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Again for Ms. London, Baddaz and others - Another area

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  • Again for Ms. London, Baddaz and others - Another area

    where there was expansion under the PNP. Add this to the expansion in investments in the tourism, private education, public - roads, water-supply - and other sectors...including upgrades in institutions and facilities to make it easier for those starting businesses...

    ...and again for Maudib - There were tremendous business opportunities created and many were those who took advantage of those.

    See: Ms. London's post under - http://www.reggaeboyzsc.com/forum1/s...818#post248818

    ------------

    Media revolution and woes
    Dr Henley Morgan

    Wednesday, August 04, 2010

    Jamaica's Broadcasting Commission recently convened its 2010 Regional Forum on Policy and Regulation in the electronic media sector. From all indications the forum was a tremendous success with a large number of local media personalities and policy makers, as well as representatives from sister Caribbean islands, the general public and online visitors participating. The BCJ is justifiably proud of the role it has played in opening up the electronic media sector to more players. There are 26 broadcast radio licensees; three islandwide broadcast TV stations and 41 subscriber television operators across the island. In 2009 alone, four subscriber television operators and four commercial broadcast radio operators received licences to provide cable television and radio service respectively.

    With liberalisation of electronic media and the explosion of new entrants, the regulatory challenges for the BCJ have multiplied. Segments of the media are more interested in earning a buck (and equally in passing it), than in maintaining the essential virtues of honesty, integrity and truth. It is a fact that with the increase in competition, reduction in margins, and consequently the increasing reliance on outsourcing as a means of converting fixed to variable overheads, some electronic media enterprises find themselves held to ransom by "mercenaries" who can account for up to 30 per cent of a station's revenue. The mercenaries who come in various forms - independent talk-show hosts, freelance journalists, contract announcers, itinerant commentators and moonlighting disc jockeys - are gaining in power. Unschooled in journalism and indifferent to the damage, the media can wreak havoc on a vulnerable society that cannot be easily restrained or made to conform to any standard.

    CASH... one form of payola


    CASH... one form of payola


    1/1
    The slippage in standards is evident in the age-old practice of payola. Payola is pay for play, that is, payment of cash or giving of gifts for airplay. The practice is commonplace on radio, cable and in TV airing of music videos locally. This brazen form of bribery in media presentation of material is like the use of performance-enhancing steroids in sports. Many talents and budding careers fail to get the exposure they deserve; are suppressed or cut short because of payola.

    Mr Don McDowell who operates his own recording studio thinks the problem is getting worse. The widespread access to low-cost digital recording equipment, he says, has spawned tremendous growth in the number of music recording studios resulting in an ever-expanding number of new artistes and new releases. The supply and demand for airplay has effectively worsened the payola situation, causing some media personalities to be more overt in their demands.

    The demands range from asking for a specific sum for a fixed number of plays plus "pull-ups", that is, several replays along with hype talk, to the wicked practice of asking for a share in the artiste's publishing, thus guaranteeing the artiste a continuous stream of income from copyright and royalties.

    In the United States this type of rapacious practice is a federal crime. The Broadcasting Commission believes that payola is best dealt with either in the criminal law or through internal station management. Along with the passage of legislation with stiff penalties and imprisonment for both parties to the transaction, Mr Don McDowell is recommending broadening the role of the BCJ to include monitoring and prosecuting infringements of the law; licensing and regulating on-air personalities, and setting limits on the number of times a song or an artiste can be played in a specified period of time. He is calling on the Jamaica Reggae Industry Association along with the Jamaica Federation of Musicians (JFM) and Jamaica Association of Vintage Artistes to make stamping out the practice of payola a priority in their lobbying efforts, and on Minister Babsy Grange to fulfil the promise she made to the music industry in 2008 to put a stop to the evil payola system.

    This and other challenges faced by local media are like Mount Everest. The highly professional display by the BCJ in convening the 2010 Regional Forum on Policy and Regulation in the Electronic Media Sector inspires confidence that the problems can be successfully tackled and overcome. In his own assessment of the event BCJ chairman, Dr Hopeton Dunn made the following statement. "We had a very successful forum. It gave us an opportunity to share ideas about where the regional industry should be going and many ideas were put on the table that are now to be acted upon in a way that is harmonised. That was one of the key goals of the meeting. Regional broadcasters and regulators now have a stronger foundation on which to pursue policy responses and activities".

    The slippage in editorial integrity, programme consistency and quality in both the electronic and print media can get worse, if resolute action is not taken. Attorney-at-law Frank Phipps is reported to have compared parliamentary order to a woman's bikini in the following way. "What it reveals is interesting, what it conceals is vital". When it comes to the media, if those vital ingredients are honesty, integrity, truth and decency, then it's time to start worrying. The Broadcasting Commission by most accounts is doing a marvellous job. It must keep up its vigilance if we are not to end up with a footloose, fancy-free media.
    hmorgan@cwjamaica.com
    Last edited by Karl; August 4, 2010, 09:44 AM.
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

  • #2
    We do not live in a vacuum.

    No point talking about how well you performed because you finished a race and you come dead last.

    The numbers are in Karl.

    1989 - 2007.. Major FAIL.

    Not interested in how 'good' wi did look while failing. That is like calling Omar Davis the greatest finance minister in Jamaica History.

    lol.

    Fundamentals were ignored while more man have cyar, gyal and cellphone.

    End of Story.

    Thanks for playing though.

    Comment


    • #3
      Anyone in telecom in Jamaica would tell that Philip Paulwell was brilliant as the tech minister. What surprised me those same people said Clive Mullings was also doing a good job.

      Who yuh tink run telecom now and is not getting rave reviews? Yes, the brucegoldious one along with Daryl Vaz!


      BLACK LIVES MATTER

      Comment


      • #4
        i always laugh when people squeal, "end of story". Like, who gave them that authority to end the story when dem feel like?!?!?


        BLACK LIVES MATTER

        Comment


        • #5
          Suh yuh tink there is more for me to add ?

          Cannot think of anything else. If him nuh get it aftah dat dem he will never.

          End of Story.

          Comment


          • #6
            Philip Paulwell was brilliant as the tech Minister ?

            Are you referring to the failed application INTECH Fund ??

            Youthful Exuberance ?

            The check from the Barbados company that was 'in his desk' ?

            How has Jamaica outperformed the region in meaningful Telecom infrastructure ? (more man have phone ? Helloo ? Helloo ?)

            Brilliant !

            Or maybe his exploits handling JPS and the deal with Mirant ?

            Brilliant !

            lol ! Woiee !

            Comment


            • #7
              as told to me by more than one person in the industry.

              what have Bruised Gelding and Vaz done for the sector?


              BLACK LIVES MATTER

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Maudib View Post
                Suh yuh tink there is more for me to add ?

                Cannot think of anything else. If him nuh get it aftah dat dem he will never.

                End of Story.


                BLACK LIVES MATTER

                Comment


                • #9
                  How long was Paulwell Minister ?

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    question ansa question now?

                    i guess it does!


                    BLACK LIVES MATTER

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Rhetorical question... it assumes a modicum of intelligence on the readers part.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        You worse than dishonest.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Mosiah View Post
                          Anyone in telecom in Jamaica would tell that Philip Paulwell was brilliant as the tech minister. What surprised me those same people said Clive Mullings was also doing a good job.

                          Who yuh tink run telecom now and is not getting rave reviews? Yes, the brucegoldious one along with Daryl Vaz!

                          Despite his youthful exuberance and indiscretions there's no doubt that Paulwell brought our telecom into the modern age.... performance beating most of the region by a wide margin....so recognized by the ITU and industry professionals

                          Facts rule
                          TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

                          Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

                          D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Brilliant but lack control.
                            Needed nuff guidance and accounting backup.
                            • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Maudib View Post
                              We do not live in a vacuum.

                              No point talking about how well you performed because you finished a race and you come dead last.

                              The numbers are in Karl.

                              1989 - 2007.. Major FAIL.

                              Not interested in how 'good' wi did look while failing. That is like calling Omar Davis the greatest finance minister in Jamaica History.

                              lol.

                              Fundamentals were ignored while more man have cyar, gyal and cellphone.

                              End of Story.

                              Thanks for playing though.
                              Who is the "you" of which you speak?

                              The point is, regardless of stories to the contrary - even as there are those who run around speaking only of negatives there were positives during the PNP's 18 year rule.

                              Facts are stubborn things.
                              "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                              Comment

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