Michael Markovitz: ‘My five years on the SABC board’

Loading player...
You’ll be hard-pressed to find anyone in South Africa as passionate about public broadcasting as Michael Markovitz.
A former journalist whose storied career has included serving as adviser to Mandla Langa, the former chairman of communications regulator Icasa, Markovitz has just completed five eventful years as a member of the SABC board.
He joins Duncan McLeod in the TC|Daily studio to talk about his experiences at the public broadcaster and why, despite its “capture” under former President Jacob Zuma and the abuse it endured under its former chief operating officer Hlaudi Motsoeneng, he still believes there is a strong case to be made for public broadcasting in South Africa.
The question, Markovitz says, is who will pay for public broadcasting in an environment where few South Africans are prepared to pay their television licence fees.
What funding models are appropriate, and why? Should a household television levy be applied? Markovitz unpacks this thorny issue in this episode of TC|Daily.
He also chats about:
• His new role as head of the Gordon Institute of Business Science’s new Media Leadership Think-Tank, and what he hopes it will achieve;
• The mess the recently departed board of the SABC inherited from the Motsoeneng era and what it took to clean it up;
• Whether the SABC can avoid a repeat of that disaster, and policy changes might be needed to protect the corporation from abuse by the executive arm of government;
• Why the delay in appointing a new SABC board is highly problematic;
• The case for public broadcasting in South Africa and appropriate funding models;
• Planned changes to broadcasting legislation;
• South Africa’s digital migration disaster and what went wrong; and
• The era of streaming and media fragmentation, and what this means for public broadcasting.
Don’t miss this great discussion!
7 Nov 2022 3AM English South Africa Technology · Business

Other recent episodes

Alan Knott-Craig unveils Fibertime’s big bet on township fibre

Alan Knott-Craig’s new fibre internet business has been flying below the radar for some time now, but the serial telecommunications entrepreneur has finally unpacked his plans for the business. Speaking to the TechCentral Show this week, Knott-Craig – who has led a range of well-known tech businesses, including Mxit, World…
15 Aug 5AM 22 min

Pick n Pay’s Enrico Ferigolli on building asap! and taking on Shoprite

Although Shoprite Group stole a march on many of South Africa’s retailers in on-demand online grocery delivery during the Covid-19 lockdowns, Pick n Pay has a clear plan to make up lost ground and compete aggressively for market share. Enrico Ferigolli, who co-founded the liquor delivery app Bottles – which…
14 Aug 8AM 49 min

Britehouse MBO: Graham Parker on what’s next for software firm

A recent management buyout of Britehouse from NTT Data – previously Dimension Data – has put the software development house on a new trajectory. In this episode of the TechCentral Show, Duncan McLeod chats to Britehouse executive chairman Graham Parker about the MBO of Britehouse Mobility and what it means…
30 Jul 4AM 25 min

Connecting Saffas – Renier Lombard on The Lekker Network

The Lekker Network is a recently launched global business platform designed to help South African expatriates find business and investment opportunities around the world, including at home. Founded by a group of well-known businesspeople, The Lekker Network was launched in March and offers members access to a business directory, a…
7 Jul 10AM 20 min

TCS | South Africa’s Sociable wants to make social media social again

The digitisation of social interactions has made it easier for people to maintain contact and build online communities. However, there has been a decrease in in-person interaction that has contributed to a sense of disconnect. South African-made social media platform Sociable hopes to solve this problem by combining online engagement…
23 Jun 8AM 23 min