The Newsroom

State TV

(December 2011)

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:-(
A former member
When reporting on countries such as North Korea, Syria, Iran and so on the 'State TV' is often quoted. I was reading article on BBC yesterday which said Irish State broadcaster RTE. What constitutes 'State TV'?
WW
WW Update
"State TV" is a problematic term because it can refer either to state- owned broadcasters (such as RTE, as well as the BBC and Channel 4) or, more often, broadcasters that are also directly controlled by the state -- official mouthpieces mostly found in authoritarian countries these days.

One way to avoid this problem is to use "public TV" instead of "state TV" when talking about RTE, ZDF, NRK, and the like. (However, this can be misleading in a UK context, since ITV and Five are also considered public service broadcasters. In most other countries, privately owned commercial broadcasters are not considered PSBs and are not regulated as such.) The term "state-owned" is also fairly clear.
Last edited by WW Update on 28 December 2011 10:51am - 2 times in total
:-(
A former member
Well news orgs should make it clearer, when one article says Irish State TV and in another North Korea State TV. They should have said public state for RTE then.
LJ
Live at five with Jeremy
I can imagine its not a term broadcasters like used about them. If you were to go by the BBC's terms then it itself is 'State tv.' Are there any civilized, democratic countries that their government controls the State tv broadcaster?
MA
Markymark
I can imagine its not a term broadcasters like used about them. If you were to go by the BBC's terms then it itself is 'State tv.' Are there any civilized, democratic countries that their government controls the State tv broadcaster?


The Vatican ? ! Very Happy
GO
gottago
I can imagine its not a term broadcasters like used about them. If you were to go by the BBC's terms then it itself is 'State tv.' Are there any civilized, democratic countries that their government controls the State tv broadcaster?


The Vatican ? ! Very Happy


He said civilised and democratic.
RD
rdd Founding member
"State TV" is a problematic term because it can refer either to state- owned broadcasters (such as RTE, as well as the BBC and Channel 4) or, more often, broadcasters that are also directly controlled by the state -- official mouthpieces mostly found in authoritarian countries these days.

One way to avoid this problem is to use "public TV" instead of "state TV" when talking about RTE, ZDF, NRK, and the like. (However, this can be misleading in a UK context, since ITV and Five are also considered public service broadcasters. In most other countries, privately owned commercial broadcasters are not considered PSBs and are not regulated as such.) The term "state-owned" is also fairly clear.


Public TV's problematic in a US context too, since it inevitably refers to PBS, which is not state owned at all (though it receives public funding).

It's a hard one to reconcile. To my mind every state-owned broadcaster is subject to some degree of state control, even if in the vast majority of democracies the Government does not seek to direct the day to day operations of the broadcaster. Even the BBC, which is probably the most independent of public broadcasters in the world, is subject to this - its members (the BBC Trust) are appointed by the British government, and if it were to become too anti-government there is always the threat available to the Government to reduce or abolish the licence fee.

If you were to ask which is the most influenced by Government state broadcaster in a liberal democracy, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation would come to mind - since it is funded by general taxation, its' funding is very easily cutable on the wim of the government of the day.

As for RTÉ (since it gave rise to the OPs post), I'm not sure it is really any more or less independent from the government than the BBC. Unlike the BBC it is a creature of Act of Parliament rather than a royal charter, and unlike the BBC it carries advertising. Nonetheless the Government doesn't give RTÉ instructions regarding its day to day business. There was a reserve power in the (now repealed) Broadcasting Authority Act 1960 to direct RTÉ not to broadcast any particular matter or class of matter, which was only ever used to ban Sinn Fein from the airwaves during the Troubles in NI. RTÉ is typically criticized for being too left-wing, an example being over the household charge (effectively a poll tax) which is being introduced next year, certain far-left politicians have been encouraging people not to pay and RTÉ has been accused of being too sympatethic to them.

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