This concept of service has to be the basic foundation. To prepare for the future it is crucial for CBC to think in terms of public good and sharing rather than in terms of monopoly and competition.
In terms of track record, before I discuss new technology, I wish CBC was more embracing in the way it has been doing things so far. I'll give you an example. When I was film commissioner, the only way CBC could conceive to work with the NFB was to absorb the NFB, basically; there was no other way to do business with them. So today on CTV or on Global, you have more NFB product than you have on CBC per se. It is very strange that an institution of $1.5 billion cannot work with an institution of $80 million, and yet CBC finds enough money to purchase a network such as the Documentary Channel, and they have already purchased a network called Country Canada, which as far as I'm concerned, as far as the audience is concerned, are not really visible on the screen.
Another initiative I think CBC could have taken over the years--the CBC has not displayed leadership on that front--is with the provincial networks.
In the case of Télé-Québec, TVOntario, Knowledge Network, CTV Saskatoon,
CBC could have been a leader, because those networks are very poor. They don't have the means to be exposed. Yet they make a lot of very good products, and if CBC could be a federator at that level, it could help us to see a vision of this country across the country, province by province.
On our national cinema, we invest a lot with Telefilm, with tax credits, with all kinds of things. Across the world, every major public broadcaster has a branch that invests in cinema. Not CBC. CBC again is free to run on its own and decide and pick and choose which films it will invest in and at what rate.
In France, England and Germany, public broadcasters invest in cinema.
I'll cite Mr. Andreas Weiss from ARD in Germany, who said the film The Lives of Others, which won the Oscar in 2007, was done because of these investments in public television, and nobody has contradicted him.
Another point before I get into new technology is CBC and international. I'm flabbergasted, and to this day I have to guess what CBC is trying to do on the international front. For example, the BBC, which has been cited and I will cite, has created a structure called BBC Worldwide, which brings in $1.7 billion in revenue from the sale of its product, the sale of its format, and the sale of its concept. In that sense, I'm still seeking what the CBC is doing on that front.
On top of that, besides selling programs, which is not the business of the day--the famous “10 minutes ago”--it is more about selling signals, selling networks. You could be in Buenos Aires today or you could be in Istanbul and watch a Japanese network, a Korean network, or a British network. Not so with Canada. Where are we? If we're talking about a global market, where are those Canadian images that should be seen around the world? CBC could have played a leadership role at that level. And that brings me to new platforms.
When they came to meet with us here, the CBC representatives asked for a 10-year vote of confidence in order to make the switch to new platforms and technologies.
This is a huge quantum leap of faith to ask for, as we live through technological changes that occur literally on a monthly basis. I'm more generous than my colleague.
In the area of new platforms, the CBC talks more often about the nuts and bolts than content. In other words, what it needs the nuts and bolts for. In the meantime, a real revolution has begun and the CBC seems to be planting a few trees in front of the forest to hide the woods.
In concrete terms, how will it stand out from private broadcasters? In my opinion, the challenges it is facing will have such incredible consequences that I recommend to your committee extending these discussions and decisions in order to hear from even more experts, as you are doing now, and not just CBC directors. In the framework of traditional television, the CBC has often played the competition card, but now, we can only prepare for the technological future if we act in partnership with others.
If there is a network in the world that has made a technological turnaround, it is the BBC in England.
We haven't consulted each other on this, but each one of us has cited the BBC as a model.
The BBC has partnered with YouTube and expanded its search engine with Google.
YouTube has 20 million visitors per month. As the BBC Worldwide director of digital media has said, they can teach us a lot.
The partnership with Google will bring about the creation of three new channels on the Internet and for cell phone users.
In the same frame of mind, BBC has signed deals with South Korea through TU Media Corporation. They have also signed agreements with U.S. companies, such as Azureus, an online distribution BitTorrent, and Joost, which is a P2B broadband distribution venture by the people who invented Skype.
In the new global market, the CBC cannot be the end-all and be-all and operate alone. The most important changes are not going to be coming from the technological choices alone, but they have to come from the content.
The revolution, and it's been cited again, is a new source: user-generated content providers. I insist on that because content is made by citizens--not by professionals alone, but by citizens throughout our country to be seen by their peers in Canada and in the world.
These types of experiences are occurring right now in Canada, among other things, Homeless Nation, is a project by which young people create their own network on the street and help each other find their own solutions. CITIZENShift and Parole citoyenne are Internet sites where people create and exchange with one another. ZTV, which CBC used to broadcast, had this type of potential, but these investments were sacrificed and transferred to more traditional and commercial projects.
The new platforms are radically changing the concept of network, product format, creation process and copyright. CBC does not want to blend in with the rest, but it has to incorporate these changes. This is not a matter of making cosmic changes such as asking Canadians to vote on the most beautiful place in the country, but to truly involve citizens in overhauling the definition of public service.
One of the patrons of the German channel, ARD, who supports the concept of
user-generated content, has said the following: “UGC can only have an impact on public knowledge when it is broadcasted on general forum platforms”. The public broadcasters can play an important role by providing a powerful yet impartial stage for public debate.
Is anyone in our Canadian landscape advising us to take such steps? While IPTV, Internet protocol networks, are seeing the light of day at minimal cost, the CBC is still busy buying older networks, such as documentary channels, caught once more in the old paradigm and in the concept of competition rather than complementarity.
CBC representatives appeared before us to ask for an additional $60 million to start making technological changes. The BBC's reform plan was cut by $8.61 billion over six years by the English government. The government asked the BBC to come up with the equivalent of $3.9 billion Canadian to cover the technological changes. At the CBC, the opposite is happening: they keep making new requests for additional funding. The approach is simple: “You pay, we do”.
It may be true that the CBC needs more means to convert to high definition and it is true that it needs more means to stay in the race, but before talking about new investment by the Canadian government, let us be sure that the CBC, like the BBC or the NHK in Japan, brings its house in order first. We cannot try to be all things to all people at the same time on the radio and television. We cannot compete digitally and catch up technologically without making choices.
But in order to do this, they'll have to shed their old skins: CBC cannot continue to invest in the studios, the office spaces, the staff that they presently have and hope to reinvent themselves from inside out.
In conclusion, what I would say to this committee is that you have a fairly complex situation in front of you. I don't think it should be left to the CBC to define its future, but I encourage you to do what your predecessors have done in the past. I'll remind you of a commission called the Applebaum-Hébert commission. I think it's time this country had the courage to put together a commission that would help to redefine what the solution is for the CBC in terms of a new platform. Nobody's questioning the fact that they will get into it. How they will get into it, in what frame of mind, is the most important thing, in my view.
Thank you.