The writer of this piece is Phillip Adams, host of the ABC-RN program “Late 
Night Live”.  For more information in this vein, consult the web site of ABC 
Friends, an Australian grassroots organization defending the independence and 
funding of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, that nation’s public 
broadcaster.  www.abcfriends.org.au

The Weekend Australian Magazine, November 12-13, 2016
Viewpoint: Phillip Adams

Legacy. Code for old-fashioned, redundant, non-digital. Hence Fairfax’s rush to 
dump legacy – that is, print – newspapers. And the ABC’s increasing impatience 
with legacy broadcasting. All those expensive transmissions to quaint 
wirelesses. Get with the program. Listen via podcast, social media or app.

The Vatican has announced it’s going digital. Soon all those legacy churches 
and cathedrals will be sold off for condos. Get VatApp today. Marry, confess, 
christen or go to mass online. On your Vphone! Via godcasts! The National 
Gallery is digitising its art collection. Soon you’ll be able to tour the 
premises via VR. The actual “legacy” art will be flogged by Sotheby’s. And who 
needs legacy books in libraries? I also get the distinct impression that my 
beloved Radio National is in legacy limbo. Soon to be available anywhere, 
anytime, anyhow – except on the legacy wireless.

I discovered RN 30 years ago, when working at 2UE with Laws, Jones, Zemanek, 
Hadley, the wrecking balls of “radioactive 2UE”. RN seemed miraculous to this 
trainee shock jock, with its breadth and depth of specialist programs in 
science, medicine, religion, arts, law, history, media, politics and long-form 
investigative journalism. It was 2UE’s antithesis. Where shock-jocks privately 
ridicule their listeners and grossly oversimplify every issue, here were 
broadcasters providing complexity and context – and talking to the audience 
with respect.

That respect was mutual. When John Howard got Bob Mansfield to write the 
umpteenth report on the sins of the ABC, 11,000 viewers and listeners made 
submissions. Mansfield was astonished to discover that 7000 came from RN 
supporters – most making the powerful point that this ABC service was 100 per 
cent on charter.

When joining RN to host Late Night Live, I discovered my audience demographics 
were dramatically different to 2UE’s. I had the best educated audience in 
Australian media: more than 70 per cent had a tertiary education. And they 
listened with a passion that boards and management found disconcerting. David 
Hill had warned me he’d love to shut the place down. Later, Brian Johns told me 
he planned to merge RN with Classic FM. (I pointed out that this would 
infuriate both audiences.)

For 26 years I’ve watched RN narrowly survive new brooms and grim reaper’s 
scythes. Though usually involving budget cuts, RN’s ongoing crisis keeps taking 
new forms. Now the network may be doomed by digital. This despite the fact that 
business is booming. Old-fashioned “live audiences” have remained solid, 
despite ever-growing competition, including from the ABC’s News Radio. RN in 
general (and  LNL in particular) does brilliantly in podcasts. Three cheers for 
apps and social media – but legacy media hasn’t been wiped out. It has a habit 
of doing a Lazarus – paper books and even some print newspapers are on the 
rebound.

I live in the bush where people, still awaiting the mythical NBN, listen to the 
ABC as they worry about bushfires, bounce around in 4WDs and drive their 
tractors. And I’ve recently talked to large “live” audiences around Australia 
at ideas festivals, book launches and writers’ weeks. When I ask, “Who listens 
on the old-fashioned wireless?” 95 per cent of the hands go up. Ditto for print 
newspapers. Business models that ignore this simple, powerful fact are as 
wilfully ignorant as business models that ignore technological change. Legacy 
media has legions of legacy listeners. If there’s an appropriate aphorism for 
these turbulent times, it’s “hasten slowly”.
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