Thursday, April 7, 2016

SABC boss Hlaudi Motsoeneng doesn't like the words 'state capturing'; says 'I don't want to use this 'capturing'. I don't think it is a South African word'.


The SABC’s controversial boss Hlaudi Motsoeneng told the public broadcaster's head of news and acting CEO that he doesn't like the word "state capture".

At the latest SABC breakfast briefing on Wednesday broadcast on SABC2's Morning Live done in conjunction with the Gupta-owned newspaper The New Age in Johannesburg, Hlaudi Motsoeneng who is a perennial panelist, once again raised eyebrows with his comments.

The topic of the breakfast briefing discussion was "state capture".

The term that rose to prominence in the news the last few weeks following multiple allegations of impropriety around the influential Gupta family's political ties and business dealings with high-ranking current and former government officials and also implicating president Jacob Zuma.

"There is no way anyone can capture Hlaudi," said Hlaudi Motsoeneng who reportedly has close ties with president Zuma and who is embroiled in an ongoing and protracted court case regarding his appointment as chief operating officer (COO) at the SABC.

The Public Protector in February 2014 released a scathing report directly implicating the famously matricless Motsoeneng in several instances of maladministration .

The Public Protector's report said Hlaudi Motsoeneng showed "a lack of ethical conduct" and noted that he should never have been appointed at the SABC, that his appointment was irregular, and that he admitted in a recorded interview that he lied about having a matric certificate.

"I have my own ethics and morale. And I influence myself. I don't influence by other people," said Hlaudi Motsoeneng on Wednesday, who just returned from a business trip to India, to laughter at the breakfast briefing. "People know, Hlaudi is Hlaudi".

"When it comes to the Guptas, they have approached me several times looking for partnership. Like other business people. I said, 'no'. In this one, it's no".

"There's no way that anyone can capture. And when we decide on business, example, I don't decide whether it's Gupta; whether the son of the president is part. What we check is whether they meet the requirements".


'I don’t want to use this capturing'
Hlaudi Motsoeneng said he doesn't like the term "state capture", looking for where Jimi Matthews, the SABC's head of news and latest acting SABC CEO is.

"You see, Jimi …where are you now? I don't want to use this 'capturing'. I don’t think it is a South African word".

"People that I work with, they know, you can't influence me. What I'm just saying is people need to have ethics and morale."

"But you know, if you know your job, you won't be influenced by individuals. Because it is not a favour. You deserve. And if you deserve, you will stand for what you believe in," said Hlaudi Motsoeneng.


'Appreciate the ruling party'
"There is this view among certain people, white people, in this case, who believe that if you're a black man you can't run a big company. And we need to deal with these issues. And as long as you are a black man, you can't run the country. As long as you don't have those qualifications – because even black people they are now using qualifications. It's different babba," said Hlaudi Motsoeneng.

"If you are a leader, it's different from having the qualification and leading. Those are two different animals".

Hlaudi Motsoeneng said "people need to appreciate the role of the ruling party. And I'm not representing the ruling party but I take offense when someone criticise people who fought, including some of the liberations movement, PAC and others, they fought for this country."

Hlaudi Motsoeneng said: "I don't want to sit here where people are criticising the democratical people who are elected. And actually we should leave politicians to debate in parliament".

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Connie Ferguson dumps SABC1's Generations - again - as the actress says the productions of her Ferguson Films needs her 'undivided attention'.


Connie Ferguson is dumping SABC1's Generations - The Legacy - the second time she's exiting the Mfundi Vundla created weekday prime time soap.

Connie Ferguson who runs Ferguson Films with her husband Shona Fergusondropped Generations in April 2010 after 16 years but returned in late 2014 to help the relaunched Generations - The Legacy which never regained the soap's erstwhile popularity and viewership ratings.

Meanwhile Connie Ferguson who've started her own production company together with Shona Ferguson executive produced and starred in the drama Rockville for M-Net's Mzansi Magic (DStv 161) and is branching out with new Mzansi Magic drama Igazi.

Connie Ferguson basically returned for a year and a half to try and steady the retooled Generations - The Legacy but now she is leaving although exiting scenes have not been filmed yet.

Viewers, some fellow actors and industry insiders branded Connie Ferguson a so-called "sell-out" for returning to work on a South African TV production that they feel is exploiting actors and on-screen talent, after the firing of Generations' 16-actor principal cast in 2014 after they demanded better contracts.

"It is with great disappointment that we have to announce the departure of the much-loved Karabo Moroka, played by the talented Connie Ferguson," says the soap in a statement.

"She's working on a couple of projects that need her undivided attention and has asked to be released from her contract."

"Connie was a significant figure in the construction of Generations - The Legacy. I will be eternally grateful for that and her contribution to the growth of our industry," says Mfundi Vundla.

"Karabo is one character that set tongues wagging and her exit will be no different".

Fight Club is back on e.tv as the Extreme Fighting Championships return to the broadcaster for EFC 47 from Friday as delayed-live broadcasts.


The fight club is back on e.tv after lengthy negotiations that will see the Extreme Fighting Championship (EFC) return to the commercial free-to-air broadcaster from Friday 8 April.

While e.tv doesn't want to show its viewers news in prime time anymore, e.tv does want to show viewers how people fight each other and how grown men physical beat each other up.

e.tv previously broadcast EFC 12 to EFC 19 after the mixed martial arts (MMA) deal lapsed.

Unlike broadcasting news which e.tv says is negatively impacting its revenue potential, broadcasting blood sport lifted e.tv's ratings, reflecting "broad mass appeal".

In a new deal with Kwesé Sports, EFC will return to e.tv from EFC 47.

"This is absolutely huge for EFC, e.tv and the sport of MMA. It's a deal that we have been working on for some time and we are ecstatic. It is great for e.tv, the EFC and its partners, the athletes and the fans," says Cairo Howarth, EFC president.

"EFC has a huge following in South Africa and we are delighted to give South African MMA fans events for free on terrestrial television and to be able to reach the whole country".

The first EFC 47 broadcast on Friday 8 April will be a rerun of the EFC 47: Kabesa v Henry event that took place at the beginning of March.

After that all EFC 47 broadcasts will be broadcast delayed-live on e.tv from around 22:30 on Friday nights after the movie.

In addition Platco Digital's OpenView HD is also getting in on the action with  two EFC Fight Night episodes that will be broadcast back-to-back every Saturday night on eKasi+ (OVHD 105) from 22:00 to midnight.

eKasi+ is also available on On Digital Media (ODM) and StarTimes Media South Africa's StarSat pay-TV satellite platform, meaning that StarSat subscribers will also be able to watch EFC 47 on a delayed live basis.

Sky News adds new weekly hour-long debate show, The Pledge, in which 5 people will discuss 5 different issues without a moderator.

Sky News (DStv 402) is adding a brand-new weekly debate show, The Pledge as a weekly show that will be an unmoderated discussion show between 5 people, debating over 5 different issues.

The 9 panelists who will alternate include Emma Barnett, James Caan, Michelle Dewberry, Greg Dyke, Nick Ferrari, Rachel Johnson, Graeme Le Saux, Michelle Mone and June Sarpong.

According to Sky News they all made a "pledge": "to talk straight and tell it like it really is. And, in the absence of a presenter or moderator, there will be nothing to hold them back".

The Pledge will be broadcast on Sky News every Thursday with open and frank discussions and absolute honesty.

"This is something really different for a TV news platform. Straight- talking, opinionated contributors, no conventional host. We are really excited," says John McAndrew, Sky News' director of content. for 

Additionally each week, The Pledge will reveal on television and mobile a musical mash up featuring a news story or individual who is in the news. 

The hour-long The Pledge, filmed at Sky Studios in Osterley, will be broadcast on Thursdays at 21:00 (South African time).

Michelle Dewberry, Nick Ferrari, Rachel Johnson, Graeme Le Saux and June Sarpong will appear in the first episode of The Pledge on Thursday 21st April.

The nine panelists include: 
  • Emma Barnett, Telegraph journalist and radio presenter
  • James Caan, entrepreneur and former Dragons’ Den investor
  • Michelle Dewberry, entrepreneur and former winner of The Apprentice UK
  • Greg Dyke, former TV executive
  • Nick Ferrari, radio breakfast show host
  • Rachel Johnson, novelist and journalist
  • Graeme Le Saux, former Chelsea and England footballer
  • Lady Michelle Mone, Baroness of Mayfair and entrepreneur
  • June Sarpong, TV presenter

Broadcasting Complaints Commission slams M-Net's Carte Blanche over 'unfair' and unbalanced iSimangaliso Wetland Park story that lacks accuracy and objectivity.


South Africa's Broadcasting Complaints Commission has slammed M-Net's Carte Blanche over an "unfair" iSimangaliso Wetland Park story, saying the investigate magazine show's insert lacked accuracy and objectivity and was not impartial.

The iSimangaliso Wetland Park Authority laid a complaint at the BCCSA over M-Net's Carte Blanche over an August 2015 insert over the way the wetland, a heritage site situated in the north-eastern section of KwaZulu-Natal, was apparently being managed, and its officials Terri Castis and Andrew Zaloumis.

The insert was about the park authority purportedly mismanaging the wetland and treating residents of Sodwana Bay.

The BCCSA in its judgment found that the insert "reveals a mindset in which the producer appears to want to vent only grievances in the programme" and that "reasonable efforts were not made to fairly present opposing views".

"There are several omissions of pertinent information given to the producer in an interview" says the BCCSA, that "would have served to give the audience a more balanced view".

The BCCSA found that Carte Blanche contravened the broadcasting code in several aspects and that the broadcast unjustifiably portrayed Terri Castis and Andrew Zaloumis and the park authority as failing to properly manage the park, and that in doing so, businesses had closed down, tourism had waned and unemployment and crime had increased.

"This unjustifiable portrayal was attributable to certain comment not being based on reliable facts, reasonable efforts not being made to fairly present opposing points of view, and the failure to afford a right of reply where this is warranted".

Carte Blanche was ordered to broadcast an on-air apology and also place it on the show's website.

How e.tv's once lofty ideals to give South Africans TV news and an alternative, turned into an apparent exercise of hate and loathing.

Image from the commemorative book, e: The First 10 Years

The steady and continued dismantling and downsizing at e.tv and eNCA (DStv 403) of its news ideals and news brand is shocking and should be a great concern for South African television viewers who should not only demand, but deserve better.

With Marcel Golding and Bronwyn Keene-Young gone in the bloody palace coup at e.tv, the most important two people who stood in the breach to protect, fight for, and champion eNews, eNCA and e.tv's news division are now standing on the outside, looking in, as they watch their once esteemed news child systematically being reduced and diluted since the end of 2014.

Sabido, eMedia Investments and e.tv executives are now very clearly signaling that what they don't care for anymore is news. What they do care for, is the bottom-line - especially since e.tv is millions of rands behind and below revenue projections.

The easy scapegoat is its news product.

With e.tv that wants to dump its news bulletin outside of prime time, e.tv executives can't be any clearer about the "value" - or lack of any - it places on producing and broadcasting news, ironically in an election year.

E.tv's apparent disdain with which it now views the "onerous" burden of having to give its viewers news instead of more EFC, Anaconda movie schlock fare and Fanny by Gaslight reruns is now in the open.

The gutted eNCA (DStv 403) where the bloodletting is continuing unabated has been a ghost of its former glory for over a year now and counting.

eNCA closed all its foreign news bureaus, its lofty UK broadcasting plan is in tatters, and there's the massive ongoing exodus of highly prized, excellent and experienced on-air talent who keep leaving - both forced out the door and fired, as well as people on-screen and behind the camera who've simply quit because they've had enough.

eNCA's Africa dreams got grounded and ebbed away when it dumped its entire African division.

eNCA canned its African bulletin and magazine shows, cancelled the majority of its once carefully build-up current affairs shows and dramatically enlarged the repeats on its "24-hour" schedule where a lot of hours that were previously "live" are now rebroadcasts.

eNews, e.tv's original TV news bulletin, Frankenstein-ed into its shocking latest trash television iteration called eNews Direct that has lost any semblance to its former pedigree, including anchors, news values and format, is likewise a visual fossil record of how a once respected and trusted brand is seemingly deliberately being snuffed off.

When eNews Live at 7 started on e.tv at 19:00 on 17 January 1999 it was a breath of fresh air. e.tv did the news from its Longkloof Studios in Cape Town. It said it wanted to be different; to give another perspective. (What happened to that ideal?)

San Reddy didn't wear a tie. He and Jane Dutton leaned on tables instead of sitting behind anchor desks. And within 18 months, eNews became the English language evening news bulletin of preference.

Now e.tv doesn't want to to do that anymore and doesn't feel it has a responsibility - as required by its broadcasting licence - to provide a half hour news bulletin nightly in prime time to South African viewers.

e.tv has tinkered and steadily broken its eNews bulletin by moving it around and away from 19:00 - and now complaining that viewers fled. It's like deliberately erecting a jumping castle in the rain and then saying you won't do it again for future birthday parties because the children are mysteriously absent.

Something that e.tv had built up as an upstart the hard way, over almost 2 decades through the very hard work of a dedicated team - it's eNews brand - the new men of the e.tv empire is willing to simply spin-off and cast aside, instead of working harder to fix what wasn't broken and to restore it to what it was and can still, and again, be.

It's easy to forget, or not to know, how drastically e.tv already destroyed the news offering it used to have.

For perspective: e.tv used to have the eNews Early Edition, eNews Prime Time at 19:00 and then eNews Late Edition. Both the early eNews Early Edition and the eNews Late Edition got cancelled with nothing in its place.

The news was pushed from 19:00 where it did very well, and damaged and damaged some more, to get to the lobotomised hybrid-madness of the current eNews Direct.

With eNews - or more precisely "eNews Direct" shunted out of e.tv's prime time, it would literally mean that tens of millions of viewers will only have access once again to the SABC's SABC News broadcasts in prime time.

It would also signal that ordinary South Africans are not "allowed", "good enough" or "deserve" commercially produced free-to-air TV news.

It would mean that only South Africans who can pay for TV news other than the news from the public broadcaster, can get access to it through pay-TV like on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform.

That is very wrong - and an abhorrent signal to send, especially from a TV broadcaster who got its broadcasting licence in the first place by saying it will target and service the rising black middle class in South Africa.

One wonders what journalism's Prof. Anton Harber, now the editor-in-chief of eNCA, thinks of this.
UPDATE Thursday 14 April 2016 - I heard directly from Prof. Anton Harber who wrote to me, and asked that I please publish his letter. He says my suggestion that this is e.tv dumping its news, is misleading.
"News may shift around and change and we live in a world in which news consumption is changing radically but we are more committed than ever to ensure our news meets audience needs and is of the highest quality." Please read his entire letter here.



If e.tv gets to dump its main news bulletin from its prime time line-up, it would be a massive step for what it audience and what e.tv's audience deserves, for South Africa, and for the local news and TV news industry.

TV news in prime time means prominence. It means it matters. It's agenda setting. Besides just what it communicates, it also says to viewers that the news and it being there, matters to all of our daily lives as citizens in a democratic society.

Viewers can't just watch WWE wrestling and The Young and the Restless. Viewers also need to be informed.

e.tv now wants to tart up its already empty carbo laced schedule further with (more) vapid eye-ball grabbing entertainment and advertiser-funded production TV trash.

e.tv is like an irresponsible parent whose kids already eat Happy Meals seven days a week, now saying: "It's okay, you don't need to eat the slice of apple. In fact, I will replace it daily with a box of Astro's although more unhealthy - because its less effort, easier and above all, so much cheaper".

Responsible parents know that part of being adult and mature means that the popular choice is not always the right decision; that part of being grown-up means making difficult decisions to do what is better and right, although its harder.

e.tv surely knows that wanting to dump its news out of prime time is irresponsible and a "bad" thing for its image and for South Africa.

Yet, because on paper the numbers and savings, and the revenue it could potentially earn from more Gold Diggers instead of eNews Direct, makes "good" business, it's willing to sacrifice what it should be doing, for what it wants to be doing for the sake of more money.

Even a public commercial TV broadcaster like e.tv that's a business instead of a public broadcaster like the SABC still has a level of civic duty, a type of social responsibility towards its viewers.

Even more Astro's to replace the already small slice of apple on its prime time plate, is definitely not the diet change that e.tv, nor South Africa, needs.

SABC fires 123 staffers over fraud and 'gross dishonesty'; SABC boss Hlaudi Motsoeneng says SABC is 'committed to rooting out corruption'.


The SABC has fired a whopping 123 employees out of an implicated 200 employees for fraud and gross dishonesty with the SABC's chief operating officer (COO) Hlaudi Motsoeneng who says "the SABC remains committed to rooting out corruption and fraud".

The firing of 123 SABC employees stems from the corruption investigation into Medscheme in 2015 where SABC staffers "colluded" with medical practitioners to defraud the SABC's Medscheme.

The SABC fraud of Medscheme for instance happened through the acquisition of various services in respect of marketing.

The massive fraud left the SABC with no choice but to fire its workers immediately. SABC spokesperson Kaizer Kganyago says in a statement the SABC "terminated the employment contracts, as the finding of guilt for dishonesty is regarded in a serious light".

Tuesday, April 5, 2016

BREAKING. e.tv wants to dump all news from prime time; blames having to show viewers news as not generating revenue, warns news will threaten its future.


e.tv, South Africa's only free-to-air commercial TV broadcaster wants to dump news in prime time to make more money from more popular commercial fare like prime time soaps and is now asking the broadcasting regulator for permission to move its once number one rated TV news bulletin out of prime time.

e.tv now blames having to do news for the public as not being a revenue generator and warns that having to give South Africans a half hour of news during prime time might threaten its future as a broadcaster and cause "serious revenue challenges".

The shocking move will mean that the majority of the millions of South African TV viewers will be left with only the TV news supplied by the public broadcaster's SABC News division.

e.tv's eNews Prime Time news bulletin was for many years the number one rated and most watched TV news bulletin on South African television until e.tv started tinkering and moving the bulletin and tweaking the format in favour of its commercial soaps like Rhythm City and other content.

Its latest couple of moves over the past year, resulting in the latest, recently introduced eNews Direct, has had an ongoing negative impact on e.tv's ratings during prime time.

e.tv now wants to get rid of news during prime time although its broadcasting licence conditions demands that at least 30 minutes of news must be broadcast as a single programme per day and broadcast during prime time.

Besides the 30 minutes of news in prime time, e.tv has to broadcast at least 2 hours of news programming per day.

If approved, the shocking move will mean no more news for e.tv's 17 million daily viewers during the time period when most South Africans watch television.

e.tv says broadcasting news to South African viewers during prime time suddenly "no longer makes sense now" although the majority of South African viewers still depend on this news, although eMedia Investments also runs the eNCA (DStv 403) as a TV news channel but for pay-TV viewers on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform.

Over the past year eNCA has itself dramatically scaled back its news ambitions, shedding on-air talent and staff behind the scenes as it cancelled current affairs programming, closed all foreign news bureaus and got rid of its entire African reporting corps.

"The idea of relying on a single prime time bulletin has inveitably become antiquated and e.tv needs to be able to take this into account with regard to its overall programming scheduling," says Mark Rosin, eMedia Investments' group chief operating officer (COO).

"We have a long history of broadcasting quality news on e.tv and while the prime time condition may have catered to our audience's needs in 1998 when we first launched the service, it no longer makes sense now".

Although he wants to take news away during prime time on e.tv, Mark Rosin says "e.tv remains committed to delivering a quality independent news service and broadcasting local content that is in the public's interest".

e.tv says English news bulletins in prime time have seen a rapid decline in ratings across all free-to air channels over the last few years but the channel fails to mention that ongoing erratic timeslot and format changes are to blame for viewers fleeing e.tv and SABC3's flagship bulletins.

"We have seen our English prime time news audience decline rapidly, despite numerous attempts to retool the bulletin. And we are not alone - our competitors have experienced the same thing."

"As a commercial broadcaster generating most of its revenue in prime time, this presents serious revenue challenges, which ultimately lead to commercial viability challenges," says Mark Rosin.

e.tv says if its allowed to dump TV news outside of prime time, the channel will be able to programme and schedule commercially popular viewing "that has a significantly greater audience demand and curb current revenue losses".

Lalla Hirayama the new brand ambassador for M-Net Movies on DStv; will present new film magazine show, Lalla Land, weekly on M-Net Movies Premiere channel.


M-Net has announced that the V Entertainment presenter and SA's Got Talent judge on e.tv Lalla Hirayama is the new brand ambassador of the set of M-Net Movies channels on DStv.

Lalla Hirayama will from now on attend Hollywood movie junkets as her schedule allows and attend red carpet movie premieres internationally to interview film stars for a new film magazine show entitled Lalla Land.

Lalla Land will cover films similar to what presenter Nicole Fox did in The M-Net Movie Show for M-Net.

Lalla Land - a play on the moniker sometimes used for Los Angeles' Hollywood - will try to give DStv subscribers a behind-the-scenes glimpse into the world of films as its screened on the various M-Net Movies channels.

Lalla Land will be broadcast on Sundays at 20:30 on M-Net Movies Premiere (DStv 103) channel just before each week's blockbuster film, and as "mini-sodes" across M-Net's nine movie channels. It will also be available online.

Lalla Hirayama already interviewed Henry Cavill and Ben Affleck of the Batman v. Superman film in London and the cast of the local South African film Happiness is a Four Letter Word at the film's South African premiere.

"This is an opportunity of a lifetime. I'm just so grateful I have been afforded to live out my dream and call this my job," says Lalla Hirayama. "I'm excited to bring Africa closer to their favourite Hollywood stars as well as as box office hits".

"We know that our viewers are a little obsessed with movies," says Justin Jacobie, M-Net Movies' head of marketing.

"With her dynamo personality and charming demeanour, Lalla is the ideal person to represent M-Net Movies and all our movie fans at these events and bring us closer to the stars and celebrities that we are all dying to meet".