Showing posts with label Cape Town TV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cape Town TV. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

CTV warns: Millions of South African viewers to lose free TV access in government's rushed switch-off plan.


by Thinus Ferreira

Cape Town TV (CTV) is joining the chorus of extremely concerned voices warning about the South African government's suddenly-rushed plan to switch off all analogue TV signals in the country at the end of the month, warning that millions of viewers will lose their TV access and that it will damage free-to-air television and TV ratings.

It comes as e.tv's case against the government's switch-off date will be heard in the Pretoria high court on Monday and Tuesday 14 and 15 March.

After South Africa's minister of communications and digital technologies Khumbudzo Ntshavheni suddenly switched to an aggressive province-by-province analogue TV signals switch-off schedule in 2021 - with the digital migration process to digital terrestrial television (DTT) now envisioned to end by 31 March - free-to-air TV ratings have started to fall as broadcasters lose viewers who haven't switched to set-top boxes (STBs) or new TV sets, and affecting ad rates.

After Sentech's analogue transmission towers for the SABC were switched off in the Free State - the first province to lose analogue television signals - TV viewers of the public broadcaster in 2021 plunged by a fifth (20%), with the SABC losing almost half of its TV audience (46%) in the Northern Cape and 34% of its TV ratings in the North West after those provinces lost their analogue transmissions.

eMedia took the decision to take the government to court to postpone the pronounced cut-off date of 31 March, with the case which will be heard today and tomorrow in the Pretoria high court.

Civil society groups like the Right2Know Campaign warn that the government is going to leave millions of ordinary South Africans without television access after 31 March and unable to get news, information and education programming.

In a statement, the department of communications and digital technologies says it "has noted with concern the misinformation and false claims that there is a pending loss of free-to-air television in South Africa".

"The misinformation seeks to create unnecessary anxiety about the end of dual illumination period and the gazetted analogue switch-off date of 31 March 2022. The claim that 14 million South Africans are going to lose free-to-air television on 31st March 2022 are preponderous at best and a figment of imagination at worst."

The department says poor households earning less than R3500 per month who applied for a government-subsidised STB by 31 October 2021 "will be connected before the switch-off and those who applied after the cut-off date will be connected within 3 to 6 months of the analogue switch-off date".


SA 'ill-prepared for analogue TV switch-off'
Like e.tv, the community TV station Cape Town TV says it is fighting to keep its analogue broadcast signal on-air "as the country stumbles towards the end of analogue TV transmission".

CTV says many of its current free-to-air viewers will lose access to the channel on 31 March since there are "too few digital TV receivers in the market".

"Our research shows that South Africans are very ill-prepared for the switch-off," says Karen Thorne, CTV station director.

"This presents a serious problem for all free-to-air broadcasters on the DTT platform. This is why e.tv is suing the government to postpone the analogue switch-off and its legal documents include community TV broadcasters as affected parties."

She says poor households who register to get an STB will still have to wait "many months before you get the device".

"Most of the existing government stocks have been earmarked for the 1.3 million people who have already registered and there is no telling when more will be available. The global chip shortage is a complicating factor that will extend the wait."


Millions of viewers to lose TV access
Karen Thorne says "We are certain that millions of South Africans are going to lose access to television if the analogue switch-off takes place as scheduled at the end of March".

"We know that less than half of the government decoders have been installed nationally and there are few decoders available for those who do not qualify for the subsidised devices. The major retail stores don't stock them so you have to find one at a specialist retailer or online supplier."

"We don't know how many digital TV sets with integrated tuners are out there, but we do know from the Broadcasting Research Council (BRC) that the proportion of television households that only receive free-to-air television stands at around 5.6 million."

"Multiply that figure by an average of 2.5 people in a TV household and that gives you an estimate of 14 million affected people. Many of these viewers are going to find themselves without television on April Fool's Day if analogue signals are switched off, particularly in the cities."

She says that a significant loss of audience will be tough on free-to-air broadcasters and could even be catastrophic for community TV channels like Cape Town TV.

"But the woes of the community TV sector don't end there - SA’s community television stations are being forced to shift from their local focus to become provincial broadcasters."

"While the expansion of broadcast footprints will bring more potential viewers into the ambit of community TV activities, it poses significant challenges for community broadcasters."

"For one thing, it dramatically increases transmission costs because many more transmitters must be hired from the national signal distributor, Sentech."

"CTV's signal distribution costs will rise from R60 000 a month to R1.8 million a month - an increase of 2900%," she says.

"We have been raising this issue with the government for many years but nothing has been done on the policy front to address this problem."


Rush to sell spectrum damaging SA TV
Karen Thorne says "The prime driver for the analogue switch-off is the auction of frequency spectrum to cellular operators, which has just taken place. Cape Town TV operates on the frequency 559.25 MHz, which is not a part of the digital dividend, so postponing switching it off will not disrupt the spectrum auction and the allocation of frequencies to bidders in that market."

"We have asked Khumbudzo Ntshavheni to postpone the analogue switch-off for this frequency so that the dual illumination period is extended for Cape Town TV. This will enable us to continue reaching Capetonians until such time as there is a reasonable business case for CTV to exist in a sustainable fashion on the DTT network."

CTV says it has joined the #SaveFreeTV movement launched by civil society organisations concerned that the government's scheduled analogue switch-off date of 31 March will deprive millions of South Africans from access to television due to the shortage of DTT receivers.

"CTV shares the concerns that e.tv and the #SaveFreeTV campaign are raising to postpone the analogue-switch-off in the major population areas until there is an adequate base of free-to-air viewers on DTT."

Karen Thorne says the South African government is "not paying attention to the fate of free-to-air television after the analogue switch-off in its rush to sell-off frequency spectrum to the cellular operators".

"We understand that the SABC saw a 30% drop-off in viewership in the Free State after its transmitters were switched off in that province. Even this level of viewership loss will hit community channels hard, but they are likely to lose even higher proportions as their lower-income audiences scramble to find viewing options."

"We want to see an orderly, well-managed and realistic process of migrating people to DTT," she says.

"This needs more time than is presently being allowed and the government must engage in a constructive fashion with all stakeholders to ensure that this happens successfully."

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Cape Town TV awaiting proposals and offering the chance to learn to create your own TV talk show.


by Thinus Ferreira

Are you the next Oprah? If you're tired of the "OpenUpTheIndustry" hashtag, South Africans can now be the change like Mahatma Ghandi said, and create their own television talk show with Cape Town TV.

CTV (DStv 263) is awaiting applications from people in and around Cape Town who are interested in having their own talk show, with the community TV station that will be using its own studio facilities in Observatory to offer a free training programme that will help people to create, finance and present their own TV talk show. 

The closing date for applications for Cape Town TV's Production Development Programme (PDP) is 10 September 2021, with workshops that will be taking place on Saturdays at the TV station's studios and that will help successful candidates with the creation of a TV talk show, using CTV's studio, crew and production skills.

The workshops are free, but only people with successful applications will be permitted to attend. People must email a short proposal of their imagined show to Sisanda Henna at sisanda@capetowntv.org by 10 September, with a brief outline of your original TV talk show idea.

The proposal must explain the TV talk show's social relevance (why it's needed) and its concept (what it will be about), who it's for and the audience and why people would want to watch it (audience appeal).

TV talk show ideas should preferably be around and address social development issues, but any topic will be considered by merit, while shows done in Afrikaans and isiXhosa are preferred.

Participants must have expertise in their subject areas - you can't host or do a TV talk show but not know a lot about the broad topic or audience you want to discuss or represent.

The various TV talk shows, without studio audiences, will be tested in Cape Town TV's studios with a generic set and after 4 sessions in the open studio a show could get its own customised set and timeslot on the CTV schedule, and shows can potentially be sponsored or be done through donor funding.

Talk shows will have a maximum of two guests per episode, and could include one short, locally-filmed insert shot in Cape Town, depending on production capacity.

The weekly workshops will include sessions on developing programme concepts, programme research, scriptwriting, the production recording process and studio know-how, post-production, marketing and monetisation.

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Crew at community TV station Cape Town TV held at gunpoint by violent robbers who break equipment and steal 3 cameras.

Crew at the community TV channel Cape Town TV (CTV) became the victims of crime last week when four armed men on Thursday entered the TV channel's studio in Observatory Industrial Park in Lower Scott Road and robbed people at gunpoint.

The four robbers entered CTV in 2 stolen vehicles and held 20 CTV crew members at gunpoint for almost half an hour 20 minutes, according to CTV station manager Karen Thorne.

"They got very violent and broke a few cameras before locking the crew inside".

The robbers fled with 3 cameras that were recently donated to Cape Town TV by MultiChoice. No arrest have yet been made.

Friday, August 18, 2017

Cape Town TV known as CTV returning to its full name as the community TV channel marks a decade on the air in 2018.

The community TV channel Cape Town TV - known as CTV - is moving away from its "CTV" name and returning to its full name of Cape Town TV.

CTV, based in the Observatory suburb of Cape Town, will officially rebrand as "Cape Town TV" in 2018 when the non-profit, community-based TV station serving the Cape Town metropolitan area marks its 10th birthday in 2018.

CTV that is also carried on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform giving it a national audience across South Africa, has two TV studios in which staff produce various talk shows, news and current affairs programming.

Besides local programming Cape Town TV also carries syndicated international content from for instance the Qatar-based Al Jazeera TV news channel.

Friday, July 3, 2015

Kgomotso Matsunyane to present a second weekly TV talk show, Sex Talk, on CTV from 9 July; promises 'frank, fun' discussion of sexuality.


Multi-tasking, multi-talker Kgomotso Matsunyane isn't staying with just the SABC, next week she will start her second nationally shown TV talk show, Sex Talk on community TV station Cape Town TV (DStv 263) at 19:30.

Kgomotso Matsunyane who is the moderator of the recently started panel discussion talk show Rise on SABC1 starts another talk show on Thursday, 9 July on Cape Town TV, opening up the discussion about sex and sexuality.

Sex Talk promises to be CTV's most provocative show yet and since the terrestrial community TV station is carried on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform making it accessible for DStv subscribers nationally, viewership will likely spike for Cape Town TV with the addition of the weekly talk show.

Episodes of Sex Talk will repeat on CTV on Saturdays at 21:00.

Kgomotso Matsunyane promises that Sex Talk will be a frank discussion about sex, "yes – sex, that topic that we dare not talk about, even though people are thinking sex, wanting sex, reading sex, watching sex, having sex, avoiding sex, or even worse, hurting or killing someone through sex".

Like SABC1's Rise, Kgomotso Matsunyane's new concurrent talk show which will be "a fun, frank and entertaining weekly talk show" will also have panelists and guests in conversation to talk about sex. Sex Talk topics will range from masturbation and deception to infidelity and impotency.

Sex Talk will also tackle issues of social concerns, such as sexual equality, teenage pregnancy, the role of the parents, violence based on sex and sexuality, but also the pleasures of sex.

"By allowing guests to interact in dialogue rather than being interviewed, Sex Talk enables free flowing and uninhibited conversation - and what emerges is revelatory," says Kgomotso Matsunyane.

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

Cape Town TV holding a 'virtual town hall meeting' on Saturday 30 August at 14:00 which will be broadcast live.

Cape Town Television (CTV) (DStv 263) is holding what the Cape Town based community TV station calls a "virtual town hall meeting" on Saturday 30 August between 14:00 and 16:00.

CTV wants to find out from viewers and stakeholders whether the community TV station is fulfilling its role as a community broadcaster, what CTV can do to improve the services the station offer and what the community and viewers can do to help the community TV station.

CTV's town hall meeting will take place at CTV studios in the Observatory Business Park in Observatory, Cape Town.

CTV will do a presentation after which guests will be able to participate in a discussion that will be broadcast live on the TV channel.

CTV says viewers at home will be able to participate in the broadcast and town hall meeting through a SMS ticker line on screen as well as on social media through Facebook.

People who want to attend the studio town hall meeting can send an email to reception@capetowntv.org by 15 August.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

48hOURS TV added to Cape Town TV with presenters Liezel van der Westhuizen and Nicole Biondi on Thursdays at 19:00.


48hOURS TV with presenters Liezel van der Westhuizen and Nicole Biondi has been added as a new weekly magazine show on Thursdays at 19:00 to the community TV station Cape Town TV (CTV).

With CTV being added to MultiChoice's DStv platform on channel 263, viewers across South Africa and Lesotho will be able to watch the show from this Thursday, 10 October when it gets a national broadcasting footprint.

48hOURS TV is a brand extension of the existing weekly newspaper The Next 48hOURS which covers events happening in Cape Town, Durban and Johannesburg.

48hOURS TV on Thursdays (with a repeat on Saturdays at 20:00) sticks to the premise by showing viewers the best of great things available to do in Cape Town, happenings and entertainment on all fronts, and interviewing people, personalities and stars visiting the city.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

BREAKING. Community television in South Africa takes a giant leap forward, forms new Association of Community Television South Africa.


The growing community television sector in South Africa is taking a giant leap forward with the formation of a new association, the Association of Community Television South Africa, which will be known as ACTSA and will represent the interest of community television and community TV stations in South Africa.

All of the existing community television licensees in South Africa - Soweto TV, Cape Town TV (CTV), Bay TV, One KZN (1KZN), Tshwane TV, North West TV and Bara TV - have signed a joint memorandum of understanding to create the Association of Community Television South Africa which will act to protect and promote, support and canvass for the community television sector in the country.

ACTSA will lobby for the community television sector in South Africa - under threat from a litany of challenges ranging from high signal distribution fees, undue influence and take-over threats from big corporate conglomerates, a lack of skilled personnel and training issues, soaring programming costs and even massive upcoming frequency disruption and viewer confusion as South Africa transitions from an analogue to a digital broadcasting space where community stations have to vacate their analogue frequencies and hope that viewers will be able to find them again.

Then there is also the South African government's interference. The government has started talk about the possible "regionalisation" of community television in South Africa to "provincial level" - something community TV stations don't want or need.

The government also wants to change the law to give the department of communication sweeping powers to appoint the boards of community television stations in South Africa - something else community TV stations are opposed to.

ACTSA will try and help with programme syndication, content exchange, the maximising of possible commercial opportunities as well as training and capacity building between community TV stations in the country.

ACTSA has elected an interim steering committee led by Motse Mfuleni from Bay TV as the chairperson, Karen Thorne from CTV as the deputy chairperson and Colin MacKenzie from Tshwane TV as the general secretary.

"ACTSA will make an important contribution to building media diversity and development in South Africa," says Motse Mfuleni. "Now we as the community television sector have a body that provides support and guidance for community TV stations and we are able to address our issues with one voice representing all the stakeholders in the sector."

ACTSA says all community TV stations joining the association have agreed to "a range of common values". These include a people-centered rather than a profit-driven approach to broadcasting, editorial and fiduciary independence, freedom of speech and community participation.

ACTSA will formulate a charter to help guide the activities of South Africa's community television sector which will include issues such as the mandate of community television in the country, programming, revenue streams and distribution platforms, governance, ownership and control and licensing categories.