Mumbrellacast: The ABC’s rough week, more Christmas ads, and Christian O’Connell’s rise to the top
It’s almost the end of the year, and that means (more) Christmas ads, GfK’s seventh radio ratings survey of the year, and Nine’s AGM. What more could we wish for?
First up are the cracking Christmas campaigns, with Woolworths, Myer and Australia Post taking their turn. Woolies got 80% of the way there and could have leant more into the magic, according to Zoe Wilkinson and Brittney Rigby, although the two disagreed on the success of Australia Post’s effort. The star of the ad, a boy named Alfie, buying a small disco ball is an effort to reposition Aus Post as a retail destination for “simple gifting”, according to creative reporter Zoe. But would Myer’s Global Positioning Stocking actually have made more sense for the postal service, with the ad’s emphasis on getting presents where they need to go, on time?
In radio ratings world, Christian O’Connell is the good news story of the week, helping Gold FM to top breakfast in Melbourne, despite only taking the hosting chair last year. Nova was the winner overall in Adelaide, ending Mix’s 27 survey streak. And it was the first full survey period for 2Day FM’s new breakfast offering: music. But is one survey really enough to judge, or are people, as Tim Burrowes puts it, “the worst”?
Nine’s AGM was also held this week, in which CEO Hugh Marks and chair Peter Costello admitted the advertising boycott against 2GB’s Alan Jones hurt Macquarie’s revenues. Macquarie is now wholly owned by Nine, and the team asks, could the next boycott extend to the broader media company, and how long will it take to associate Jones with the Nine brand?
Speaking of controversy, it was a rough week for the public broadcaster, which pulled a fiery episode of Q&A, received backlash for deciding not to broadcast next year’s Olympics on live radio due to budget constraints, and was forced to issue an apology after a media preview version of #MeToo documentary Silent No More featured the names, faces, and stories of victims without their consent. Has the blunder set the #MeToo movement back even further in Australia?
The bright spot was its upfronts, which, according to Hannah Blackiston, had a very different energy to that of the big three networks. On the ABC’s 2020 slate are docu-series Dark Emu, based on the book by Bruce Pascoe, and Revelation, in which Sarah Ferguson will interview convicted Catholic priests. It’s an impressive line up which leaves the team lamenting the fact that these shows would likely never appear on commercial TV.
In the news
- Nine and Seven bosses warn of soft ad markets (00:41)
- The ABC faces backlash (15:14)
- Woolworths, Myer and Australia Post offer up their Christmas ads (34:38)
- And all the winners and losers from radio ratings survey seven (46:17)
Subscribe through iTunes or wherever you get your podcasts.
Alternatively, copy and paste the following link into your favourite podcast feed reader: https://feeds.mumbrella.com.au/MumbrellaPodcast
Last 3 episodes have failed to download from Apple Podcasts on iPhone
User ID not verified.
Hi Marc,
I’m sorry you’re having trouble with the podcast. I’ve just downloaded this episode onto my phone – I have an iphone and use Apple Podcasts – and it worked fine. If you are struggling, you can stream via the website, or you can copy and paste the link above into another podcast feed. Unfortunately, we have very little control over the podcast once it hits Apple Podcasts, so it’s not really possible for me to work out the issue.
If you need any assistance, you’re welcome to drop me an email – hannah@mumbrella.com.au – and we can try and get to the bottom of it.
Thanks,
Hannah – Mumbrella