THE BRIEF: Manic Monday

By Matt Buchanan in Media News on

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SBS managing director James Taylor steps down and appointed oOh!media CEO

By Staff writer in Media News on
    SBS Managing Director James Taylor (pictured) will be stepping down from his role at the public broadcaster after 13 years of service, with the last seven years as Managing Director.    Appointed as Managing Director in October 2018, Taylor has presided over a period of record growth for SBS. Taylor, who has led SBS since 2018, will start his new role as CEO of oOh!media in late 2025 or early 2026, succeeding Cathy O'Connor who announced in April her intention to step down after more than four years in the role and will remain with oOh! until January 2026 to ensure an orderly transition. “It’s been a privilege to lead SBS and work alongside such a talented and committed team. I’m incredibly proud that today we’re reaching the biggest audiences in our history, producing more original local content than ever, and doing it with a credibility we’ve earned, not claimed,” said Taylor. “SBS has a clear purpose: to serve, reflect and connect all Australians - no

THE BRIEF: Journalism with the lot

By Matt Buchanan in Media News on
Seated (just) to my left The headlines in the Sydney Morning Herald (“We will rebuild Gaza”) and The Age (“Humanity’s best hope”) perhaps confers rather more impact and centrality to Australia’s beneficence than is merited but Paul Sakkal and Matthew Knott today provide even-tempered reporting focusing on Australia’s promised role in the post-war reconstruction of Gaza as key to its policy shift. In The Age, Foreign Affairs Correspondent Knott also offers comment (“Breaking point for deputy sheriff”): “The Albanese government’s decision to recognise a Palestinian state marks [a] historic moment in Australian foreign policy even if the move is likely to have little to no practical impact on the Middle East in the foreseeable future.” Also in the SMH, David Crowe has an analysis/news piece on Netanyahu (“Sharp jab in Australia”), while Amal Naser pops up in the op-ed pages arguing “Recognition is a mere distraction.” Meanwhile, S

Editors Guild to host Prem Bhatia Journalism Awards on Aug 11

By Staff writer in Media News on
The Editors Guild of India will host the Prem Bhatia Memorial Lecture and Journalism Awards 2025 on Monday, August 11, at the CD Deshmukh Auditorium, India International Centre, New Delhi. The annual event honours excellence in journalism, with awards for Political Journalism and Environmental Journalism.  This year’s memorial lecture will be delivered by Justice Sanjiv Khanna, former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of India, on the topic “Judiciary and Media: Shared Principles – Similarities and Dissimilarities.”  Instituted in 1995 by the Prem Bhatia Memorial Trust in memory of The Tribune editor Prem Bhatia, the awards and lecture have been carried forward by the Editors Guild since 2024, after the Trust handed over its corpus. The Guild will now organise and administer the awards and the lecture annually.

India-US relations at its lowest as Pak army chief threatens to go nuclear from US soil

By Pradeep Damodharan, Pragadish Kirubakaran and Neeraja Gopalakrishnan in Media News on
Two decades of bonhomie between India and the United States is now literally at its lowest point with long ranging ramifications as India, US, Pakistan and China try to adjust to rapidly changing global relations. While Indian PM has urged the country's technocrats to press for a "Swadeshi" policy urging Indians to go local after US punished with 50 per cent tarrif India for buying Russian oil, Pakistan's army chief has threatened to nuke half the world if their survival is in question. The Pak chief made this statement from US soil less than 15 years since Osama Bin Laden was killed by the US in Islamabad.   Hot off the Press Targeting US President Donald Trump over the doubling of tariffs and for calling India a “dead” economy, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, without taking names, said Sunday that “there are some people” who think they are “Sabke Boss” and, because “they do not like the rapid development of India”, are trying to make Indian goods expensive.

Prasar Bharati partners with AEx SPORT to launch Global League Wrestling in India

By Staff writer in Media News on
Prasar Bharati has signed an MoU with UK-based AdiGroupe’s sports arm, AEx SPORT, to launch Global League Wrestling (GLW), the first professional wrestling league in India and the Asia-Pacific region. The league will air on DD Sports and stream on Waves and All India Radio.  GLW will officially be unveiled on September 17, 2025, with broadcasts starting October 4. The inaugural season will run 40 weeks, offering family-oriented sports entertainment that blends Indian cultural storytelling with global production standards.  Prasar Bharati chairman Navneet Kumar Sehgal said the tie-up will promote diverse sports and give Indian youth a national platform, while CEO Gaurav Dwivedi called it “a new genre of youth-led programming.”  The Great Khali, former WWE World Heavyweight Champion, has been named Brand Ambassador and Talent Commissioner, tasked with nurturing talent and shaping the league’s creative vision.

LS Election fraud: EC needs to come clean on Rahul Gandhi’s allegations

By Pradeep Damodaran, Pragadish Kirubakaran and Neeraja Gopalakrishnan in Media News on
Image source: The Hindu, TOI, India Today, The Reporters' Collective and Law and Other Things; Edited by Dinesh Raj M   Senior Congress leader and Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi has accused the Election Commission of India (ECI) of “criminal fraud” and collusion with the BJP to steal elections claiming that 1,00,250 “fake votes” were created in the Mahadevapura Assembly seat under the Bangalore Central Lok Sabha constituency in order to ensure a win for the BJP. Hot off the Press Gandhi took reporters through a detailed presentation of the alleged fraud at Congress headquarters and listed out five different ways through which the alleged vote chori (theft) was done: duplicate voters, fake and invalid addresses, bulk voters at a single address, invalid photos, and the misuse of Form 6, reported Sandeep Phukan for The Hindu. Explaining how and why the Congress undertook a six-month-long investigation, he said the party’s internal survey had predicted a

Women driving major shifts in tourism industry

By Tony Bosworth in Media News on
<>   The travel industry is experiencing a significant transformation as women increasingly dominate travel decisions and solo female adventures surge, according to Robyn Foyster, founder of Women Love Travel. “Eighty-two per cent of women are the deciders in all travel decisions," Foyster reveals. "And solo female travellers, the number of them has surged by 131% since 2024. We are seeing a rapid growth in the number of women who are travelling and they're doing more solo travel than ever." The trend has prompted travel companies to adapt their offerings. Foyster notes that major global and local operators are now tailoring experiences specifically for female travelers.  "Even in Deer Valley Park, they have many more women's events that they're doing. Things are being tailored just for women because these travel companies are seeing the trend,” Foyster told Influencing. "Safety remains a primary concern for female travellers. Women feel comfortable with other women,

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SBS managing director James Taylor steps down and appointed oOh!media CEO
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THE BRIEF: Journalism with the lot
The only story in town today is the news that the Albanese government will break with the US and join Western allies in recognising Palestinian statehood at the UN next month. Is it fair to say the coverage varied? My word, yes. From chin-stroking sages pondering the gravity of the political moment to x-ray analysis of the shadowy forces within Caucus shaping the decisions, to a dependable riot of spittle-flecked red-cheeked tabloid rage, it's all there and in our face. Stories today from Paul Sakkal and Matthew Knott, david Crowe, Peter Hartcher, Andrew Tillett, Phil Coorey, Claire Armstrong and Carla Douglas, Katina Curtis, Ben Packham, Geoff Chambers, Christine Middap and Joanna Panagopoulos, Paul Kelly, Greg Sheridan, and Michael Read. ... Show more

Women driving major shifts in tourism industry
Founder of Women Love Travel - Robyn Foyster - explains why the digital publication is in the right place at the right time as the number of women travelling soars and women solo travelling makes its mark.  ... Show more

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