Al Jazeera English focused on its American dream

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/mediatechnologyandtelecoms/5039921/Al-Jazeera-English-focused-on-its-American-dream.html


Al Jazeera English, the international television 
channel belonging to the Emir of Qatar's news 
network, has a fight on its hands to conquer America.



By Rowena Mason
Last Updated: 9:41PM GMT 23 Mar 2009
Al Jazeera English focused on its American dream

Al Jazeera English focused on its American dream Photo: AFP/GETTY IMAGES

The USA has been the downfall of many a foreign 
export but when you're a broadcaster based in the 
Arab world, bankrolled by a Middle Eastern 
autocrat and associated in the popular mindset 
with terrorist videos, the endeavour begins to look near-impossible.

When the English-language channel was set up in 
November 2006 to provide impartial competition 
for CNN and the BBC, the reputation of its Arabic 
sister channel, Al Jazeera, was already controversial.



Related Articles



<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/mediatechnologyandtelecoms/media/4451088/Sky-News-to-open-new-bureau-in-Dubai.html>Sky
 
News to open new bureau in Dubai

<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/pakistan/2540522/Al-Qaeda-chief-Ayman-Zawahiri-attacks-Pakistans-Pervez-Musharraf-in-video.html>Al-Qa'eda
 
chief Ayman Zawahiri attacks Pakistan's Pervez Musharraf in video

<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1580506/BBC-to-spend-25-million-on-Arabic-channel.html>BBC
 
to spend £25 million on Arabic channel

<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1567446/Al-Jazeera-on-crusaders-side-over-bin-Laden.html>Al-Jazeera
 
'on crusaders' side' over bin Laden

<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/4175573/Iran-denounces-BBCs-new-Persian-channel.html>Iran
 
denounces BBC's new Persian channel

Some observers claimed that it broadcast videos 
sent to the station from terrorist suspects, 
while US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld had 
wrongly suggested that the network showed hostages being beheaded.

Since this inauspicious start, the Al Jazeera 
English team has been manning the PR battle lines 
against lobbyists anxious to keep the channel off US television line-ups.

So how did the Al Jazeera brand begin to convince 
US audiences that it serves a serious broadcasting purpose?

Tony Burman, managing director of Al Jazeera 
English and former Canadian TV executive, has 
found some of the answers while the station has 
built up an audience of 140m households in 40 countries – including Israel.

Among Mr Burman's priorities has been busting a 
few myths, hiring journalists from 
well-established rivals and focusing news coverage on the developing world.

The English-language channel is carried by 
satellite television operator Sky in the UK. More 
astonishingly, its commercial team is on the 
brink of signing several contracts with cable and 
satellite operators to give it a reach right across the US.

"We want to rival CNN and the BBC World in size 
and quality," the managing director says. "There 
has been a political dimension to our lack of 
coverage, but with Obama in office, there has 
been an increased hunger for looking at the wider world."

In recent months, the campaign to widen audiences 
has been led by the grassroots website 
IwantAJE.com. This is where the channel claims to 
set the record straight that Al Jazeera has never 
shown a beheading, only airs footage of 
terrorists for newsworthy purposes and has ever been anti-American.

There have even been rumours in political circles 
– strongly denied by business secretary Peter 
Mandelson and Al Jazeera – that the channel would 
be well-placed to make an offer for ITV.

It no longer seems such an outlandish proposition 
given that the channel is creeping up on CNN and 
BBC World, with half the number of viewers but a 
greater audience in parts of Africa, South America, the Middle East and Asia.

Despite its rising reputation, some of the 
English-language channel's most recent 
controversies have concerned editorial neutrality.

David Marash, a former ABC presenter, quit the 
Washington bureau accusing senior management of 
succumbing to political pressure from the station's Qatari owners.

The channel also recently fought and won at a 
tribunal brought by a white Christian female 
employee claiming race, sex and religious discrimination.

Charges of anti-Western bias are rigorously 
denied by the station, which has published a code 
of ethics committing to free speech and balanced reporting.

At the broadcasting centre in Knightsbridge, 
staff from dozens of different countries share 
the address with an Abu Dhabi sovereign fund.

It has only a small set of studios cramped into a 
basement full of young-looking staff, but the 
first two names above my own in the visitors' 
book have considerable clout: those of veteran 
broadcaster Sir David Frost, who has his own 
political show, and Conservative MP Ann Widdecombe, one of his guests.

Journalists go on air here in the afternoon, 
"following the sun" with a few hours of 
broadcasting from Kuala Lumpur, then Doha in Qatar, London and Washington.

"We don't devote time to celebrity or salacious 
crime stories, like the Meredith Kercher murder 
trial," says Ben Rayner, the executive producer 
of European news and a former ITN editor. "We are 
serious about investigative stories."

On the day of Jade Goody's death from cancer, a 
story that has gripped the UK media, a search of 
the Al Jazeera English website yields only one 
news piece from 2007. TV show tormentor ousted: 
Jade Goody is voted off Celebrity Big Brother after being accused of racism.

It is mid-morning and reports are already 
flooding in from around the globe – with one 
dispatch about landmines in Angola, another about 
water shortages in Kazakhstan.

The far-flung correspondents also give the rare 
impression of a TV newsroom less troubled by 
money worries than most, at a time when financial 
constraints have shut studios and foreign desks globally.

By some estimates, the Emir of Qatar has sunk 
$1bn into Al Jazeera. Has the channel been 
feeling the effects of the economic crisis at 
all? According to Mr Burman, Sheikh Hamad bin 
Khalifa Al-Thani intends his flagship channels to 
become commercially self-sustaining but there is 
no timetable for privatisation nor worries about funding.

Unlike the BBC, Al Jazeera English does carry 
limited advertising, and pay-TV operators are 
charged a fee to carry it on their networks but 
Mr Burman is not able to give details about how 
much revenue is from advertising.

Neither can the commercial director, Phil Lawrie, 
a former Time Warner executive, who is reluctant to talk about figures.

"Until now there hasn't been a huge amount of 
advertising but it has doubled year-on-year," he says.

Mr Lawrie believes that the channel's commercial 
potential lies principally with distribution fees 
paid by a cable or satellite provider.

"It's a turning point when you go from being 
carried for free to securing a fair and 
reasonable fee," Mr Lawrie says. "At the moment, 
our aims are not economic or commercial but securing distribution."

Could it be that advertisers do not want their 
product linked the contentious Al Jazeera name?

Mr Burman believes those who have watched the 
channel will see that its quality speaks for itself.

Viewing figures have been boosted by the 
English-language station's coverage of the Gaza 
conflict late last year, when the network's 
reporters were the only ones inside the borders.

Although the channel reaches only a sprinkling of 
US households in Vermont, Texas, Washington and 
Ohio, live streaming of its coverage on its 
website and YouTube increased six-fold during the 
war – with 60pc of viewers in the US and the UK.

"We fight on two fronts – with the conventional 
TV channel and a strong website where we have no coverage," claims Mr Burman.

"We are an alternative voice," he adds. "I love 
the BBC and CNN but you don't have to watch for 
long to realise they are Western channels with a 
Western perspective. We don't have a home town. 
We are international and that appeals to people."

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Please note that I do not send or open attachments sent to this list. 

You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Catholics on Fire" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/Catholics-on-Fire

May the blessing of Jesus and our Blessed Mother be with you
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to