Tin: The Intertainmint Nitwerk

For 12 years the commercial networks have been able to claim New Zealand content in their obligations to show local drama. It’s time for that crutch to be removed, Colin Delaney argues.

With a certain layer of guilt, Australians have long claimed Kiwi talent as our own; actors Sam Neill and Russell Crowe, Crowded House’s Neil Finn, Keith Urban and perhaps in a couple of years, Paul Henry. However in TV land they’ve been able to do so completely guilt-free for 12 years.   The three big commercial broadcasters, in accordance with the Australian Communications and Media Association regulations, must air a certain amount of Australian-made drama. A point system for tallying the hours of broadcast must total a minimum of 250 points a year. Different types of drama get different numbers of points per hour. The regulation is to both protect Australian culture in the media, and to create work within the production sector.

However in 1998, a ruling by the High Court of Australia allowed New Zealand drama programs to be considered local drama content to remedy an inconsistency within a much larger economic trade agreement between the two countries.

For the first time since the decision, results released this week by ACMA, showed Network Ten would not have cleared its 250 drama points in 2011 without New Zealand drama content. Ten’s 27 hours of Kiwi content contributed 68 of the channel’s 267 points.

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