25 broadcasters from 13 Pacific countries touched down in Auckland recently for the Pacific Broadcasters conference.
A meet and greet filled with lots of talanoa, networking and healthy debate, the conference was a welcome change from a typical Zoom meeting.
Natasha Meleisea, CEO of Pacific Cooperation Broadcasting Ltd (PCBL) which operates Pasifika TV, says the conference is about uniting Pacific broadcasters.
“I’ve kind of shared messages today around, it’s never a solo journey. There is strength in the collective and partnerships is really important,” Meleisea says.
“For a very long time we’ve had Pacific Voices or Pacific Stories being told by non-Pacific. There’s nothing wrong with that. However, it’s good to provide a platform where our own Pacific people can share those stories themselves and PCBL, Pasifika TV enables that.”
After seeing Vanuatu stories in the hands of overseas productions, story sovereignty was an important point of discussion for CE of Vanuatu Broadcasting and Television Cooperation (VBTC), Francis Herman.
“We’ve noticed that in previous years, people have just flown in, told our stories, misconstrued a lot of things,” says Herman.
“[They’ve] gone for the ratings, gone for the dollars and left us high and dry, and they really haven’t told the real stories. We are the experts in our own culture, our own island, or about our people.”
But Herman says the PCBL partnership has been a “faithful…and equal partnership.”
“We haven’t been seen as a very small island developing state or a very small broadcaster. They’ve treated us as equals.
“We tell our own stories. We know our audience better, we know our country better than they do. Let’s tell our stories. And I think Pasifika TV has given us that opportunity and that’s why we’ve continued that partnership.”
Part of that partnership includes training in camera production, operation of Live U units and journalism training, something which Kiri One TV CEO Tiarite George Kwong deeply values.
“Kiri One just started five years ago…and so we are very new in this kind of industry,” Kwong says.
“The idea for the partnership with PCBL is to upgrade our skills so that the news that we produce is up to the standard that people want to listen and watch every day.
“Compared from day one that we started, we have seen the improvement.”
Broadcasters like Mai TV in Fiji have taken the PCBL training one step further, when they acquired the netball rights for the Oceania Netball Series in 2022, their first time to do so.
“We were thinking we cannot do this because you need all the different equipment and costs and things,” says Director of Mai TV, Stanley Simpson.
“But we spoke with PCBL and they found solutions for us. And through that we were able to take the Oceania Netball series to Tonga, to Samoa and the Cook Islands, which is the first time that we were able to distribute rights from Fiji.
“That empowerment has been really strong. And from the discussions and the inspiring conversations we’ve had with the team at PCBL, it made us look around and realise that we have the best stories in the world in the Pacific.”
Now that their Pacific counterparts are receiving the necessary training and equipment, Meleisea says there’s an abundance of Pacific content being produced from their regional partners.
“We went to air in 2016, at that point in time we weren’t getting any content from the Pacific. Fast forward eight years down the track, we’re now getting eight to 10 hours a day from the Pacific, which is a phenomenal feat.
“In order to achieve that, it’s been a slow build. It’s been about providing equipment, providing training, and then providing the infrastructure and the connectivity to enable it. So without all of those three things, we wouldn’t have been able to get the content from the region,” she said.
SOURCE: TAGATA PASIFIKA/PACNEWS