Pomeranz Takes A Swipe At SBS Management
Former star of SBS program The Movie Show (and personal foe of Zach Braff) Margaret Pomeranz has written an article for today’s Crikey mailout in which she displays both support for newsreader Mary Kostakidis, as well as contempt for the current management of SBS.
Here’s a brief excerpt to whet your tastebuds.
The recent acrimonious departure of Mary Kostakidis is the last in the long line of defections and ejections from SBS under the current management. The organization has been stripped of just about anyone who had any connection to an SBS where an ethos of commitment pervaded the organization. There has been a cultural genocide at the place.
…
Whether you want to acknowledge it or not, that dollar will ultimately shape programming. The antics of Paris Hilton are well-covered on the commercial broadcasters, what is the justification for including a story about her at the top end of the SBS news? Did anyone mention dumbing-down?
You could perhaps justify the changes if they proved more relevant to more Australians. But the reverse has been the case. SBS news was respected, valued and watched. In its new, more commercial incarnation it is actually less watched. It’s sad to see the demise of this flagship of SBS as the ratings plummeted with the new format. A format very much like Channel 9. Or 7. Or 10.
Touche.
Meanwhile, smh.com.au has Paul Sheehan declaring that SBS is “an indulgence we don’t need”, stating, amongst other things -
the problems facing SBS, in particular, are bigger than any personality or any management policy. The problem is structural. The real question facing the Federal Government, and the overwhelming majority of taxpayers who pay for SBS but rarely watch it, is whether SBS should continue to exist at all.
I think it should go. Because SBS is more valuable dead than alive.
The Special Broadcasting Service Act should be repealed, the corporation dismantled and sold and its valuable broadcasting spectrum auctioned off. SBS has outlived its charter, and the charter has always been of dubious social utility. (I quote, in part: “As far as practicable, inform, educate and entertain Australians in their preferred languages.”)
Australia has moved on. The term “ethnic” is now laughably outdated. Technology has been transformed.
Ooer. Personally, this has been the most interesting SBS has ever been in our eyes, excluding the period when it had the show Life Support, and the night we stumbled across Inspector Rex for the first time.
- Next Post: Owen Wilson Reportedly Hospitalised After Suicide Attempt »
- « Previous Post: “Ruddslide” Continues To Pwn Libs, Howard Considering Tactical Membership To Spearmint Rhino

Comments
To very, very roughly paraphrase Paul Sheehan’s SMH piece, he argued that a) because SBS only gets 5% of the ratings it’s irrelevant and b) people who don’t speak Enlgish can now get Foxtel to watch world news.
Well Mr Sheehan I didn’t realise that a 1/20 share of a TV audience was all that bad (especially considering that commercial stations and even the ABC would have much more money pumped into them for production and advertising intents), and as for people of the LOTE-kind getting Foxtel, does he realise how annoying it is to pay for 35 stations only to find yourself watching the umpteenth rerun of Whose Line Is It Anyway cuz there’s SFA on?
um, paul sheehan is a raging tool, so this is pretty predictable stuff from him.
oh, and onya mary.
I worked with Mary at SBS for many years and I am apalled at the way she has been treated. She is not alone in being abused by the management there. Shaun Brown and his cronies should learn that just because you run a commercial station doesn’t mean that you have to start acting like Eddie Bloody Maguire. In fact I would argue that if you want a successful TV station, acting like Eddie Maguire is the worst thing you could do.