The pond can't say it doesn't mean to harp on it, because it does mean to harp, endlessly, joyously on it.
Christopher Warren was on hand in Crikey yesterday to help with the harping ... For sale: Murdoch’s grand dream, barely used. Available by subscription only, News Corp's sale of Foxtel represents the dying embers of Rupert Murdoch's grand plan for a global television subscription network. (paywall)
It’s official: News Corp’s Foxtel is on the market. The bargain basement sale of Australia’s declining pay-TV monopoliser and struggling streamer sounds the last post on the most ambitious play by Rupert Murdoch.
Once central to the Murdoch dream, Foxtel now no longer fits. It’s just the last piece left over from Rupert’s grand 1990s vision to build a global television subscription network, dominating the supply chain from content creation to distribution, burrowing into your eyeballs through your wallet.
It’s unlikely Foxtel will long outlast the sell-off, with the rumoured private equity buyer expected to do what private equity does: strip it for parts. Sell what it can. Milk dry what it can’t sell. Close what it can’t milk.
Just 20 years ago, Murdoch’s global vision seemed within his capacious grasp. In Australia, Foxtel had beaten competitors to be the sole distributor at scale, with control of key sports rights (and joint ownership of the National Rugby League) essential to building audiences. He’d also secured a long-term lease to build a major production studio at Sydney’s Moore Park.
The Australian operation matched a controlling (albeit minority) stake in Britain’s BSkyB and interests in Germany and Italy. In Hong Kong, James, then the favourite son, was leading the drive to build the Asian link with the Star Television Network in eastern and southern Asia including — most audaciously — into China.
In 2003, Murdoch’s world network seemed to be coming together as he captured a controlling stake in the major missing piece: the largest US satellite distributor, DirectTV. It was an intoxicating moment, but no sooner were all the pieces laid out on the table than it began to fall apart.
Once central to the Murdoch dream, Foxtel now no longer fits. It’s just the last piece left over from Rupert’s grand 1990s vision to build a global television subscription network, dominating the supply chain from content creation to distribution, burrowing into your eyeballs through your wallet.
It’s unlikely Foxtel will long outlast the sell-off, with the rumoured private equity buyer expected to do what private equity does: strip it for parts. Sell what it can. Milk dry what it can’t sell. Close what it can’t milk.
Just 20 years ago, Murdoch’s global vision seemed within his capacious grasp. In Australia, Foxtel had beaten competitors to be the sole distributor at scale, with control of key sports rights (and joint ownership of the National Rugby League) essential to building audiences. He’d also secured a long-term lease to build a major production studio at Sydney’s Moore Park.
The Australian operation matched a controlling (albeit minority) stake in Britain’s BSkyB and interests in Germany and Italy. In Hong Kong, James, then the favourite son, was leading the drive to build the Asian link with the Star Television Network in eastern and southern Asia including — most audaciously — into China.
In 2003, Murdoch’s world network seemed to be coming together as he captured a controlling stake in the major missing piece: the largest US satellite distributor, DirectTV. It was an intoxicating moment, but no sooner were all the pieces laid out on the table than it began to fall apart.
Amid the gloating, there's one item that still sticks in the craw - the way that the Emeritus Chairman and his minions conspired with the onion muncher and his lackeys (Malware following orders) to ruin the NBN...
...Foxtel struggled with high costs, rapidly evolving technology and low market penetration, peaking at about 30% of households (compared to more than 80% in the US and UK). Despite the company’s political clout, it could never convince either Labor or Liberal governments to waive the anti-siphoning laws that protected free-to-air broadcasters’ priority access to sporting rights.
Faced with the innovator’s dilemma, News Corp retreated to its core competency of regulation manipulation, with a long campaign to block or neuter the National Broadband Network. As technology continued to disrupt the sector, neither the Murdochs nor News Corp’s Australian management ever quite knew what to do with Foxtel, one moment zigging to bigging it up, the next zagging to freezing it out.
But revenge is sweet ...
...The company then turned to consolidation. The Murdochs bought back the share of the business that Rupert had gifted to Kerry Packer as part of the settlement of the Super League wars. Ownership of Australia’s Sky News was swapped from Britain’s BSkyB and its Australian partners to News Corp Australia. Program production and distribution were merged into a new Foxtel company, two-thirds owned by the Murdochs (and consolidated into News Corp accounts) and one-third by Telstra.
News Corp played with floating Foxtel — with the hope that a recapitalisation would pay off the debts Foxtel owes to both News Corp and Telstra (including the capitalisation of unpaid services the two owners had contributed to the platform).
Too late; Foxtel pivoted to streaming, trying various iterations that have all struggled. Most global suppliers can’t be bothered releasing Australian figures, but Binge seems to sit in fourth or fifth place behind Netflix, Stan, Disney and, perhaps, Prime and Paramount+. It faces losing its most valuable product when HBO launches its own expected streamer next year.
The sports streamer, Kayo, dominates Australia’s key sports — cricket, rugby league and AFL — but sports rights are a margins business, with competition from other streamers (and from Nine) threatening to squeeze those margins as costs rise.
According to the AFR, the company is hoping to clear about $1 billion from the sale and recoup the money Foxtel owes it. Worth it to quietly bury a failed dream.
Speaking of failed dreams and failed dreamers, there was plenty of that this day on the front page of the lizard Oz ...
Eek, the Orbán-loving onion muncher is back for a birthday bash ... but then Lloydie of the Amazon hasn't scribbled since 18th July so it was way past time for a bit of climate science denialism.
But first to the bro, because if you've got the onion muncher, first you must have the bromancer to deliver the fragrant bromance, still going strong ...
Both these fine Brexiteers and Thatcherites managed to propose that little England be reduced to a land of excrement, in a way that made the reviled Seine look like drinking water ...
Remember the bro in his hey day?
But the pond isn't here to relive the grand old days.
The bromancer's mission, should he chose to accept it, is to blather on about the recent UK riots without mentioning the far right, or key muck rakers and rabble rousers who played a part in the proceedings...
Of course he accepted, and did it in a doddle ...
Can the bromancer get by without mentioning the likes of Andrew Tate or Tommy Robinson? Can he what?
How wrong of you to doubt his incredible skills and capacity for misleading distractions ...
What of the talk of civil war? Nope, it's all about getting dewy-eyed about Margie, while the fiendish Bond villain is obscured from view ...
In time the real cause - identity politics - will be revealed ... and the bromancer can have yet another go at the Voice, while managing to confuse and conflate left and right ...
Follow it up with a serve of Bond supervillain Elon Musk calls PM 'two-tier Keir' over police response to UK riots.
Then you might dip into 'Two-tier': UK treats far-right attacks less hardly than Islamist violence, says thinktank ... or perhaps Priti Patel's 'laughable 'claims of two-tier policing putting officers at risks.
The pond can't guarantee these antidotes will work, but you need to swallow something if you're going to be able to swallow a far-right loon scribbling about everything except the far right loons who took to the streets to riot, while ignoring all those in England who took to the streets to protest at the behaviour of the far right goons ...
Why that's totally worthy of George Orwell ... roll it around on the tongue: "without authority there is no freedumb."
Up there with “It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.”
And so to the onion muncher, because once you've had the bro, you must have the object of the bromance, and a serve of climate science denialism ...
Fucked the NBN, and now still busy diligently fucking the planet ...
And so to Dame Groan and the usual Tuesday groaning ... and taking her cue from the onion muncher, this week it's education and those damn furriners yet again...
It has the familiarity of a nightmare, or a fever dream ...
The pond is no psychologist and so is in no position to provide an explanation of what seems like a deeply Freudian fear of pesky, difficult furriners ... a fear that haunts Dame Groan week in, week out ...
Best just to note the snaps and the video distraction...
The pond has mentioned before how all those students press down on Dame Groan like the playing cards that assault Alice in Alice in Wonderland ...
A bigger tragedy is the way that Dame Groan's obsessions prevent her from giving comrade Bill a bagging on a matter he really should be bagged about ...
Dame Groan doesn't care about any of that ... she's still haunted by those bloody furriners ...
And so to the final gobbet of the fever dream, sweat forming on the brow as Dame Groan groans away at the keyboard ...
Just in passing, I noted this typical reptile contribution from Groany: "Using some extremely suspect data...". Now would it be really too much effort for the Groany to provides for us: the source (ie what data produced by whom, when) and the nature of its suspectness (what exactly is wrong with it).
ReplyDeleteBut no, that would be asking for decent scholarship and reporting from someone utterly incapable of any of that. We're simply expected to believe her without question.
GB - thank you for that observation on the Groaness. That is really all that need be said of her, um - effort? for this day. Y'r ever h'm'ble contributor has been travelling, so not having time through the day to make observations, even on behalf of the cult.
DeleteHe is happy to report that the wattle season in the high country here, just above the border, is an absolute cracker. It is quite possible to drive for a couple of kilometres with both sides of the road lined with wattle in full bloom. That is a great thing to raise ones thoughts and spirits, way above what Rupe's minions tell us we should take as the 'news' of the day. It is the same sense that makes Housman's 'Loveliest of trees' such wonderful poetry.
And with any luck, they'll still be blossoming long after we, and especially the Groany, aren't even long faded memories.
DeleteThe Bromancer is certainly sliding further down the slippery slope toward authoritarians promotion propaganda. The lede says;
ReplyDelete"Because without authority there is no freedom".
An oxymoron and tautology all at once. Putting that sentence into a search engine is a DOG WHISTLE PROMT! Locke, Locke, Locke... fortunately civil justice types interspersed with rwnj 'think tanks' Hoover, Liberty etc...
2nd hit from, as Gore said; "Gore adds, "These groups are not providing unbiased judicial education. They are giving multithousand-dollar vacations to federal judges to promote their radical right-wing agenda at the expense of the public interest."[22]" [Liberty [for us] Fund.] From "Gore, Al (2007). The Assault on Reason. Penguin Press. p. 234. ISBN 978-1594201226. Liberty Fund .
And from the prof (now of Media Watch fame, due to Renew Economy article cancellation - last night)...
"John Locke, an enemy of freedom
...
"A proper treatment of Locke would have to explain how
* His theory of natural rights in property was designed to justify the expropriation of indigenous populations
* His advocacy of freedom included support for slavery
* His theory of religious toleration excluded atheists and Catholics
* His theory of political freedom did not extend to freedom of speech.
"How then did Locke get such a high reputation? The answer isn’t all that mysterious. Locke was closely involved in the British colonisation of North America, both as an investor and as a participant in political activity such as the drafting of the Constitution of the Carolinas, which ratified the expropriation of the indigenous population and enshrined the absolute power of slave-owners.
"When the slave-owning colonists achieved independence from the British Crown, it was natural for them to look to Locke to provide the basis for their political theories"...
...
https://johnquiggin.com/2015/06/15/john-locke-an-enemy-of-freedom/
Bromancer is Loxke'd and Loaded in the newscorpse shitgun. Baaad ammo man. The koolaid must be a potent brew.
If he was alive today Locke would be part of that Potemkin class of public intellectuals occupying endowed chairs and think tanks trying to make sh*tfvckery look like sensible policy.
DeleteOh my:
ReplyDelete"Continent is warming at much faster rate than other parts of world, leading to fires, drought and health problems."
https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/aug/12/heat-aggravated-by-carbon-pollution-killed-50000-in-europe-last-year-study
So if, as our local deniers strenuously inform us, cold kills more people than heat, then how many froze to death last year ?
So which is more important: enjoying the Olympics (Go Raygun !) or fixing the anthropogenic climate change ?
Now this doesn't make any contribution to inflation, does it, because CEOs perform huge productivity increases in their job every year, don't they.
ReplyDelete"Median pay for a FTSE 100 boss rose to £4.19m in 2023, 120 times that of the average full-time worker"
How did CEO pay get so high in UK and can we do anything about it?
https://www.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/aug/12/ceo-pay-high-ftse-100-chief-executive
Oh yes, here we go into the world of really big productivity increases by the wealthy:
Delete"Wealth of Australia’s richest 200 people equal to about 25% of GDP, report finds."
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/article/2024/aug/13/the-rich-are-getting-richer-australias-wealth-divide-continues-to-widen
You have to hand it to the Onion Muncher. He turns a nice freebie dinner (the travel bill for which was probably picked up by the taxpayer) into an opportunity to recycle a few of his standard talking points for the umpteenth time in the form of an opinion piece for the Lizard Oz. Sure it may only provide beer money but he’s a veritable Rumplestiltskin, spinning straw into gold - even it’s just of the rolled variety.
ReplyDeleteWell he's gotta continually recycle all his talking points, Anony, because if he doesn't they don't get repeated often enough for anybody else ('ceptin wingnuts and reptiles) to believe any of them.
DeleteEasier than thinking up new talking points. Actually, easier than thinking.
DeleteHi Dorothy,
ReplyDelete“British author Douglas Murray points out that riots in 2011 were especially aggressive in Sutherland, Rotherham and Hartlepool.”
I assume Sheridan is liberally copying from this piece in the UK Spectator;
https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-unfashionable-truth-about-the-riots/
Of course as Foreign Editor The Bromancer is supposed to check his own work so no surprise he confuses Sunderland (NE England) with Sutherland (Scotland). Poor old Greg he can’t even copy properly.
What neither Sheridan or Murray care to note when trying to conflate the latest riots with high employment caused, in their minds, by high immigration, is that Sunderland, Rotherham and Hartlepool were once very large coal mining communities.
Who destroyed these mining communities and led to generations of the unemployed and unemployable?
Margret Thatcher.
"Follow it up with a serve of Bond supervillain Elon Musk"'s "Xkid" vivllainous says;
ReplyDelete1d a day ago
"Let’s talk about the Walter Isaacson book. For those of you unaware, he wrote a biography about Elon in which I am featured. This is what I have to say on the matter. It’s a bit heavy, so bear with me."
vivllainous
1d a day ago
"To Walter Isaacson, you threw me to the wolves in what was one of the most humiliating experiences of my entire life. Elon was your darling Tony Stark apartheid-american hero with a semi-tragic backstory who was saving the world and you were too fucking cowardly to write anything other than a sad excuse for a puff-piece. To further this goal, you portrayed me in a light that is genuinely defamatory and I’m not going to mince my words."
(+5 more kick in the balls gobbets)
https://www.threads.net/@vivllainous/post/C-jgBWQxyRs