Impartiality gone mad

Filmmaker James Ricketson shares his experience with the ABC’s policy of impartiality, following Andrew Pike’s case last week.

In the interests of debate about the ABC’s commitment to ‘balance’, in its programming, this is a record of my experience with one project presented to the ABC.

My documentary Sleeping with Cambodia was broadcast on the ABC in 1996. The film rated very well. Sleeping with Cambodia was implicitly critical of money-wasting NGOs in Cambodia – one of them the high profile Christian NGO World Vision. After Sleeping with Cambodia’s screening the ABC was deluged with correspondence from World Vision and other NGOs accusing the documentary of bias.

A long battle of words ensued. I was asked again by the ABC to verify the factual basis of the statements I had made in the film relating to how much it cost World Vision to support one child in a street kids’ centre – 10 times per annum what it would have cost to support an entire Cambodian family. I did so to the ABC’s satisfaction – as I had already prior to the screening. World Vision did not give up, however. The deluge of criticism of the film continued. The ABC was in a double bind. It supported Sleeping with Cambodia as being factually correct and yet wanted to get the NGOs off its back. The solution? Broadcast, late at night when virtually no-one would see it, a statement to the effect that the ABC acknowledged that this powerful lobby group did not believe the film to be factually correct. I was informed of the ABC’s decision only hours before the statement was broadcast. This statement did not accuse me of lying, but nor could it have been construed as support for my integrity as a filmmaker. Very few people would have seen it at 10.30 but it had the effect that the ABC desired. The deluge of correspondence from World Vision stopped.

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