Thanks a lot, Mr. Chairman.
I will be making my presentation in French.
I'll be happy to answer questions in English if you wish.
It is quite a challenge that you face, to define the role of a public broadcaster in the 21st century, in the world that is completely different from the one we have known until now, and above all, in a world in which the public broadcaster was not designed. It was designed for a period that did not have the wealth of choices that we are experiencing now.
That image is a good illustration for the theme I wish to develop. I was told that I should be brief, and that you prefer to ask questions rather than listen to a long speech. In fact, that is more or less what the world is becoming, for professors as well as for journalists. Formal lectures are being replaced by seminars because students do not like long speeches anymore. I am not implying that you are students, but I think that that image defines clearly what the public broadcaster should be now, in my opinion. It is the blue fish in an aquarium of red fish. The title of this book—I have the English version but it exists in French as well—is Making a Difference: The Blue Fish Among the Red Ones.
This is what the public broadcaster should be in the 21st century--the blue fish, the different broadcaster.
Why? Because a great many of the missions that the public broadcaster had in the 21st century, of the roles it was trying to play in the last century, are now fulfilled by specialized broadcasters, sometimes public, sometimes private. In this way, some of the general ideas that we have about the public broadcaster... Furthermore, it remains part of the legislation. I am not saying that we need to change the act. However, when the latter says, for example, that the public broadcaster should contribute to shared national consciousness and identity, the principle is no doubt still valid.
And yet, when a network has only a 5 or 6% audience share, as is the case for the English network of the CBC, it is difficult for it to share this national consciousness; it is difficult for it to be what certain researchers call the “social link”; it is difficult for it to build a nation. We have long said that the CBC should be the nation builder. But 5% of the audience—I am speaking mainly about television today—does not add up to a lot of viewers to build a national consciousness.
In the 21st century, we must see the public broadcaster within the context of fragmentation. We conceived of our public broadcaster in the same way as we conceived of our broadcasting system during an era when we talked about broadcasting. I use the English terms, because in this case, the English says much more clearly what it is I am trying to say. Broad means big. We spoke of broadcasting and we continue to do so. But now, we live in a world that is one of narrowcasting. Narrow as opposed to broad.
All of this unfolded over a long, 20-year period. In 1985-1986, when my colleague Jerry Caplan and I wrote the report of the Task Force on Broadcasting Policy, the Groupe de travail sur la politique de la radiodiffusion, specialized channels were just coming into being. It was the beginning of this fragmentation. At the time, there were a few specialized channels, including several in English. It was also the beginnings of French-language specialized channels. Now, there is an infinite number of channels.
It is very clear that we can no longer conceive of the television role of the CBC and Radio-Canada in the same way we did 20 years ago. It is not possible. In the same way that the main stream private networks have financial problems because they survive on advertizing—on a commercial basis—because of fragmentation. The public broadcaster is also experiencing problems and must review its role in the current context, and much more, as this fragmentation will continue to increase because of the Internet and other new media.
We must therefore see the public broadcaster within the general context of this fragmentation. That does not mean—I particularly do not wish to be misunderstood—that the public broadcaster is no longer important. The public broadcaster is just as important as in the past, but in my opinion, the main principle that should now be guiding its activities... The public broadcaster was founded, was built up over the years on a certain number of principles: universality, that is to say servicing all the regions and all social groups, etc., diversity and independence. During the 1990s, a new principle developed: that of particularity, of specificity. This is what we must bank on for the future of the public broadcasting. Radio is playing this role very well.
What does specificity mean, concretely? When a viewer turns on his television and he is on the public broadcaster's channel, he must realize right away, very quickly, that he is on the public broadcaster's network. This is not always the case. Sometimes it is, but that is far from always being the case for television; for radio, on the other hand, this is always true.
When you turn on your radio and Radio-Canada is on the dial, you know immediately that you are not on a private channel. There is a difference. That is Making a difference. There is a specificity there. Public television must manage to do the same thing that has been done on the radio, that is to allow us to distinguish it from the private sector. We can come back to this issue, if you would like to speak about it in more depth during the question period.
What is the main reason for our being able to tell right away, to recognize the radio service as distinct whereas this is not the case for television? It is the absence of advertising on the radio. On television, it is the advertising that makes the difference. The more advertising there is, the less we recognize the distinctive character of public television. I am fully aware that the economics of television are not the same as the economics of radio. The distinction must be made. Perhaps we do need some advertising to finance television. However, the more advertising plays a part in the overall financing of television, the less we will be able to see the distinctiveness of public television.
I do not want to delve into the subject of programming, because I do not believe it is the role of analysts of public television to take themselves for television programmers. Therefore, I do not want to begin to discuss which programs correspond to what public television should be and which do not. I will however give you two or three examples of programs.
Another thing I would like to emphasize is that I would really not want to leave you with the impression that public television should be an elitist television. That's not the intention of distinctive television. Distinctive television must speak to the general public, because all taxpayers pay for this television. Therefore, there must be something in it for everyone. All kinds of programming must be present on public television: variety shows as much as current affairs, dramas as much as sports. On the other hand, what is important, is that each genre should be treated differently when it is on public television. We should not create variety programs in the same way on public television as is done on private television. Sports coverage should not be done in the same way on public television as it is on private television. Indeed, it is interesting to note that there is a difference. On the French network, since sports coverage of, say hockey for example, moved over to the Réseau des sports—Réseau des sports is the equivalent of the Sports Network—the way in which hockey games are covered is not the same as when the Canadiens matches were broadcast by Radio-Canada, the public broadcaster.
Nor is it true that when the public broadcaster does more difficult things, it does not attract viewers. Currently, there is an example in terms of information. There is a science show called Découverte which is always broadcast on Sundays at 6:30 p.m., and it is currently attracting many viewers because it is presenting excellent BBC programs in a French version.
The legislation and the spirit of the Canadian television system emphasizes canadianization before and above all else. We must not vilify foreign programs. There are foreign-made programs that can be of the highest quality. There are even American shows that can be of a very high quality. The BBC program that is reviewed by the Découverte team has drawn, I am told, up to one million viewers over the month of April. This is a dry program, a difficult program.
I will give you another example. It will be the last, because I am far from being the programmer. There is a program called L'épicerie, and it is the perfect illustration of what I am trying to explain: doing things differently. There are food shows on all the networks. On the private networks, what are the food shows? They are interesting, but they are cooking shows.
So on the difference between what we see on the French television regarding food, this is an explanation. This is real journalism about food, whereas we don't see anything like that on the private networks. On the private networks we see programs on cooking, and I feel this is a very good example of what I'm saying. In public television there should be all sorts of programming, but it should be different from the private sector. Journalism about food is different from making a program about cooking. This is the same area, but the journalistic treatment on public television makes the difference.
According to the data, L'épicerie has had an audience of over 700,000 people over the month of March, at 7:30 on Wednesday evenings.
This is not 3 million or 2 million people. We do not get 3 million people anymore. That era of 3 million people watching the same show is over. French-language television, which is exceptional, sometimes has an audience of 2 million people. Seven hundred thousand people is not 2 million, but for an information show like this, which is doing excellent work on a very specific subject, that is very, very good.
What does public television do differently? International news.
This morning in the Ottawa Citizen there is an article on the editorial page comparing Justin Trudeau and René Mailhot. René Mailhot died over the weekend. He had been doing foreign affairs for the French network, both radio and television, for I think 30 years.
René Mailhot explained foreign affairs very simply. He made things understandable to the audience. This is precisely another example of what public television should do and what does not exist on private radio or television. No one on private radio would spend 10 minutes explaining the geography of an international problem. That is the role of public television.
The public broadcasters must be present, as they are in fact, and CBC and Radio-Canada are doing good work on the Internet. In the current context and given the rise of the Internet, some analysts would like to do away with the traditional network, and see the public broadcaster become an agency that produces or has programs or other content produced that would be broadcast on various platforms, choosing the best platform in light of the program or the content. There would therefore no longer be a network. Programs would be produced by the public broadcaster and broadcast here and there, largely on the Internet.
It is an interesting idea, but I believe it is only a medium-term solution. The risk that not only the public broadcaster but the media in general are running today is that they prepare for the long term while forgetting about the short term, forgetting about tomorrow morning.
Traditional media like newspapers are in decline, and the Internet is rising, albeit slowly. There is never a revolution in the media world. History has shown that there is no revolution, but a slow evolution. The danger is to be getting ready for the long term by going forward only with solutions like those that I have suggested, that is to say abandoning the networks and producing programs that would be distributed across the country, and forgetting about the short term. Television is still a powerful medium.
In conclusion, I will read you the last three sentences of the short text that I sent you:
We must be careful, it is wrongheaded to prepare for the long-term future while ignoring the immediate future. Television is still a powerful medium. The vast majority of people still watch television for their information and entertainment needs. Announcing its imminent decline is premature.