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U.S. International Broadcasting Aims for Sweeping Changes
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U.S. international broadcasting may soon look very
different, at least to anyone familiar with its structure and distribution
methods.
Either planned, requested or being considered by the
Broadcasting Board of Governors are some big changes indeed that are spelled
out in a new report from BBG.
Those changes include a further “sharp drawdown” of U.S.
shortwave capacity outside of a half-dozen key target countries; proposed
repeal of the 1948 ban on “domestic dissemination” of content to listeners and
viewers in the United States; a merger of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Radio Free Asia and Middle
East Broadcasting Networks into one corporate structure; de-federalizing some
of the agency’s work; ending language services in countries that have more
developed, independent media; and moving substantial news and production assets
from Washington, nearer target nations. Smaller changes
include steps like putting up FM antennas at U.S. embassies to further BBG’s
reach.
A merger of the
staff of the BBG and the International Broadcasting Bureau is already in
progress.
The BBG says it “will not accept that our audiences and our
impact will shrink.” It stated new goals: to become “the world’s leading
international news agency by 2016, focused on the agency’s mission
and impact,” and to grow weekly audience by 50 million people, to 216 million.
To accomplish that, BBG laid out the plan to restructure
itself and U.S. international broadcasting. It released a
“framework” of a strategy to enhance the impact of its services (Voice of America, Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty, Alhurra TV and Radio Sawa, Radio Free Asia, and Radio and
TV Martí). Chairman Walter Isaacson said this report
“frames the future direction of U.S. international broadcasting.” It outlines
steps to overcome its structural limitations, ongoing censorship and the
“profound, ongoing changes in audience media consumption habits.”
The board wants
to integrate elements of U.S. international broadcasting into a single
organization while preserving those familiar brands. The BBG, it said, is a “complex
amalgam of broadcast entities created by Congress at different points in time
over the last 70 years in response to specific foreign policy challenges,” with
a structure that is inefficient and complicates the job of managing resources
and involving users. “We
must break down a stove-piped bureaucracy of separate, semi-autonomous
entities, and shape a robust, integrated, international media network with
multiple brands targeted to markets where they still strongly resonate.”
On the topic of how content is distributed, BBG promises
“wholesale changes.”
“We are currently configured largely as we were in the
1980s, with substantial resources devoted to shortwave broadcasting. Global
media use now strongly favors TV, the Internet and FM radio as well as social
media. Shortwave is vital in a half-dozen countries. But elsewhere we will
sharply draw down our shortwave capacity to reallocate the resources to the new
platforms our audiences are using.” The role of shortwave has been a
contentious one, with some politicians and veterans of the organization arguing
that shortwave should not be scaled back further than it has been.
The board also will seek to repeal the ban on domestic
dissemination in the 1948 Smith-Mundt Act. “Adopted in the age of cross-border
communication via radio, this act did not envision either the Internet or satellite
broadcasting, which do not honor national boundaries,” the report states. “With
all of the BBG’s 59 languages available via the Web, the agency cannot comply
with this outdated statute.” Also, the law obstructs BBG from reaching significant
expatriate communities in the United States. The Obama administration supports
legislation to repeal the Smith-Mundt ban as it applies to the BBG.
Also among its plans: to create a global news
network out of its 59 different language services; develop automated translation to
help users; expand delivery technologies such as satellite
video for China, Central Asia and Southeast Asia; explore new ways to counter
Internet blocking and other forms of censorship; launch a prototype TV channel in Latin America that features
“crowd-sourced” content for young people; and place FM antennas at U.S.
embassies in Africa as a low-cost additional radio outlet.
Some changes will require congressional approval; a BBG spokeswoman said the organization would be working with Congress and the administration to implement the plan. Some steps are underway including integrating the IBB and BBG staffs and building a shared website content management system.
And the name Broadcasting Board of Governors itself will be eliminated. “The new
identity will be corporate in nature. Our current brands will remain the public
faces for our audiences, who have come to know and trust them.” However, it
emphasized, none of the proposed restructuring or new identity changes its
mission, which is now stated as “To
inform, engage and connect people around the world in support of freedom and
democracy.”
Read the BBG Plan (PDF)
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