Desert Peace

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

AL-JAZEERA'S ENGLISH CHANNEL COMES TO ISRAEL

Since the day AlJazeera started their English broadcasting, Israel and its Lobby affiliated allies have complained that it was anti Semitic. This attitude has apparently changed, not because of a change in political views, but because it is cheaper than CNN....

When the new service started last year, I phoned the cable company requesting that the station be aired... their response was that there was not much demand for it. Now it seems that there is? A demand for AlJazeera or a demand for more profits for the cable company??

Whatever the reasons, I'm satisfied. I will still have access to CNN via the internet... so in effect, I will have the 'best of both worlds.' The following report from the Jerusalem Post deals with this.

HOT cable to drop CNN for Al-Jazeera

It's about to lose the right to broadcast CNN in Israel, but the country's largest cable provider appears to have found a replacement: Al-Jazeera in English.

A contract with the controversial Gulf-based news network "should be finalized within a few days," a senior representative of HOT Television told The Jerusalem Post Monday. Should the deal be signed, it will put Al-Jazeera's English-language offshoot on the air around the time HOT drops CNN, said Yossi Lubaton, the company's vice president of marketing.

The announcement marks the latest programming shake-up by the cable provider, whose subscribers make up nearly two-thirds of Israel's cable and satellite audience. Both HOT and its main competitor, Yes Television, already offer Al-Jazeera in Arabic, and Yes added Al-Jazeera's English channel last year.

The removal of CNN and the addition of Al-Jazeera's English version both stemmed from financial considerations, Lubaton said, describing the changes as part of a cost-cutting campaign launched last year by HOT CEO David Kamenitz.

"It's an economic issue," Lubaton said. "Most of the internationally famous news channels - Sky News, the BBC and Fox - for all of them the cost is significantly lower than CNN. [The move] to introduce Al-Jazeera in English comes at a much lower cost than CNN."

Though HOT is prepared to cut ties with CNN at the end of the month, Lubaton distanced the company from statements released last week that appeared to question CNN's competitiveness as a news organization, and which drew attention to the channel's drop in the American ratings race behind Fox. "We are not arguing that CNN is not one of the leading news channels in the world, that CNN is not a good news channel," Lubaton said.

But, he added, "We believe that the other news channels are sufficient to satisfy subscribers' news demand."

That position is debatable, however, at least as it relates to the arrival of Al-Jazeera's English version, said Prof. Tamar Liebes, head of the Hebrew University's Communications Department.

"Even to think of it as a replacement is a joke," Liebes said, adding that few Israeli viewers would be inclined to "trust" the channel's coverage of international affairs. Al-Jazeera's Arabic network, which broadcast videotapes featuring Osama bin Laden soon after the September 11, 2001, attacks, has been criticized for what some call its anti-American and anti-Israel news coverage.

"It's incomprehensible," Liebes said. "Whatever functions CNN performed, none of them will be performed by Al-Jazeera. It's a whole different kind of person who will watch."

The channel has remained the international news leader in Israel, said Hagit Mendes, a spokeswoman for the network here. Her comments were echoed by Liebes, who named the network one of two channels Israelis turn to for coverage of breaking news stories overseas.

Asked about her channel's imminent eclipse in Israel by Al-Jazeera in English, Mendes declined to comment.

"We have issues with HOT, not with other channels," she said. "We welcome another international news channel. It's a good thing to have as many channels as possible in a democratic society."

4 Comments:

At 5:45 PM, October 23, 2007 , Blogger purpleXed said...

A recent trends analysis of German media, reveals that Al-Jazeera English is now one of the most quoted international media outlets in Germany — “far ahead of CNN and neck-and-neck with the Washington Post,” says Roland Schatz, CEO of the Media Tenor, adding that the Arab media is becoming increasingly influential, largely due to the advent of the Qatar-based television network Al-Jazeera, which started an English-language version, from 15 November 2006. When asked if Al-Jazeera English will eventually become a major force in the TV news industry, Schatz responded: ‘‘Knowing about their ambitions and their cash resources, and knowing that they took a lot of BBC journalists, I would say, yes’‘. ‘‘Do you think it will take a couple of years?’‘ the journalist asked ‘‘I would say less,’‘ Schatz said. Media Tenor is the leading media institute in the field of applied agenda-setting research. The company’s detailed analysis of news reports provides insight to major corporations and government agencies, such as the U.S. State Department.

As Aljazeera English marks its 1st Anniversary on 15 November 2007, it is adored by many but abhorred by others. In terms of size and budget with CNN and Fox News, many call Aljazeera a 'little matchbox' but, when it comes to richness of representation, diversity of opinion and plurality of views AJE appears well prepared to take on the corporate news media on its merits. According to author and former executive of USIA, Alvin Snyder, it's a shame AJE isn't being given the chance to compete in the US marketplace. Writing more than two-years ago Snyder anticipated that AJ would be giving Fox, CNN and the others "a run for their money" in America, based on the popularity of its website in the US. This would have taken place if it was given a level playing field to perform and demonstrate its merits and demerits.

Do the content of AJE programmes pose any ideological or security risks? Perhaps an appropriate person to make a calculated judgement about such risks in the Middle East region is Shimon Peres.

The fact that (as the Israeli Deputy Premier) Shimon Peres would set aside some time to visit the headquarters of Aljazeera News Channel in Doha will not surprise observers of the region's media scene. Peres also appeared in a special interview on the day this 24 hour news channel was launched on 15 November 2006 saying perhaps we will be able to talk better about peace on Aljazeera English.

The fact that Peres appeared on the channel several times reflects the significance of reaching out to an audience genuinely interested for peace in the region. The attention and engagement accorded to AJ sends a clear message on how seriously the newly established channel is taken by important regional players. This leaves cynics on the wrong foot when it comes to the realities of the Middle East.

 
At 3:45 AM, October 24, 2007 , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Am I the only one that finds it ironic that the AIPAC crowd lobbies against Al Jazeera here in the US but is all for it in Israel?

 
At 10:49 AM, October 24, 2007 , Anonymous Anonymous said...

No you are not.

 
At 9:13 PM, November 04, 2007 , Anonymous Ines said...

I deeply regret HOT decision despite the many customers requests and complains...

I feel HOT have let me down...and also betrayed my trust...

Hot chose financial gain to quality and good service to its customers...

Hot should know better... and I hope to get back CNN .. I never watch FOX News I cannot stand that channel at all... and I cannot believe that Al Jazeera in Englishw will able replace CNN

I watched CNN and the BBC in all the countries of the world I live and now Hot cancel CNN here in Israel... I really feel very bad about it...

 

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