Save Our SBS – friends of SBS – joins all supporters and every friend of SBS in celebrating SBS radio, television, digital and online services. We are a not-for-profit association of ordinary people defending the original special purpose of SBS.DONATE here.
Last October the federal government announced five-year funding for SBS. That begins on 1 July this year. Previously SBS was funded on a triennial basis.
In the budget handed down this week, existing short-term funding for key language services and audio description will continue into base government funding.
A spokesperson for SBS said:
SBS welcomes the continuity and stability which the five-year funding model provides, ensuring that we are able to keep delivering our… »
The Albanese Labor Government confirmed it will deliver 5-year funding terms for Australia’s national broadcasters, SBS and the ABC, commencing 1 July 2023.
Communications Minister, Michelle Rowland, said that moving those broadcasters beyond 3-year funding terms will better safeguard the independence of the national broadcasters, as well as support long-term strategic planning and innovation in high-quality content provision and service delivery, across Australia.
Save… »
SBS has released its fifth Elevate Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP), updating SBS commitment to First Nations content for the next four years.
The broadcaster has worked closely with Reconciliation Australia to continue its commitment to First Nations stories, cultures and languages. Reconciliation Australia is the lead body for reconciliation in Australia, promoting relationship-building and respect between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and the wider… »
SBS has translated the Uluru Statement from the Heart into more than 20 Aboriginal languages and another 60+ languages for Australia’s Culturally and Linguistically Diverse communities.
In his victory speech as Australia’s 31st Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese not only started by acknowledging the traditional owners of the land but went a step further and confirmed the Labor Party’s commitment to the implementation of the Uluru Statement from the Heart. Albanese said:… »
This was first published by Pearls and Irritations on 12 January 2022. The full text is presented here as written by Save Our SBS president Steve Aujard.
It was Brian Johns, then Special Broadcasting Service managing director, who in 1987 came up with the idea of supplementing SBS’s taxpayer subsidy by broadcasting ads between TV programs.
“I hope I haven’t created a monster,” he told me during an interview over coffee on 6 February 2013 at Cafe Cavallino in Carlton.… »
SBS have a daily news bulletin for new English speakers – SBS News in Easy English. It is a great initiative.
Bulletins of SBS News in Easy English are read slowly using simplified language and run five minutes.
Content mostly focuses on Australian news and the text of each bulletin is available on the web, app, or whatever plateform is used to listen.
The idea of news in easy English is not new. In radio's hey-day, all the big broadcasters ran 'news in simple English'.… »
The results are of the THREE QUESTION POLL are in.
► There are too many ads and promos on SBS.
Agree: 97.91%
Disagree: 2.09%
Total Votes : 6753
► SBS has too many commercial breaks disrupting programs.
Agree: 97.78%
Disagree: 2.22%
Total Votes : 6664
► Most in-program commercial breaks on SBS look forced or artificially contrived, and it would be misleading to describe them as natural program breaks.
… »
SBS appears to have 50 percent more advertising in some primetime hours than the SBS Act permits according to a series of findings carried out by Save Our SBS from 2009 to 2020.
Promos were not counted. Nor were classification announcements, community service announcements, sponsor billboards and sponsored promos.
Under section 45* of the Special Broadcasting Service Act 1991 advertising is limited to “not more than 5 minutes in any hour of broadcasting”. Promos do… »
An overwhelming majority of SBS viewers want the broadcaster to present programs for children provided those programs are fully-funded, without advertising or reliance on advertising.
A total of 3,981 viewers were polled in two separate polls - one on Facebook, the other on Save Our SBS - in which participants were asked separate questions about multicultural, multiethnic, and Indigenous programs for children.
The questions and findings of the Two question poll on… »
A government initiated Options paper proposes SBS be obligated to broadcast or stream a quota of children's TV. We'd like to hear your views.
Take the TWO question poll below and leave a comment below that too.
SBS is not currently required to carry programs for children but if it were, do you agree or disagree that——
More information at the Save Our SBS Australian content and children’s TV on SBS – a submission to the Supporting… »
Earlier this year, a government initiated Options paper authored by the Australian Communications and Media Authority with Screen Australia considered how best to support Australian stories on-screen generally, and proposed SBS carry a quota of children's content. The communications department then asked stakeholders to comment on the options in the paper. Below is the submission that Save Our SBS made in respect of that.
To enable Save Our SBS… »
Apart from ease of viewing, there are many reasons to shift advertising away from programs on SBS but until now, the economic benefits have not been explored.
SBS aims to inspire “inclusivity and social cohesion.” That's what drives the broadcaster and this aim is articulated in its Corporate Plans, underpinned by its Charter.
Despite SBS's aims, The Scanlon-Monash Index of Social Cohesion 2007‑2018 shows that social cohesion has been falling in… »
This year, the Senate’s communications committee has been inquiring into the economic and cultural value of Australian content on our media services.
Written submissions to the committee from SBS and Save Our SBS put the case for set quotas of Australian content saying it ought to be fully-funded. Save Our SBS argued that if content were fully-funded, there would be no point in SBS carrying advertisements. To stay faithful to its Charter, Save Our SBS said that SBS… »
When the 1991 Parliament incorporated the phrase “natural program breaks” into the SBS Act it intended the placement of advertising on SBS television would not disrupt programs, that SBS not present itself like a commercial broadcaster and that “natural program breaks” would be restricted to:-
Mr SMITH Liberalhalf-time in a soccer match … in effect what will happen is that advertising will top and tail programs
Sen ALSTON Liberalnatural program breaks, one would think that it is not too difficult to identify … clearly the half-time break in football and other sporting programs is a fairly common occurrence. The topping and tailing of programs so that good quality films are not massacred by advertisements is something that most people will readily identify with and recognise the breach of very quickly
Sen COLLINS Labor natural program breaks will be so unobtrusive on audiences as to be almost undetectable
Mr LEE Laboradvertisement–at the beginning and the end of the sponsored program. In that way the viewers were not disturbed and were not constantly interrupted, as is the case on some of the commercial television programs
Mr SINCLAIR National let us not try to get the advertising revenue that will make the SBS another commercial channel. If we do, again, that will change its character, and I do not think that is really what we are about
Save Our SBS – friends of SBS – joins all supporters and every friend of SBS in celebrating SBS radio, television, digital and online services. We are a not-for-profit association and defend the original special purpose of SBS. We advocate greater public funding for SBS, value multilingual & multicultural programs, and treasure the diverse culturally rich service intended for SBS – without in-program commercial breaks.