November 07, 2008

Virgin Media delays repayments on £4.3bn debts, by Amanda Andrews - The Telegraph - 3rd November 2008

Virgin Media, the content and communications group, has secured a deal with its lending banks to delay its debt repayments, giving the business until 2012 to refinance its £4.3bn of loans.

The cable operator had asked lenders to agree to a payment deferral until June 2012, hoping that free cashflow would enable it to cope with repayments.

Virgin Media's lenders had until noon on Friday to vote on the new terms. The Sunday Telegraph revealed that Deutsche Bank, the agent running the process, was counting the votes over the weekend and an imminent announcement was expected.

It is understood that the new arrangements will see the banks receive fees of up to £70m and a further £50m a year in increased margins. Virgin's senior debt facilities comprise £4.3bn of loans in A, B and C tranches and a £100m revolving credit facility.

"In light of the disruption to the credit markets, the company has decided to address its amortisation payments that are due in 2010 and 2011,'' Virgin said in a statement last month.

While Nasdaq-listed Virgin Media will have a large chunk of debt for 2012, the move gives it more time to look at options to reduce its debt load, such as asset disposals. The cable operator, which previously said it had sought to reschedule its debt repayment because of disruption in the credit markets, needed the support of 66.6pc of debt holders for the changes to be passed.

Neil Berkett, chief executive of Virgin Media, insisted the new terms were not a matter of urgency and were in the best interests of the company, investors and customers.

Virgin Media yesterday said it will provide an update on the amendment process, including the percentage of lenders who have individually agreed to move into new tranches of the senior loans with modified payment terms, in conjunction with its results announcement on November 6.

(Credit: The Telegraph)

Media Man Australia Profiles

Virgin Media

Richard Branson

Television

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Packing up the pieces, by Matthew Ricketson - The Age - 1st November 2008

As James Packer finally left the building at Channel Nine this week, his rivals at the Ten network revealed a new channel specialising in the very field Nine once dominated — sport.

Packer's departure from the board of Nine's majority owner, PBL Media, was the final severing of ties with the television station his grandfather, Sir Frank, founded and his father, Kerry, forged into the number one network in the predominant medium of the 1980s and 1990s.

But if Packer is closing the door on past media greatness, the Ten network is trying to gain a foothold in the new television landscape. From January 1 free-to-air TV networks will be able to broadcast a new standard definition station in addition to their existing offering. This intersection of past and future highlights the uncertainty swirling around the media in general and television in particular.

James Packer's decision underscores his steady withdrawal from the industry with which his family has been associated for the past four generations, beginning with his journalist great-grandfather, Robert Clyde Packer. The only media assets he retains in his company, Consolidated Media Holdings, are a 25% stake in the subscription television network, Foxtel, a 50% stake in production company Premier Media and a 27.5% holding in the online jobs advertising site, seek.com.au.

These assets have a strong foothold in the future; long derided by the lords of free-to-air TV, Foxtel is gradually changing Australians' TV habits with its IQ digital set top box that enables viewers to pause and rewind live television and record programs to watch later in a process known as "time-shifting".

In addition to online advertising, Premier Media produces programs for Foxtel, which is now in about 30% of Australian homes. Packer has been gradually selling out of the Nine network and Australian Consolidated Press, owner of the biggest magazine stable in the country, since late 2006 when a private equity company, CVC Asia Pacific, paid $4.6 billion for a 50% share in the Packer media empire and went on to form PBL Media.

Using borrowed funds, CVC bought at the very top of the then roaring sharemarket. Such is PBL's annual interest bill that it has wiped almost its entire annual profit of $460 million in the last financial year, prompting media analysts to value the company at zero.

The swaggering, rulers of the earth attitude that pervaded Nine for many years began to dissolve when it lost its once iron grip on the ratings crown last year. Since then it has shed jobs and lost any claim to be the national broadcaster by cutting its mid-evening news program, Nightline, and abandoning its high quality current affairs program Sunday.

Multiple Gold Logie winner and former Nine network darling Ray Martin described the axing of Sunday as "a dopey decision", and one that mirrored PBL's closure early this year of another Australian media fixture, The Bulletin magazine.

Meanwhile, Nine's ratings have been stronger than expected this year. It has been leading the three commercial free-to-air networks in the quest for the 16-to-54-year-old demographic, which accounts for around two-thirds of prime time advertising revenue.

But, according to media analyst Steve Allen, of Fusion Strategy, ratings for Nine's programs have been trailing off in recent weeks and it is possible Nine will end the ratings year behind Seven among both 16-to-54-year-olds and across all viewers.

"Nine has done very well with some of its programming this year, such as Underbelly, but it has also overused some of its big franchise programs, such as CSI, and, to a lesser extent, Two and a Half Men, which potentially leaves its cupboard bare for 2009," he says.

Allen says by shifting the time slots of these popular programs and running them several hours a week instead of one or two, Nine has shortened their natural life span and alienated fans.

Nine's managing director, David Gyngell, told advertisers and media buyers in Sydney this week that he would remain close to his lifelong friend James Packer but that he was "a better mate than he is a boss" and was "looking forward to proving him wrong", on his decision to withdraw from free-to-air television.

But Gyngell also told the International Advertising Association lunch that the introduction of the new multi-channels next year would erode the profits of free to air networks and could damage the quality of programs they broadcast on their existing channels. "More choice doesn't lead to more profits. The new channels are an obligation we have to undertake," he said.

Nine is clearly under pressure in the changing mediascape. Mass audiences are being replaced by myriad niche audiences as a dizzying array of new choices opens up on television and online.

Advertisers are even less likely to spend money on new channels as the global financial crisis is already forcing them to slash their budgets. To date the free-to-air networks have been slow to spend money buying or making programs to broadcast on their new multi-channels.

They are worried they will have trouble recouping their costs because the new multi-channels will most likely attract small audiences and therefore little advertising revenue.

This is why the Ten network's decision to create a 24-hour channel dedicated to sport is a significant development and a bold attempt to resurrect its own fortunes, which have been buffeted not only by the structural changes affecting the media industry but also by its own relatively poor performance in the ratings this year.

Ten's chief executive, Grant Blackley, said this week that in planning the new channel — which will be called One — a key consideration was that no other free-to-air network had a "dedicated sports channel" and that it would help encourage people to switch over to digital television.

The Federal Government will switch off the analogue television signal at the end of 2013 and has been under intense pressure from the free-to-air networks to allow them to show sports on their new multi-channels that are included on the anti-siphoning list.

This list, which covers events such as the AFL grand final, the Melbourne Cup and the Australian Open tennis, is aimed at ensuring key sporting events are freely available to everyone.

Ten's new sports channel does not include any events on the anti-siphoning list but Blackley said he would "welcome the lifting of the restrictions on what free-to-air networks can show on their channels".

Communications Minister Stephen Conroy is caught between the public policy goal of encouraging everyone to buy a digital TV and entrenching the protected status of the free-to-air networks, which, as he freely acknowledged to The Age this week, have "done a very poor job of looking after sports fans in the past". And the free-to-air networks find themselves caught between inexorably dissolving audiences and the need to invest in new channels.

For its part, the subscription television sector, led by Foxtel, fears the Government may cave in to the free-to-air networks' lobbying, which could affect the attractiveness of their own offerings to customers.

And looming on the horizon — when Australia finally gets quick broadband speeds — is the arrival of hundreds of channels of internet television, which not only pose a threat to free-to-air and subscription television but also to the national broadcasters, the ABC and SBS, who are struggling to finance local drama, news and current affairs with what even Conroy admits is severely inadequate funding.

Matthew Ricketson is media and communications editor.

(Credit: The Age)

Media Man Australia Profiles

James Packer

David Gyngell

Network Nine

Channel Seven

Network Ten

Foxtel

Television

Friday, October 31, 2008

Packer is wrong: Gyngell, by Miriam Steffens - The Sydney Morning Herald - 31st October 2008

David Gyngell has vowed to prove James Packer wrong.

The Nine Network boss believes there is still money to be made in free-to-air television, and has promised to tap his experience from another Packer, Kerry, to make his point.

The TV executive and close friend of James Packer told advertisers in Sydney yesterday that the billionaire's decision this week to cut his family's more than 50 years of ties to the network was not going to spell any change for Nine, which has started a comeback in TV ratings this year.

The tradition of the late Kerry Packer — who was so passionate about the network that he called producers personally to change what was on air — was set to continue under his tenure, he said.

"I loved Kerry Packer, what he did for me and how much I learned from him," Mr Gyngell said.

"He was truly extraordinary, so hopefully I picked up his attitude towards Channel Nine, and I do love Channel Nine and what we do with Channel Nine.

"While on my watch, we won't be cutting our costs to damage our content.

"If anyone understands the structure of the deal as it was originally done, the day that James and his family gave up control of Channel Nine was the day that he made a decision on his position on media.

"He's got his view, and I'm looking forward to proving him wrong."

(Credit: The Sydney Morning Herald)


Media Man Australia Profiles

David Gyngell

James Packer

Network Nine Australia

Crown Casino

Channelling Kerry: boss loves Nine, by Miriam Steffens - The Sydney Morning Herald - 31st October 2008

David Gyngell has vowed to prove James Packer wrong.

The Nine Network boss reckons there is still money to be made in free-to-air television, and has promised to tap his experience from another Packer, Kerry, to make his point.

The close friend of James Packer told advertisers in Sydney yesterday that the billionaire's decision this week to cut his family's ties to the network, which spanned more than 50 years, was not going to spell any change for Nine, now on a comeback in TV ratings this year.

The tradition of the late Kerry Packer - who was so passionate about the network that he called producers personally to change what was on air - was set to continue under his tenure, he said.

"I loved Kerry Packer, what he did for me and how much I learnt from him," Mr Gyngell said. "He was truly extraordinary, so hopefully I picked up his attitude towards Channel Nine, and I do love Channel Nine and what we do with Channel Nine.

"While on my watch, we won't be cutting our costs to damage our content."

The assurances came three days after James Packer cut his funding and severed links to his father's media empire by declaring that he and his top lieutenant, John Alexander, would step down from the board of PBL Media, the private equity company that runs Nine and ACP Magazines.

The business, which is creaking under a $4.2 billion debt, is now in the hands of the buy-out firm CVC Asia Pacific.

Mr Gyngell said Mr Packer had made up his mind about the network last year, when he reduced Consolidated Media Holdings' stake in PBL Media to 25 per cent, handing over economic control of Nine and ACP Magazines.

"The day that James and his family gave up control of Channel Nine was the day that he made a decision on his position on media.

"He's got his view, and I'm looking forward to proving him wrong."

(Credit: The Sydney Morning Herald)

Media Man Australia Profiles

David Gyngell

James Packer

Network Nine

Television

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Resignations clear the decks for move on PBL Media - 27th October 2008

CVC Asia Pacific is seeking an estimated $300 million to invest in PBL Media after James Packer's Consolidated Media Holdings refused to inject $75 million into the media company. Mr Packer and Consolidated Media chairman John Alexander have also resigned as directors of PBL, ending 50 years of Packer-family involvement with Consolidated Media-owned broadcaster Nine Network. The further injection of funds by CVC Asia Pacific will see Consolidated Media's stake in PBL fall to 10 percent or less.

Media Man Australia Profiles

Network Nine Australia

James Packer

Packer family's TV links with Nine almost severed, by Fleur Leyden - Herald Sun - 28th October 2008

James Packer has distanced himself from Channel Nine's owner, PBL Media, quitting its board and declaring his Consolidated Media Holdings won't pour more funding into the debt-laden company.

Mr Packer's resignation, and those of CMH chairman John Alexander and alternate CMH directors Chris Anderson and Martin Dalgleish, came as PBL Media moved to allay concerns about its ability to service its $4.2 billion of debt.

"The group has been in compliance with all of its financial covenant requirements to September," PBL Media said.

It revealed it was in talks with senior debt and mezzanine note lenders about a possible recapitalisation of the company.

However, refinancing of its $4.5 billion loan facility - drawn down to $4.2 billion - was not due until February 2013 and April 2014.

"Amortisation of the senior debt over the next 12 months requires a payment of approximately $22 million in December 2008 and approximately $22 million in June 2009."

PBL Media was formed in 2006 after Mr Packer's former media and gaming empire Publishing & Broadcasting sold its media assets for $4.5 billion into a joint venture with private equity firm CVC Asia Pacific.

The billionaire's exposure to the vehicle - which houses the Nine Network, ACP Magazines and some website holdings - then reduced to CMH's 25 per cent stake.

Mr Packer's resignation from the board sees him effectively relinquish all control of his late father's TV network and PBL Media's other assets.

Australia's leading media buyer Harold Mitchell said Mr Packer's move did not come as a surprise.

"James Packer is clearly making his business life in his own mould rather than that of his father," Mr Mitchell told BusinessDaily.

"The media properties - while still very good - are not as close to him as they were to Kerry."

CMH, which holds its annual meeting today, will stop equity accounting its 25 per cent PBL Media stake.

It said the holding could be diluted by extra capital contributions from major shareholder Red Earth Holdings, which is owned by funds advised by CVC.

BBY analyst Mark McDonnell said CMH's decision not to equity account its PBL stake suggested it could be diluted below 20 per cent.

"It's difficult to see this in any other light than a distancing of CMH directors at a time when there's a great deal of speculation that PBL Media's debt levels are unsustainable," Mr McDonnell said.

"By the end of the year there's a risk that CVC will have been in breach of its debt covenants."

CVC did not return calls yesterday.

Shaw Stockbroking analyst Greg Fraser said that if attention moved from CMH'S PBL Media stake to its other assets - such as stakes in Foxtel and jobs site Seek - investors would realise the stock was cheap.

CMH shares, down 50 per cent since the start of the year, closed 6c higher yesterday at $2.08.

(Credit: News.com.au)

Media Man Australia Profiles

James Packer

Channel 58 New Zealand TV Station And License For Sale

Channel 58 New Zealand TV Station And License For Sale

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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Shooting starts for second Underbelly series - The Australian - 17th October 2008

A second series of the acclaimed Underbelly TV drama went into production today dogged by the question of whether it would it be as good as the original. Underbelly - A Tale of Two Cities will focus on the illegal drug trade in the 1970s, a long way from the more recent Melbourne drug wars portrayed in the hit series which aired on Nine this year. Instead of Carl and Roberta Williams the villains will be Aussie “Bob” Trimbole and Terry “Mr Asia” Clark.

Announcing the start of start of production in Sydney and Melbourne, the head of drama for the Nine Network Jo Horsburgh said “the series is proving to be as rich and exciting as the first series”. Nine is desperate to make Underbelly 2 the hit it was the first time around. Other Nine dramas this year, including Canal Road and The Strip have not fared so well. It wasn’t screened in Victoria until recently because it may have influenced the outcome of a trial.

Comparisons between Underbelly 1 and 2 are inevitable. Producers Screentime have been under pressure to come up with a prequel or a sequel ever since Nine attracted big audiences for Underbelly earlier this year. Should it be a prequel looking at the same Melbourne criminals when they were younger or a sequel now they’re all dead or in jail?

Eventually, producers decided to go right back to another rich period in Australia’s criminal history between 1976 and 1986 - but many younger viewers were not alive when anti-drugs campaigner Donald Mackay was a household name.

Screentime’s executive producer Des Monaghan emphasised the series would be an improvement and not a disappointment: “We are very excited about Underbelly - A Tale of Two Cities - which promises to be even bigger and better than the first series”.

Actors Roy Billing (Trimbole), Andrew McFarlane (anti-drugs campaigner Donald Mackay) Matthew Newton (Terry Clark) and Peter O’Brien (George Freeman) have already been cast.

Greg Tingle comment


I think the second series is likely to be as good, but not quite as popular as the original. There’s only even one first and the massive media and public buzz, fueled by then current criminal proceedings, backed up by frequent reference to Network Nine in the courts and the papers, all point to that equation. David Gyngell at the team at Nine have hit the jackpot with Underbelly, and let’s hope it doesn’t get prostituted to Crocodile Dundee III depths, where it makes money (again) at expense to its legacy and overall high production standards. Great to see Matthew Newton cast this time around (as everyone knows its going to be a winner, as opposed to an unknown quantity last time the cattle call was done), and it would be something to see Newton right there in the mix with Reb, Gyton Grantly (Carl), Westaway (Gatto) and the crew. I wonder if there’s going to do much with the storyline on my old mate Bert Wrout, who teases that he knows where a number of the bodies are buried! Sometimes the real news doesn’t make the news, as in some matters revolving around Wrout, however Australia eagerly awaits the next installments of prime time gangsters and mobsters Aussie style down under. Not sure what its going to do for Australia’s image on the tourism front, but that’s another story. I don’t foresee Baz getting dragged into advertising or PR scenarios for this portray of some of Australia’s society happenings. Maybe we can expect to see a dash of product placement re Packer’s Crown Casino, or maybe they don’t want to get quite that real to the true story of Melbourne’s underworld? If this show doesn’t fire up James’ passion for Australian television, nothing will. It’s all good fodder for the papers and should keep Nine out of the doldrums it was in a few years ago.

(Credit: The Australian)

Media Man Australia Profiles

Underbelly

Television

Fox TV, Burnett spin casino game, By Michael Schneider - Variety - 14th October 2008

Mark Burnett and Fox Television Studios have teamed to launch a TV series based on an old casino game.

"Rouletter" takes a traditional Roulette wheel and replaces the numbers with letters. Contestants then place bets in order to form words, "Scrabble" style, within a specific time frame.

The initial pilot will be shot in South America, where Fox TV Studios is already producing several projects (including the Chris McQuarrie-produced "Persons Unknown" and the Annabella Sciorra starrer "Mental"), and then be sold to territories around the globe.

Producers in various territories will be able to ship in contestants to the South America shoot site in order to do their own pilots. Burnett, who owns a studio in Asia, plans to do the same thing on that continent as well.

"I like trying things that I think will translate globally," Burnett said. "It's a global village, and I've probably produced more foreign stuff than most other producers. I'm not intimidated by producers being in other countries. By producing ('Rouletter') in South America, it made sense to do this together with Fox TV Studios."

Fox TV Studios president Emiliano Calemzuk said he plans to first sell "Rouletter" to Latin American networks but has already received interest from channels all over the globe.

"I thought it was the perfect time to do this, a new take on successful shows like 'Wheel of Fortune,' " Calemzuk said. "And Mark thought it was a great idea to make a big pilot."

Burnett and David Russo are the show's creators and will exec produce; the Collective's Reza Izad and Al Hassas will also exec produce. In addition, FTVS and exec producer Matthew Gaven will produce the initial pilot episode.

Burnett said he sees a bigger business in "Rouletter" beyond just TV, including licensing the game to casinos. The show has applied for a patent on its unique letter-based Roulette wheel.

Beyond "Rouletter," Burnett's international expansion has included a new edition of "The Contender," now being shot in Singapore. Burnett's other upcoming skeins include CBS' "Jingles," MTV's "Star Maker" and TNT's "Wedding Day."

Fox TV Studios skeins include "Burn Notice" and "Saving Grace," as well as the alternative series "Talkshow With Spike Feresten" and "The Girls Next Door."

Media Man Australia Profiles

Mark Burnett

Casino News

Monday, October 20, 2008

Ten a shaky third, by Debi Enker - Fairfax - 16th October 2008

Much of the attention through the "back end" of this ratings year has rightfully been on the ascendant Seven Network and the success of its new and continuing shows. The Tuesday night line-up of RSPCA Animal Rescue, Find My Family, Packed to the Rafters and All Saints has been a notable standout. While Make Me a Supermodel has stumbled and Dancing With the Stars has waned, other shows, such as City Homicide, The Force, Border Security and Better Homes and Gardens have continued to perform strongly.

Nine has battled on in second place, riding on the surprising popularity of Two and a Half Men and, last week, the Rugby League grand final. But struggling harder in third place, and even wobbling dangerously there, has been Ten.

The youth-oriented network has suffered a string of prime-time problems over the last weeks. Episodes of the Beverly Hills 90210 revival, fast-tracked from their US screenings, have appeared and abruptly disappeared due to viewer indifference. The success earlier in the year with Bondi Rescue was not repeated when the lifesavers took their patrols to Bali and Bondi Rescue: Bali was also axed. The misconceived dating game, Taken Out, intended to anchor the 7pm slot on weeknights, lasted only two weeks.

House, once a reliable Top10 program, has also experienced a slump. Last year, it could be counted on to draw more than 1.5 million viewers, but the new, fast-tracked episodes of the hospital drama have conspicuously failed to achieve those heights. Last week, it was No.69 nationally with only 858,000 viewers. In the same timeslot, the final episode of ABC1's The Hollowmen drew 900,000.

Another new show with high hopes stepped up to fill an unscheduled gap last week when Jamie's Ministry of Food premiered to a lukewarm reception. Attracting only 764,000 viewers, it was No.80 nationally. This suggests that the Naked Chef's heyday as a TV drawcard may be over. Perhaps we are now firmly in the Ramsay era, or maybe Jamie Oliver's healthy food warrior phase is less appealing to viewers than the cheeky lad bouncin' around a cheery flat, happily snipping his homegrown herbs into some brilliant new dish.

Amid this succession of failures, one of Ten's crucial "tentpoles", the Australian Idol franchise, has also been fading. With 1.21 million viewers last week (No.25 nationally), it's not in critical condition, but it's not attracting the crowds it once did.

Amid the upheavals, the American crime series NCIS has proved a hardy stayer (No. 20 last week with 1.3 million viewers). The new Australian police drama, Rush, has also been a bright spot, in terms of quality, if not numbers. Perhaps inhibited by its 9.30pm Tuesday timeslot, Rush was No. 70 last week with 838,000 viewers. One can only hope that Ten has some patience with this one, because it's worth it. Many local series that went on to have long and healthy lives didn't take off until their second seasons (Blue Heelers and Water Rats among them).

Even with its focus fixed firmly on the youth market niche rather than a more broad-based appeal, Ten isn't doing well. In a horror week earlier this month, it was beaten in the national ratings by ABC1, an exceedingly rare event. And as it surveys the prospects for 2009, what Ten might see is a big slab of the schedule, estimated at 120 hours, that will no longer be filled by Big Brother, which was axed in July after eight seasons.

Seven is powering through its post-Olympics run and easily won the week. In Melbourne, it recorded a victory with a substantial margin, scoring a 31% prime-time audience share ahead of Nine (25.1%), Ten (20.2% ), ABC1 (18.6%) and SBS (5.1%).

Media Man Australia Profiles

Television

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Virgin launches casino TV channel - 3rd July 2008

Virgin Media, the entertainment and communications arm of British business magnate Richard Branson's Virgin Group conglomerate, has rolled out a 24-hour interactive casino television channel.

Challenge Jackpot features on Virgin Media Television's leading entertainment channel, Challenge.

The channel features several new games and launched at the start of this month with flagship brand Roulette Nation.

Viewers can play along and bet on a range of automated fixed-odds games that include Get Set Roulette, Face Up Hold 'Em and Hot Shot Keno.

Media Man Australia Profiles

Virgin Media

Challenge Jackpot

Virgin Enterprises Limited

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

60 Minutes story on AP and UB could air October 26

Poker News Daily is reporting that 60 Minutes may air a story about the cheating scandals that rocked AP and UB on Oct. 26, just over a week before the general election.

http://www.pokernewsdaily.com/60-min...ober-26th-442

Media Man Australia Profiles

60 Minutes

Poker and Casino News


Casino News Media

Saturday, October 11, 2008

RICHARD BRANSON - TONIGHT & TOMORROW ON BLOOMBERG TV

Tonight and tomorrow on the BLOOMBERG TELEVISION® program "Night Talk," anchor Mike Schneider talks to Billionaire Richard Branson.

Branson talks about how the world is going to get out of the global economic crisis. "It's going to be up to entrepreneurs everywhere; especially those who've got a bit of money to try to you know help dig us out of this by cautious investments here and cautious investments there. And, perhaps even opportunities that come from a crash like this."

"I think it’s important that businesses that have got some cash don't just leave it in the bank and sit on it, for the sake of everybody in order to avoid a massive unemployment problem. We've still got to look for investments that make sense and push forward."

"This is a climate where entrepreneurs are born. Now, trying to find the cash is tough."

"Virgin America will actually benefit bizarrely from this crisis, Virgin Atlantic has benefited from this crisis because a lot of airline we were competing with - all the business class jets Eos and Maxi-Jet have all gone bust, the biggest holiday companies out of the UK have gone bust, and so because we have deep pockets and because we have a well respected airline a lot of that business is coming our way."

He talks about rival British Airways proposed merger with American Airlines. "I would be flabbergasted if the competition authorities allowed BA and American, the 2 biggest carriers in the world to be allowed to effectively merge."

He also talks about hedging fuel prices. "More by fluke than anything else Virgin America hadn't hedged because it was a new carrier, we will almost definitely start hedging quite soon and then we'll actually have the lowest cost base of any airline........another $20 fall would be nice and most likely we'll get in and hedge"

He talks about getting back into the mortgage business, "It won't be a massive footprint. If we'd succeeded in buying Northern Rock, which we came very close to doing, then you would have seen a light of high street Virgin Bank stores. But as it is, we didn't succeed in doing that. So it will be a more modest mortgage company and not having high street stores will most likely mean that we can be more competitive anyway."

He talks about how the Lehman collapse altered Virgin’s strategy. "We were about to launch City Hotels and our partner of 25% share holder was going to Lehman Brothers and I was meant to be on a plane to fly to sign and announce the deal on the day that Lehman’s went bust, that's been delayed by a month or two and I suspect we'll end up funding that ourselves."

"Virgin Atlantic saw this coming years ago and just decided to conserve cash and they've been very conservative over the last couple of years and they now have 2-3 billion dollars of cash so that if a lot of people stop flying they can ride it out - we learnt a lot from 9/11."

"People should remember this is not 9/11, this is just money."

"Night Talk" airs in the U.S., Europe and Asia on Bloomberg TV at 10PM on weeknights and is simulcast on Bloomberg Radio at 10PM. Bloomberg Radio is broadcast on 1130AM in the New York Metropolitan area and is available on XM and Sirius. The Friday night Show re-airs over the weekend Sat at 8:00-9:00pm, 10:00-11:00pm and Mon 12:00am - 1:00am.

"Night Talk" can also be seen on Bloomberg.com (http://www.bloomberg.com/tvradio/shows.html), is podcast at (http://www.bloomberg.com/tvradio/podcast/night_talk.html) and also on iTunes under Business News.

For information, tapes and transcripts please contact Heidi Tan (htan14@bloomberg.net). For guest suggestions, please contact Robin Wood (rwood12@bloomberg.net)

Media Man Australia Profiles

Richard Branson

Virgin Group of Companies

Financial News