**HOT OFF THE PRESS**
Here’s the latest article from SCMP on the licensing
issue (this just came out today).
Hmmm…very interesting article. It seems to me after reading this article
that the Communications Authority (aka Broadcasting Authority) actually has no
real power and their opinions don’t count for anything.
Speaking of the Communications Authority….
The other big piece of news that came out today was that
TVB has officially announced they will file an appeal with the Executive
Council and Chief Executive to overturn the ‘ruling’ that the Communications
Authority made a few weeks back charging that TVB violated anti-competition
rules (check out the 2 articles I posted below about the issue several weeks
back).
I’m actually very interested in seeing how this whole issue
with the anti-competition thing plays out.
If TVB ends up getting their way, then HK is “screwed” for sure because
that means there is definitely corruption going on amongst the Executive branch
of the HK government….I mean, it definitely can’t be a ‘coincidence’ for the EC
and CE to ‘go against’ the CA once again (with the free TV license thing and
now this) and ‘overrule’ everything that the CA says (which is exactly what
they did in the license thing – in fact, based on the below article, looks like
the Executive Council has no respect for the CA whatsoever). If that’s the case, then, in my opinion, the
government might as well just get rid of the Communications Authority
altogether, since no one seems to listen to them or take them seriously
anyway!!
******
'Fear of
failures' behind Exco decision to add only two free-TV stations
Source: South China Morning Post
The fear that television stations
might close in the face of fierce competition was the main reason for the
Executive Council's decision to issue just two new free-to-air TV licences.
A person familiar with the council's
discussions said the decision to offer licences to PCCW's Hong Kong Television
Entertainment and i-Cable's Fantastic TV but not Hong Kong Television Network
(HKTV) was based on the "mainstream views" of Exco members, although
it was not unanimous and was not put to a vote.
The mainstream view was that cutthroat
competition would force the closure of TV stations, the person said, citing the
1978 collapse of Commercial Television.
A government source, meanwhile, said
the chief secretary, financial secretary and secretary for justice agreed that
only two licences should be issued, adding that the decision was not intended
to protect any existing players.
Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying said
the whole market's sustainability was a concern.
This emerged as HKTV chairman Ricky
Wong Wai-kay confirmed that a judicial review challenging the decision would be
filed "very soon".
Wong has said he was invited by a
senior government official in 2009 to bid for a licence and the government
still had not explained why he lost.
Lawyers said the judicial review could
hold up the licensing process, as Wong stood a chance of winning.
It is understood that of the
applicants, HKTV was not seen as the weakest in reports commissioned by the
then Broadcasting Authority (now the Communications Authority), which have not
been fully made public.
The reports by Spectrum Value partners
- partly quoted in TVB's filings for its unsuccessful judicial review
application aimed at blocking the new licences - predicted that ATV would be
the first to go out of business if three new players were brought in.
But the reports said
"sustainability of the market or individual applicants should not be a
primary consideration" in the granting of new licences.
The government also said in 1998 that
it would not cap the number of licences.
Nevertheless, the person familiar with
Exco discussions said: "Exco does care about the impact on market order.
Unlike the telecommunications market, the free-TV market affects seven million
people and the grass-roots people who can't afford pay-TV don't have choices
other than free TV."
Exco had chosen what it regarded as
the two strongest operators.
As the three contenders had no
financial problems, "the most crucial factor members took into account was
programme planning. [Winners] HK Television Entertainment and Fantastic
Television are better than Hong Kong Television Network", the person said.
It was "political nonsense"
to say that Exco should not deviate from the Broadcasting Authority's
recommendation in 2011 that all three licences be granted. "Exco needs to
take into account all factors before making a decision."
Wong said Hong Kong people had many
choices of current affairs programmes, but not of entertainment on free TV.
"We invested HK$900 million
mostly on entertainment shows," he said.
Wong rejected the suggestion his
company, which planned to offer 30 free channels, two produced by itself, was
the weakest in programme planning.
"From programming quality to
experience, we are the best," he said.
Executive councillors Fanny Law Fan
Chiu-fun and Regina Ip Lau Suk-yee said yesterday that the government should
explain more clearly the rationale behind the decision to settle the
controversy.
Fan noted many people were not convinced
by the government's explanation.
Democrat James To Kun-sun said that he
would seek a debate in the Legislative Council on the issue on November 6.
ATV's and TVB's licences will expire
in 2015.
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