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Video clip synopsis – John Safran, Megan Spencer and Scott Goodings discuss the nature of programming at SBS.
Year of production - 2005
Duration - 2min 39sec
Tags - audiences, broadcasting, changing communities, democracy, diversity, identity, media and society, multiculturalism, radio, stereotypes, television, television programs, see all tags

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SBS Charter

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Additional help.

About the Video Clip

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The interviews with John Safran, Megan Spencer and Scott Goodings were recorded for the website From Wireless to Web, produced in 2005.

John Safran is a filmmaker and self-proclaimed media hooligan. Megan Spencer is a film critic, reporter and filmmaker. Scott Goodings is a self-proclaimed “TV freak” and walking archive. You can view their full biographies at From Wireless to Web

The website is a selective history of broadcast media in Australia. Decade by decade, from radio and newsreels to TV and the internet, this history shows how the Australian broadcast media developed and shaped the way Australians see themselves.

From Wireless to Web is a Film Australia production in association with Roar Film.

Curriculum Focus

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Students will:

  • discuss the relevance of SBS programming to themselves and the Australian public in general
  • compose a report on one day of TV programming in relation to the SBS charter
  • draft a personal letter discussing SBS
  • present a ‘live’ review of an SBS program to an audience.

Curriculum links
National: The Statements of Learning for English- Year 9

Reading, viewing and interpreting information and argument texts

  • Students read and view texts that entertain, move, parody, investigate, analyse, argue and persuade. These texts explore personal, social, cultural and political issues of significance to the students’ own lives.
  • Students understand that readers and viewers may need to develop knowledge about particular events, issues and contexts to interpret texts.

Writing

  • When students write information or argument texts, they make appropriate selections of information from a few sources and attempt to synthesise and organise these in a logical way.
  • Students write imaginative texts in print and electronic mediums that contain personal, social and cultural ideas and issues related to their own lives and communities and their views of their expanding world.

This resource is also relevant to Media Studies- Regulation, Representation, Multiculturalism in the Media and Audiences.

These are extracts only. Teachers and students should consult their state’s curriculum and learning programs.
Go to The National Curriculum Statements for English

Background Information

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The principal function of SBS is to provide multilingual and multicultural radio and television services that inform, educate and entertain all Australians, and, in doing so, reflect Australia’s multicultural society.

SBS, in performing its principal function, must:

(a) contribute to meeting the communications needs of Australia’s multicultural society, including ethnic, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities;

(b) increase awareness of the contribution of a diversity of cultures to the continuing development of Australian society;

(c) promote understanding and acceptance of the cultural, linguistic and ethnic diversity of the Australian people;

(d) contribute to the retention and continuing development of language and other cultural skills;

(e) as far as practicable, inform, educate and entertain Australians in their preferred languages;

(f) make use of Australia’s diverse creative resources;

(g) contribute to the overall diversity of Australian television and radio services, particularly taking into account the contribution of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and the public broadcasting sector; and

(h) contribute to extending the range of Australian television and radio services, and reflect the changing nature of Australian society, by presenting many points of view and using innovative forms of expression. (Special Broadcasting Service)

Classroom Activities

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  1. Getting started
    As a class view the interviews with Megan Spencer and Scott Goodings then discuss and write notes on the following:
    1. Explain Megan Spencer’s comment that she hopes SBS will be ‘left alone’.
    2. From what they say, comment upon whether Spencer and Goodings view the SBS entirely as an ethnic broadcaster for the non-English-speaking Australian community.
    3. Comment on whether the SBS is of any relevance and interest to you. What is your attitude to watching programs with English subtitles on SBS?
  2. Drafting a report
    In pairs, research the SBS charter, then examine the program guide for one day of programming on SBS Channel 28. Prepare, draft, edit and proofread a report in about 350–400 words arguing whether you believe SBS fulfills its charter for that day of programming. (You may need to find more information about the content of some programs than what a guide listing provides, and also to view sections of programs to make an assessment.)
  3. Writing a personal letter
    It’s been claimed that SBS TV has no direct equivalent elsewhere in the world. As a ‘typical’ TV viewer, write a 300–350 word letter to a friend or relative living in another country, discussing SBS in comparison to other TV networks in Australia. (You may include the issue of paid advertising on SBS.)
  4. Reviewing an SBS program
    You have been asked to review ‘live’ on youth radio an SBS program such as Pizza, South Park, Iron Chef, MythBusters, or any other, in consultation with your teacher. Present your two-minute ‘live’ review to the class.

Further Resources

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Go to From Wireless to Web for more about the history of broadcast media in Australia.

Go to SBS Corporation Charter

Read Media new ways and meanings 3rd Ed. by Colin Stewart and Adam Kowaltzke. Jacaranda, Milton, QLD, 2008. Go to a sample of chapters online at Jacaranda Books