University of Southern California
USC Center on Public Diplomacy
CPD BLOG
INSIDE THIS SECTION

SendSEND TO FRIENDS


Main Page | Month Archive | Email Updates | RSS Feed | Print Version

The Public Diplomacy Blog is intended to stimulate dialog among scholars, researchers, practitioners and professionals from around the world in the public diplomacy sphere. The opinions represented here are the authors' own and do not necessarily reflect the views of the USC Center on Public Diplomacy at the Annenberg School.



OP-ED: AL-JAZEERA FINALLY COMING TO TOWN, BUT HURDLES REMAIN
NOV 8, 2006 - 11:15AM PDT
Posted by Alvin Snyder
All posts by this author

In what can only be described as anti-climactic, Al Jazeera International is starting its English channel broadcasts to North America November 15 with a whimper, rather than the desired flourish. After failing to meet several self-appointed inaugural air dates over the past year, the controversial Arabic TV channel kicked off its service to the U.S. via bottom-tier, off-the-beaten-track delivery services on which Al Jazeera International's audience in America will be miniscule to start. The satellite service Globecast, owned by France Telecom, has added Al Jazeera English to its menu of some 150 overseas channels on its program menu, watched mainly by ex-patriots living in the U.S. who want to view programs from their native lands. For those not already subscribing to Globecast who wish to watch Al Jazeera English and other channels, the one-time cost for the program package is about $200., plus the cost of the receiver dish and installation, about an additional $200-$300. Other carriers also offering their own Al Jazeera English packages include relatively unknown and smaller program providers such as Fision, the on-line service Jump TV, and VDC, a Houston, Texas company. In what can only be described as anti-climactic, Al Jazeera International announced it will begin its broadcasts to North America November 15. After failing to meet several self-appointed inaugural air dates over the past year, the controversial Arabic TV channel is scheduled to kick off its service by showcasing an exclusive interview with British Prime Minister Tony Blair on Sir David Frost's new breakfast show. Major carriers like a Cox Cable, or a satellite-delivered DirecTV, did not wish to deliver Al Jazeera International into America's TV households. But when or if the channel is given the opportunity to reach and touch Americans in their living rooms, can Al Jazeera eventually make a go of it in the world's most competitive commercial marketplace? One likely scenario is that Al Jazeera will start out to show prospective U.S. carriers, which obviously have been reluctant to do business with the network, that it has a different face for North America than it does for the Middle East, and does not intend to damage any provider's integrity. It would not, for example, be the go-to channel for the terrorist video pronouncements and news releases which helped the parent Arabic regional channel gain considerable notoriety. Executives at Al Jazeera's home base in the Persian Gulf country of Qatar contend that the network's hard-earned brand will be maintained for its English off-spring. But those in front-line management positions for the international channel -- top-heavy with British and American electronic journalists -- envision an Al Jazeera that offers something closer to a BBC, but certainly not an "Al Jazeera light," as some critics have suggested it is likely to become. Nonetheless, broadcast journalists, both domestic and international, these days do find themselves compromising what they report to gain the maximum number of viewers. In the highly competitive U.S. marketplace, for example, there is more emphasis than ever on showcasing an anchor…... FULL TEXT
 
Read Comments (2) | Add Your Own

- - -

Read Comments:

Alan Simpson on November 9, 2006 @ 10:20 am:
Alvin highlights the duplicity of the US when it comes to any alternative view of world events. Washington demands the rest of the world watch their propaganda channels, and criticizes the fact that they are not made available to the average citizen, yet gloats at the inability of AJ to get carriage on US cable systems, even in heavily Arab and Muslim areas. Certainly in DC the AJ people are far more moderate than the rabid religious right whose extreme views are ramrodded down every cable network. A choice of views on world affairs would be a very healthy addition to the US viewers diet. But as Alvin says they will probably choose to continue with gossip, football and celebrity trash. Maybe that is the formula for the retooled US PD network, have Britney Spears, Brad Pitt and Pamela Anderson instead of DC talking heads.

Michael Sakbani on November 26, 2006 @ 6:56 am:
Aljazeera aired today, 26th of November, a very problematic program featuring a nationalist kurd expounding his chauvinist views through a visit to Kirkuk ,Iraq.
I have no objection to any body expousing their views on any thing they hold. However, to give the podiume of Al Jazira to un scrutinized and unverified set of views on a topic hottly disputed in Iraq, does not do honour to either Mr. R. Omer or Aljazeera. The minimum that Mr. Omer should have done is to air other balancing views or at least to verify the truth of what was said. For example, it was asserted that Kirkuk is a Kurdish town with a Kurdish majority. This is not true, for the Turkmans and Arabs are a majority in the town.It is also quite preposturous to say that Arabs have used Islam to subjugate and render the Kurds second class Muslims; some of the most revered names in Arab history are Kurds. Mr. Omer has no excuse for neglecting the elementary duty of a reporter: to verify and sift what was said..
I trust that Al Jazira will make sure that such half- cooked reports will not be on the menu in the future.

Dr. Michael Sakbani, Geneva, Switzerland.

- - -

Add a Comment:

Your Name:

Your Email:

Comment:

Please enter the word you see in the image below:

NOTE: Comments are moderated by CPD and will typically be posted if they are relevant and respectful.

*
*
* *
*

REGIONS
Africa
Americas
Asia Pacific
South Asia
Middle East
Eurasia


BLOGROLL
Abu Aardvark
Brand Horizons
Chasing the Flame
CMD PR Watch
CPD/FPA Election
Demos
DipNote
Diplo Foundation
Diplomacia Publica (Spain)
East West Views
FCO Bloggers:Global Conversations
Global Interdependence Initiative Switchblog
Institute for Cultural Diplomacy
John Brown’s Public Diplomacy Press and Blog Review
Julkisussdiplomatia
Kim Andrew Elliott
Layalina Review
Mountain Runner
Public Affairs (Germany)
Simon Anholt's Placeblog
The Language Business
Undiplomatic
Wandren PD
World Politics Review

- - -
- - -

Enter your Email


Powered by FeedBlitz

XML     

- - -
USC Center on Public Diplomacy logo Back to Top
USC Center on Public Diplomacy
Home | About the Center | Newsroom | Center Projects | Library | For Students
*
Search | Contact Us | Privacy Policy   ©2010 USC Center on Public Diplomacy. All rights reserved.