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Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Television Station in Uganda with a Promising Media Business Model

By Esther Nakkazi

A Television Station in Uganda that broadcasts in only a local language is a successful media business, with a model that has not been replicated anywhere in Africa as far as we know.

The Bukedde TV, of the New Vision Group in Uganda is targeted at house helps who make purchasing decisions on behalf of their bosses, hence the target for this only local dialect, Luganda TV, says Robert Kabushenga, the CEO, New Vision Group, Uganda.

So, I am attending a media owners conference organised by the African Media Initiative or AMI in collaboration with the Rockefeller Foundation, Uganda’s National Association of Broadcasters and Panos Eastern Africa.

The workshop under the theme, Promoting Effective Media Management: The Place of AMI’s Leadership Guiding Principles for African Media Leaders and Managers (LGP), is happening now 21-22 in Kampala, Uganda.

Am I a media owner? It is a dream yet to happen. But I am an Executive Editor, of a periodical, The Health Digest, and the founder, of the Health Journalists Network in Uganda www.hejnu.ug. I am also a freelance science journalist mainly corresponding for SciDev.net.

Even if the forum is targeted at media owners just a few few, only three, are present. And during the discussions I understand it is the trend. Media business owners do not have time to sit in such forums, it is a waste of their time.

Lynn Najjemba of PANOS East Africa says they have invited them on several occasions but it is always a no show. Najjemba believes it is only the Uganda Communications Commission, the regulator in Uganda, that can get to them.

Kabushenga suggests that the only way they can get them around is to massage their egos, they do have super large egos, give them incentives with the invitations to the forum.

Kabushenga, is a speaker on the panel discussing media business models and he cites Bukedde TV, as a success and a news programme, 'Agataliko Nfuufu', which he said is a true example of knowing your audience.

I have been trying to have a conversation on 'Agataliko Nfuufu', that airs in Luganda, a local dialect, and is very popular among the population. It is mostly done by citizen journalists and largely, as Stephen Ouma of the Ugandan Journalists Union (UJU) described it, the script runs the same, like a movie and always ends with a police comment.

I have watched two interesting news items here that I can remember. The first one, was a 'withered' tree, the leaves had dried up and fallen off, the trunk turned colour, there was no fruit. The news story, was that the villagers were accusing someone in their community for bewitching the tree. The reporter interviewed many people in the community as well as the accused, who obviously denied it. There was no scientific perspective to the cause in the story.

But the accusations and counter accusations were hilarious, maybe, the reason that some people describe this news as a stress reliever. Doctors sometime may with time prescribe it to relieve stress as well. It is full of scandals, fights, accusations.

And Bukedde TV also has video jockeys who translate english movies into Luganda, which Kabushenga says many rich but uneducated people have thanked him for, an innovation that lets them watch movies without their educated wives labouring to interpret for them from English to Luganda.

The second news item and most recent was about rivalling co-wives who had a fight and one bit off the lip of another and spit it. The community gathered, remember all this is on tape, the lower lip was put in a polythene bag, and taken to police. I guess, its the reason that Ouma thinks these stories are always mini-movies.

My question to Kabushenga was, I find that the stories in this news programme are not balanced and do not hold up to the journalism standards, is this business model sustainable anyway? His answer, was well, it had run for 4 years and is still very popular.

He said people like me who have studied journalism think we have a monopoly over story telling but it should not be rocket science.

According to Kabushenga, 'Agataliko Nfuufu' and the TV station was designed for house helps and it meets its targeted market very well. If people like me, 'middle class' watch 'Agataliko Nfuufu', we are impostors getting into a space not meant for us.

"We give the global community a package. This was one way to get into the market. I have received many calls and complaints about this news program. I ignore them," said Kabushenga.

Here is how this media business model works; The house helps, most of of whom are comfortable speaking the local languages, and not English, do the home shopping, and they pick the brands they want for the household. Even those who do not do the shopping advise their bosses.

For instance, when you are the boss and buy a certain brand of washing powder, the house help will advise, that it burns their hands and prefer the other one. So any businesses that sell household items have no choice but to advertise on  Bukedde TV and the business model is working, says Kabushenga.  I wonder how far true this is but then I have no house help in my house. My daughter does not fuss over brands of household items! I make the decisions.

Friday, April 3, 2015

President's Visit to My Home Street;

By Esther Nakkazi

Today, the President visited Firidina Road in Kiwatule, my home street. It’s not necessarily the cleanest street, with goats and chickens roaming freely and a vacant plot where some residents, unwilling to pay for rubbish collection, dump their trash at night.

The plot’s caretaker, an elderly woman, occasionally burns the accumulated rubbish, loudly complaining as she does so. The resulting smoke often engulfs us if we are home. Children play on the roadside and sometimes in the road, enjoying games like dodgeball and skipping.

Half of Firidina Road is tarmacked while the other half is murram. Boda boda mechanics and ironworks artisans also work here, primarily on the upper side of the road. The street is about a kilometer and a half long.

The President visited to honor my neighbor, the late Joan Kagezi. During her memorial service yesterday, a member of the clergy suggested renaming the street after her. His visit was covered by the media: Museveni Visits Kagezi’s Family.

Joan Kagezi lived just a few gates away from my home. Though I’ve lived here for the past six years and occasionally bumped into her, we never exchanged greetings. I had no idea she was the Senior State Prosecutor; she was always a humble neighbor, never displaying any airs despite her position.

During my exercise runs, I used to pass her two-story house and continue along the half-dusty street. There was nothing to indicate her presence. When she passed away, we, as neighbors, went to console her family and were met with heavy police deployment.

Yesterday evening, while listening to the news, I heard the clergy's request to rename Firidina Road to Kagezi Road. I wondered why not rename one of Kampala’s streets after her instead. Is this the best way to show appreciation? Firidina Road is quite shabby.

Joan Kagezi lived a humble life and worked hard for this government and its people. While her home may be here, this half-tarmacked road does not deserve her name. She deserves better. 

Unless, of course, they fully tarmac it, install street lights, and beautify it. That might show a fitting tribute for a fallen hero. Farewell, my humble neighbor Joan Kagezi.

Firindina Road, Kiwatule