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Sunday, July 24, 2022

School Broadcast Media of Japan

 

Q.5 Discuss the school broadcast media of Japan.

 Course: Broadcast Media in Distance Education

Course code 8621

Level: B.Ed (1.5 Years)


Answer:

 

The broadcasting system in Japan is divided into the public sector, represented solely by NHK (Nippon Hoso Kyokai, or the Japan Broadcasting Corporation), and the commercial sector.

 

NHK collects the mandatory viewing fees from households that own TV sets and makes it the source of funds for its wide activities. It operates a nationwide network with 2 MW radio, 1 FM radio, 2 VHF television, and 2 BS television channels. Also, it has a shortwave overseas radio in Japan.

 

As of 1992, there are 177 commercial broadcasting companies, 36 of which operate both TV and radio, 82 only TV, and 59 only radio. Local TV stations form tie-up networks with major key companies in Tokyo, i.e. NTV, TBS, Fuji-TV (CX), TV-Asahi, and TV-Tokyo. The majority (roughly 80%) of programs are provided by these dominating stations. Those commercial broadcasting companies rely on advertising revenue. As you can imagine, sponsors are very sensitive to audience ratings, hence TV stations tend to make junky programs that only aim at ratings.

 

TBS-Aum scandal and underlying problem in TV journalism All Japan’s news media reported the TBS-AUM scandal on March 26, 1996:Tokyo Broadcasting System Inc. (TBS) executives confirmed at a news conference Monday that network employees had shown a group of AUM Shinrikyo followers a videotaped interview with anti-AUM lawyer Subsume Sakamoto. …

 

Sakamoto and his family were abducted and murdered about a week after the tape screening, on Nov. 3, 1989, allegedly by AUM followers. Police believe that AUM leader Shoko Sahara ordered the killings after being told about the interview. …

 

The taped interview, which was never aired, was supposed to have been for a TBS news report about the cult. The AUM members, including high-ranking cultist Kiyohide Hayakawa, were allowed to see the tape before the report was aired and, after protesting about it, TBS decided not to air the interview, according to prosecutors and some AUM followers.

 

(Mainichi Daily News)

Many people say that TBS got many scoops on the Aim issue, including an exclusive interview with Shoko Sahara, after it showed the videotape. Did they make a deal with Aim for audience ratings? Is “wide-show” programming really journalism?

This type of problem has been repeated. It seems that the problem is not only for TBS but for all of Japan’s TV journalism. Japan’s (TV) journalism is in danger!

 

Satellite broadcasting and Cable TV *

 

…At the end of May 1995, the new opening of terrestrial stations was stopped. The Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications (MPT) judged that, in the dawning age of multichannel television typified by the proliferation of satellite broadcasting and cable TV, there was no need for any further increase in the number of regional TV stations that have difficulty operating without the support of a major Tokyo-based broadcaster.

 

Satellites

 

The development of media using satellites is making commercial headway. Japan Satellite Broadcasting Inc., Japan’s first private satellite broadcasting company, launched its service in April 1991. Moreover, 11 companies using communications satellites got off the ground in 1995. Two private companies broadcasting music digitally via satellite using PCM technology were operating as of April 1996, and four companies commenced around-the-clock programming using communications satellites in 1992 and 1993.

 

Multiplex broadcasting utilizes the gaps to provide bilingual broadcasts, stereo sound, emergency broadcasts, and so on. In April 1996, MPT proposed in a report that all commercial TV stations should be obliged to provide text and sound commentary broadcasts for sight- and hearing-impaired viewers.

 

Cables

 

Until recently cable TV was used only in those areas where reception of radio waves is poor, such as secluded mountain regions and outlying islands. However, urban cable TV, defined as having over 10,000 tap-offs, more than five independent channels, and two-way functions, is now becoming an important medium in metropolitan areas, offering a multitude of programs on numerous channels. Tokyo’s first cable TV station began broadcasting in the spring of 1987.

 

As of March 1995, there were 61,606 cable TV stations around Japan, with 10.3 million subscribers, including 170 urban cable TV stations (Feb. 1995) with 2.0 million subscribers (Dec. 1994).

 

HDTV and Digital

 

Hi-Vision TV, the Japanese version of high-definition television, is being developed primarily by NHK. With roughly twice the scan lines of standard TVs, Hi-Vision TV has made possible high-resolution, high-detail images. Apart from broadcasting, it is attracting attention in the fields of arts, medicine, and education.

 

TV broadcasting is also being influenced by the tide of digital technology. The standard so far has been analog technology, in which pictures and sound have to be transmitted on separate radio waves. But with digital technology, one radio wave can be compressed without loss of quality; four to seven channels can run on one conventional analog frequency band. In Japan, two companies plan to begin digital services in 1996, although the timing of its introduction in satellite broadcasting is uncertain [see next section]. Since Hi-Vision TV uses analog technology [for encoding], its proponents are opposed to the introduction of digital technology.

 

Digital Broadcasting

 

On June 30, 1996, the Japanese satellite JCSAT-3 aired the first experimental digital broadcasting. It is Perfect TV, the joint venture of four big Japanese trading companies, and will start commercial service in October ’96, providing 61 TV and 104 sound channel selections. The registration fee will be 2,800 yen with about 50,000 yen for the antenna and decoder, and the monthly charge will be 2,190 yen for 12 channels set.

 

The U.S. DirecTV will enter the Japanese market, while Mr. Murdoch, who recently took major stock of TV Asahi, announced that he will begin 100 channels J Sky B within two years. Thus, Japanese people will be able to enjoy a few hundred programs shortly.

 

The ground broadcasting companies keep cool on the satellite fever. They think it is difficult for these newcomers to provide quality programs to satisfy so many channels (I doubt current ground programs have any quality, then). Another problem will be the antenna. As of June 1996, current services with analog Commercial Satellite (CS) gained only a hundred thousand subscribers, while those using Broadcasting Satellite(BS) achieved more (NHK’s BS has 7 million and Wowed 2 million). Because CS services require a different antenna than BS services, they experience a serious handicap in the Japanese housing situation. Many experts wonder if people dare to put one more antenna for the new digital satellite programs


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