USAGM attracts record audience of 410 million

USAGM attracts record audience of 410 million

USAGM attracts record audience of 410 million

​The measured weekly audience for U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM) programming grew to 410 million people in fiscal year 2022, according to the agency’s Performance and Accountability Report submitted on 15 November 2022 to the US Congress.

The audience grew by 16 million adults, in the face of a global environment where autocratic regimes are increasingly impeding access to independent media or criminalising its consumption.

“This audience growth, despite sometimes draconian crackdowns on free media, proves what we’ve long known — that people will go to great lengths to seek out the truth,” said USAGM CEO Amanda Bennett. “The increase in audience and improvements in other impact measures laid out in this report speak to a worldwide hunger for accurate and reliable reporting.”

In FY 2022, USAGM measured audiences grew in key countries and regions around the world. In Nigeria, the audience has nearly doubled since it was last measured in 2018, to more than 37 million adults weekly. In Latin America, new data revealed measured audience growth of 22 percent, adding more than 12 million new consumers to the number reported in FY 2021.

USAGM also continued to reach large audiences in countries of key national security interest, despite efforts to block independent reporting in markets including Afghanistan, Russia, and Iran.

USAGM’s web and mobile traffic continued strong growth in FY 2022, with an average of more than an 18% increase across the networks.

USAGM’s networks — the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the Office of Cuba Broadcasting, Radio Free Asia, and the Middle East Broadcasting Networks — deliver news and programming via radio, television, and internet in 63 languages.

A sixth USAGM entity, the Open Technology Fund, provides tools to help audiences overcome internet restrictions and surveillance. In FY 2022, visits to USAGM networks’ websites through OTF-supported anti-censorship technologies almost doubled to more than 13 million per week.

“On behalf of those seeking independent, fact-based reporting, I want to thank the many brave women and men at our networks working under difficult, at times even life-threatening conditions, to share free media with the world,” added CEO Bennett.

Research conducted to estimate the agency’s global audience adheres to standards developed by the Conference of International Broadcasters’ Audience Research Service and reports the number of unique individuals who access USAGM content, or what is referred to as the unduplicated audience. This global audience estimate is just one element in USAGM’s annual performance report. The agency also measures impact based on quantitative and qualitative data on a wide range of factors, including program quality and credibility, engagement with content, and audience understanding of current events.

Picture: Henry Ridgwell reporting for VoA News from the Medyka crossing between Ukraine and Poland, February 2022

The AIBs 2022 – winners revealed at gala event in London

The AIBs 2022 – winners revealed at gala event in London

The AIBs 2022 – winners revealed at gala event in London

The winners of the 18th annual international competition for journalism and factual productions across TV, radio and digital platforms were announced at the AIBs gala dinner in London on 11 November.

The gala at Church House Westminster was the first in-person awards event for three years and was attended by guests from countries across Asia, Europe, and North America.

This year’s event partner was Radio Taiwan International, and the President of Taiwan, Tsai Ing-Wen, gave an opening address from Taipei highlighting the country’s remarkable transformation over the past few decades to open democracy and a free media.

The evening’s host, Rana Rahimpour, senior presenter at BBC News Persian, spoke of the ever more pressing need for free and impartial information – the type that entries to the AIBs represent so vividly.

The winners in each of the 19 categories are:

BREAKING NEWS TV/VIDEO

Winner – CNN – Ukraine

CONTINUING NEWS COVERAGE TV/VIDEO

Winner – ITN – ITV News – Partygate coverage

Highly commended – AFP – A War from All Angles: AFPTV Coverage in Ukraine

Highly commended – Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty – Russia’s War on Ukraine

NEWS COVERAGE breaking or continuing RADIO/AUDIO

Winner – BBC Long Form Audio for BBC Sounds – Ukrainecast – 100 Days

SPECIALIST FACTUAL TV/VIDEO

Winner – Al Jazeera I Unit – Al Jazeera Investigations: The Truth Illusion

Highly Commended – Nutopia, Protozoa, Westbrook and National Geographic – Welcome to Earth

Highly Commended – Storyteller Films for CNA, Mediacorp Pte Ltd – A League of Extraordinary Makers

INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS DOCUMENTARY TV/VIDEO

 Winner – Zandland Films for Channel 4 – The Cult of Conspiracy: QAnon

Highly Commended – Evan Williams Productions for Channel 4 – China: The Search for the Missing

Highly Commended – VRT – Syria, The Toxic War

FACTUAL PODCAST

Winner – Whistledown Productions for Audible – Deepest Dive: The Search for MH 370

Highly Commended – BBC Long Form Audio – The Coming Storm

HISTORICAL TV/VIDEO

Winner – OR Media – The Iran-Iraq War: A Tragedy That Changed History

Highly Commended – ViacomCBS – Channel 5 – 1000 Years a Slave

Highly Commended – Yeti Television for Channel 4 – Edward VIII: Britain’s Traitor King

HUMAN INTEREST RADIO/AUDIO

Winner – RTÉ – Documentary on One: Felix-Life and Limb

Highly Commended – Tortoise Media – Sweet Bobby

HUMAN INTEREST TV/VIDEO

Winner – Flicker Productions for ITV – Kate Garraway: Caring for Derek

Highly Commended – Just Another Production for CNA, Mediacorp Pte Ltd – Never Out of Reach

DOMESTIC AFFAIRS DOCUMENTARY TV/VIDEO

Winner – ITN for ITV News & Current Affairs – Surviving Squalor: Britain’s Housing Shame

Highly Commended – Finestripe Productions for Channel 4 – Davina McCall: Sex, Mind and the Menopause

Highly Commended – Artlab Films for Channel 5 – Warship: Life at Sea

INVESTIGATIVE DOCUMENTARY TV/VIDEO

Winner – Flicker Productions for Channel 4 – Hunting the Football Trolls – Jermaine Jenas

Highly Commended – BBC Africa Eye – Black Axe

Highly Commended – RTÉ Investigates – The Accountant, the Con, the Lies

SPECIALIST FACTUAL RADIO/AUDIO

Winner – ABC & CBC – STUFF THE BRITISH STOLE – The Abductions

Highly Commended – Lepus and Sparklab – Love, Spit and Valve Oil

Highly Commended – Loftus Media for BBC Radio 4 – Fungi: The New Frontier

SHORT FEATURE TV/VIDEO

Winner – Bloomberg News – The Pay Check – Kenya: The Lost Girls

Highly Commended – Channel 5 News | ITN – Child to Parent Abuse

Highly Commended – Al Jazeera Digital – Start Here: NATO’s Eastern Front

SPORTS JOURNALISM TV/VIDEO

Winner – Al Jazeera I Unit – Al Jazeera Investigations: The Men Who Sell Football

INVESTIGATIVE RADIO/AUDIO

Winner – A Tortoise Studio Production for Audible Originals – Finding Q: My Journey into QAnon

Highly Commended – BBC World Service – The Documentary: Who Killed My Grandfather?

NATURAL WORLD TV/VIDEO

Winner – NHK/ARTE France/NHK Enterprises – SATOYAMA – Niigata: Living with Snow

Highly Commended – Melt Studios for Al Jazeera English – Witness: Capturing Change

Highly Commended – Voice of America News – Weathering the Storm

SCIENCE and TECHNOLOGY TV/VIDEO

Winner – Wondrium and Blue Chalk Media – Solving for Zero

Highly Commended – Flicker Productions for BBC One – Ellie Simmonds: A World Without Dwarfism?

STREAMING DOCUMENTARY

Winner – WildBear Entertainment & Chrysaor Productions – Hating Peter Tatchell

Highly Commended – 歪脑|WHYNOT – Caught in the Crossfire

Highly Commended – Passion Pictures – Lady Boss: The Jackie Collins Story

POLITICS and BUSINESS TV/VIDEO

 Winner – ITN – ITV News – Partygate Coverage

Highly Commended – CNA, Mediacorp Pte Ltd – In Bad Faith

Highly Commended – Al Jazeera English in partnership with Reveal from the Centre for Investigative Reporting – Fault Lines: Unrelinquished

The AIBs 2022 winners book is available at: https://theaibs.tv/AIBs-2022/Gala-evening/The-AIBs-22-winners-book.pdf

Arqiva and MainStreaming in streaming video distribution partnership

Arqiva and MainStreaming in streaming video distribution partnership

Arqiva and MainStreaming in streaming video distribution partnership

Arqiva and MainStreaming have forged a technology and services partnership, to jointly offer distribution services for the media streaming market.

The partners will explore how the combination of MainStreaming’s cutting-edge CDN technology and broadcast-grade streaming experience with Arqiva’s global media infrastructure and managed services capability can offer more scalable, flexible, and programming-centric content distribution services for the media streaming market.

With ever-growing viewer numbers on streaming services and the increasing strategic value of online audiences, the streaming needs of the biggest broadcasters and service providers are greater than ever. The combination of a large audience served, consistently high video quality, and low latency is the tough combination to get right hour after hour. As such, secure, scalable and cost-effective content distribution networks are vital. 

Existing streaming distribution networks are not well suited to deliver either the quality of service required by service providers or the quality of experience expected by audiences. The growing carbon footprint of streaming services is also a concern for both providers and audiences. Arqiva and MainStreaming are coming together to address these issues and to challenge conventional approaches to content distribution.

“MainStreaming’s technology makes true edge computing for the media industry a reality, and already delivers important benefits for our industry-leading customers,” said Antonio G. Corrado, CEO, MainStreaming.  “We are excited to work together with Arqiva and the media industry to take advantage of our real-time, ultra-low latency, highly scalable streaming capabilities to deliver broadcast-grade streaming and also create new and exciting edge applications for video delivery.”

Clive White, CTO, Arqiva, commented: “The streaming world is changing fast and navigating the commercial and technical issues has never been harder. Arqiva and MainStreaming will be collaborating on a range of new capabilities and service offerings to meet these challenges with a view to optimising the customer experience and adding value to the biggest broadcasters in our core markets.”

The Trusted News Initiative creates Asia-Pacific network

The Trusted News Initiative creates Asia-Pacific network

The Trusted News Initiative creates Asia-Pacific network

Partners in the Trusted News Initiative (TNI) have agreed to further expand its global representation by creating a regional Asia-Pacific network.

The media organisations that now make up TNI’s new Asia-Pacific network have received training, funded by the Google News Initiative, to help their journalists navigate the disinformation environment.

The TNI is an industry collaboration of major news and global tech organisations, led by the BBC, working together to stop the spread of disinformation where it poses risk of real-world harm.  The creation of the Asia-Pacific network will enable the TNI’s regional partners to share their insights about tackling disinformation and discuss trends in the region.  They will draw on their expertise to share best practices and findings with the wider TNI and alert each other to the most dangerous forms of disinformation through the TNI cooperative framework.

The TNI is expanding its Asia-Pacific presence with the addition of the following group of independent news organisations:

  • ABC (Australia)
  • Dawn (Pakistan)
  • Indian Express (India)
  • Kompas (Indonesia)
  • NDTV (India)
  • NHK (Japan)
  • SBS (Australia)

Senior Controller of BBC News International Services and BBC World Service Director, Liliane Landor (pictured), says: “With the creation of TNI’s first regional network, we are bringing together trusted Asia-Pacific news-publishing organisations to further reinforce our collaboration and to make it even more efficient and productive.”

Head of Google News Lab, Matt Cooke, says: “As part of the Google News Initiative’s ongoing efforts to strengthen journalism and fight misinformation, we’ve worked with a range of academics, news organisations and nonprofits across the globe for several years. Now, we’re supporting the Trusted News Initiative to deliver targeted, expert training workshops on a variety of digital tools to help journalists as they seek to continue day-to-day verification and fact-checking in newsrooms across the region.”

Current TNI partners include AP, AFP, BBC, CBC/Radio-Canada, European Broadcasting Union (EBU), Financial Times, Google/YouTube, The Hindu, Information Futures Lab, Meta (Facebook/Instagram), Microsoft, The Nation Media Group, Reuters, Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, Twitter, and The Washington Post.

The TNI partnership works collectively in four main areas:

  • Fast Alert: creating a system so organisations can alert each other rapidly when they discover disinformation which threatens human life or disrupts democracy
  • Intelligence sharing: real-time conversation of equals between news organisations and tech platforms about the evolving nature of harmful disinformation
  • Media education: sharing insights and research on how audiences and users react to disinformation, thus informing best practice and supporting better digital literacy
  • Engineering solutions: sharing information on engineering solutions for authentication of trusted news sources and improving the information environment.

This is entirely separate from, and does not in any way affect, the editorial stance of any partner organisation.

[Source: BBC press release]

DW documentary ‘Music Under the Swastika’ premieres in Berlin

DW documentary ‘Music Under the Swastika’ premieres in Berlin

DW documentary ‘Music Under the Swastika’ premieres in Berlin

‘Music Under the Swastika: The Maestro and the Cellist of Auschwitz’ debuts November 9 at the Delphi Filmpalast in Berlin in the presence of Claudia Roth, the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media. It will also stream live on DW Documentary-YouTube-channels in German, English, Arabic, Spanish and Hindi.

The film captures a moment in time when music and fascism were clashing and reveals contrasting stories of the two protagonists, cellist Anita Lasker-Wallfisch (1925*), member of the Women’s Orchestra of Auschwitz, and star conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler (1886-1954), who formed an alliance with Adolf Hitler and his helpers.

The documentary hears first-hand testimony from Anita Lasker-Wallfisch about her time in Auschwitz: “We could see everything, the arrival ceremonies, the selections, the columns of people walking towards the gas chamber and being turned into smoke. We played marches at the camp gate, for the prisoners who worked in the surrounding factories. And concerts on Sundays, around the camp, for the staff or whoever would listen. For many, music was an absolute insult in that hellish camp.”

The film also sheds a light on how music was used as a political tool by the Nazi regime, bringing insights from historians, authors, and musicians. Using scores of period material, the film features never-before-colorized archive footage from concerts of the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, the Third Reich’s chosen orchestra conducted by Furtwängler.

Considered one of the greatest conductors at the time, Furtwängler was not a member of the Nazi Party. He supported Jewish musicians and banned composers. Under pressure from the Nazis, he resigned from his post as chief conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic in 1934. Later in 1935, he issued a statement acknowledging Hitler as head of cultural policy and was allowed to return to the Berlin Philharmonic.

Peter Limbourg, DW Director General: “For decades, the date November 9 has been linked to terrible historical events in German history – with the November pogroms as a prelude to the murder of six million Jews by the Nazis – until it also took on a very hopeful and positive meaning with the fall of the Berlin Wall 33 years ago today. Showing and explaining German history and culture in all its facets, especially to the younger generations, is one of the most important parts of Deutsche Welle’s mission. Our documentary about the fate of mainly Jewish cultural figures in the Third Reich illustrates the perfidy of Hitler’s regime. It is part of our efforts to prevent such atrocities forever through information and education.”

Nadja Scholz, DW Acting Managing Director of Programming: “This documentary makes a dramatic time experienceable for all of us in a fascinating way. Christian Berger illuminates contrasting biographies in the Nazi era, with the focus on music. It is stirring and instructive at the same time. Exceedingly worth seeing!”

Rolf Rische, DW Director Culture and Documentaries: “The film manages to convey the subject matter emotionally while maintaining a very high quality and depth of content. That is truly outstanding. Editorially, the film is part of a larger context. Antisemitism has long been a central topic for DW’s cultural editorial team, both in terms of German history and current developments. ‘Music Under the Swastika’ is thus part of a series of productions that we have made in cooperation with, for example, Neuengamme Concentration Camp Memorial and the Society of 1700 Years of Jewish Life in Germany. We will continue to work in this direction.”

Tim Klimeš, DW Head of Documentaries: “For some it was an instrument of propaganda, for others a glimmer of hope in dark times. In his documentary film, Christian Berger poignantly describes the ambivalence of classical music under the Nazi regime. ‘Music Under the Swastika’ is an important film in fragile times.”

Christian Berger, film director: “I wanted to bring these moments in music history into our time through color and make them more tangible, thereby also getting ‘non-music specialists’ interested in the historical subject. The contrast in this film could hardly be greater. On the one hand is a star conductor courted by those in power, and on the other hand, a musician who made music in a concentration camp under fear of death. For me, the interview with Anita Lasker-Wallfisch was the most fascinating; how precisely she analyzed the situation as a young woman. She was already afraid back then that people would not believe her accounts of these monstrous events.”

The film (86 minutes) was commissioned by Frauke Sandig, executive produced by Rolf Rische and Tim Klimeš and directed by Christian Berger with Maria Willer and Bernhard von Hülsen as producers.

Starting Nov 9, the film will be available to stream worldwide across the YouTube channels of DW Documentary in Spanish, German, English, Arabic and Hindi. It will debut on DW television from November 17 in German, English, Spanish and Arabic.

TV broadcast times:

DW English 19/11/2022 – 10:30 UTC
DW German 18/11/2022 – 23:00 UTC
DW Español 17/11/2022 – 16:30 UTC
DW Arabic 21/11/2022 – 03:00 UTC

[Source: DW press release]

November AIB industry briefing published

November AIB industry briefing published

November AIB industry briefing published

The AIB Secretariat has published the latest in the Association’s global media briefing. 

With stories from Central African Republic, Kazakhstan, Iran, the UK and more, this regular briefing – received by more than 25,000 media leaders globally – helps provide insight and intelligence about developments in the media industry across the world. 

To subscribe, visit: https://aib.org.uk/sign-up-to-the-aib-industry-briefing/

Read this latest briefing here: https://aib.org.uk/NL/AIB-Nx-brief-221108.html