Sneesby finally torches Nine career
After 3½ years as Nine Entertainment chief – which followed his reign as boss of Stan – Mike Sneesby has handed in his ID pass at the front desk.
After 3½ years as Nine Entertainment chief – which followed his reign as boss of Stan – Mike Sneesby has handed in his ID pass at the front desk.
The appointment of former ABC editorial chief Alan Sunderland to conduct an independent review into the ‘fake audio’ scandal at the broadcaster has raised red flags for some.
The nation’s TV ratings service, OzTAM, delivered the TV ratings more than seven hours late but it was a top result for key AFL free-to-air broadcaster Channel 7.
The ABC was notified multiple times – not just once, as it has claimed – about serious errors in its coverage of an operation involving Australian soldiers in Afghanistan in 2012, but failed to address the problems.
The online station is set to roll out new live programming for the first time, focusing on content for women aged over 30.
The left-leaning publication’s senior reporter Rick Morton has hit out as his own employer after it published a comment piece about public servants, taking his fury to those in charge.
The start-up entrepreneurial station has not paid its employees for months and they remain in the dark about their future as funding dries up.
ABC boss David Anderson admits the broadcaster’s legal team ignored a letter raising concerns over audio depicting an Australian soldier shooting at unarmed civilians in Afghanistan.
Justin Stevens concedes the issue with altered audio in a news report on alleged war crimes in Afghanistan ‘shouldn’t have occurred’ and that an investigation was ongoing to determine who was responsible | LISTEN
The taxpayer-funded broadcaster has taken down a video containing audio that depicted an Australian soldier firing at unarmed Afghan civilians.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/sophie-elsworth/page/5