The Jakarta Post , JAKARTA | Wed, 06/24/2009 11:03 AM | National
Research into the nation’s television viewing habits has revealed most people regard news and talk show programs to be the best in terms of education, but the majority still prefer to watch soap operas and reality shows.
“Our research shows that viewers regard news and talk shows to be the
best television programs to watch,” the Science, Aesthetics and
Technology Foundation Deputy Director, Agus Sudibyo, told a seminar at
Tarumanegara University in Grogol, West Jakarta, on Tuesday.
“However, our research also shows that the same people still
prefer to watch soap operas and reality shows, which they themselves
say are low quality,” he added.
The results were drawn from a survey of 220 respondents across
11 major cities, including Medan, Palembang, Bandung and Jakarta.
Around 90 percent of those who took part in the research, conducted
between April 7 and April 13, were university graduates.
The respondents claimed the top five television programs were
Metro TV’s Kick Andy talk show, TV One’s Apa Kabar Indonesia Malam talk
show, SCTV’s Liputan 6 Petang daily news program, RCTI’s Seputar
Indonesia news program and Trans TV’s Bocah Petualang children’s
education program.
However, the same respondents said the five programs
they watched the most were SCTV’s Cinta Fitri teen soap opera, RCTI’s
Dewi soap opera and three reality shows from Trans TV — Termehek-mehek,
Me VS Mom and Jika Aku Menjadi.
“The respondents said soap operas completely lacked when it came
to encouraging social empathy, exemplifying good behavior or being
suitable for children,” Agus said.
Around one-fifth of respondents believed the popular soap operas, such as Cinta Fitri, were quality
programs.
“It was also ironic to discover that the state education
institution, the National Education Ministry, prefers to run its
advertisements about education during soap operas programs. I think the
ministry needs to really consider when to run its commercials and not
base its decision just on popularity but on substance as well,” Agus
said.
RCTI’s editor-in-chief, Arief Suditomo, told the seminar the
national television industry needed to fully commit to strengthening
its role as a public education service by moving away from airing
poor-quality shows.
“I admit that ratings are important for the industry. But we must also commit to advocating better
education programming for the public.” (hdt)
(JP/Irma)
Ryan Octavianus (not verified) — Wed, 06/24/2009 - 11:14am
The great thing about TV is, you have the control (remotely or not) to switch channels or just turn it off :)
Gustian ESA (not verified) — Wed, 06/24/2009 - 5:52pm
Whatever the opera or TV show must exemplify a good guidance not just a show...
John Hargreaves (not verified) — Sun, 06/28/2009 - 9:17am
The first paragraph states that "most people regard news and talk show programs to be the best."
But halfway through the article we learn that "90 perecnt of those who took part in the research ...were university graduates."
Are people and university graduates the same thing now then?