FILM NEWS


SOUTH AFRICA’S RISING STAR ETIENNE KALLOS RECEIVES SUNDANCE INSTITUTE/MAHINDRA GLOBAL FILMMAKING AWARD
25 Jan 2012
The National Film and Video Foundation (NFVF) is proud to announce that one of South Africa’s bright lights Etiene Kallos received the Global Filmmaking Award from the Sundance Institute and Mahindra for his visionary project. 
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THE IPO CONGRATULATES MS LULAMA MOKHOBO ON HER APPOINTMENT AS SABC GCEO
25 Jan 2012
The Independent Producers Organisation released the following statement on Monday congratulating Ms Lulama Mokhobo on her appointment as SABC GCEO
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CITYVARSITY FAQ'S ANSWERED FOR INTERESTED STUDENTS
20 Jan 2012
If you’re interested in the wide variety of media courses offered at CityVarsity Cape Town or CityVarsity Newtown, it’s not too late to join our creative family for 2012! Here's a Quick Guide to make things a little easier for you - Open Day, Contact Details, Start Dates, Bus Service, you name it!
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MOBISLYDERS JUST ARRIVED AT PHOTO HIRE
20 Jan 2012
Mobislyder is the world’s first portable camera slider designed specifically for a broad range of small video-enabled devices such as iPhones, smart phones, compact cameras and small D-SLR cameras. 
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3rd Degree Turns Ten

3rd Degree’s anchor and executive producer Debora Patta is a bit like Marmite; you either love or hate her. She is as often criticised for her interview style as she is praised for her tenacity.  Her current affairs show pulls in around 1.9 million viewers per night. 

After a decade of exposing corruption, racism, sexism, nepotism, and most other negative isms, the show is as strong as ever. 

On Tuesday 11 May 2010, e.tv screened a special edition of 3rd Degree that looked back on ten years of investigative journalism. “It is part of our decade celebrations,” says Debora. “We also had a media breakfast on Tuesday morning and then a team lunch.  We were actually going to take Wednesday off but an important interview with Bheki Cele changed the plans. Work comes first.”

Debora says she first started toying with the idea of a current affairs show towards the end of 1999. “I had just had my first child and did not like the idea of coming back to do only news,” she recalls. “I wanted to do a current affairs program with a difference.  The vision was of an investigative show, which asks difficult questions and also comprises of a tough interview segment.” 

She pitched her idea to e.tv channel director, Quraysh Pattel.  He liked it and in 2000 3rd Degree aired for the first time.

Debora was a political activist in Cape Town’s squatter camps during the 80s, while she was working on her Bachelor of Social Sciences at the University of Cape Town. 

She has been an investigative journalist for 20 years and has won category awards in the CNN African Journalist Awards, Checkers Woman Of The Year and the Vodacom Women In The Media Award, among others. 

“Every year 3rd Degree, or one of our team members, win an award,” says Debora.

“I would say in total we win three to four awards per year, which would add up to around thirty awards in the last decade.” 

For example,  producer Anna-Maria Lombard won the CNN MultiChoice African Journalist of the Year Award for HIV/Aids reporting.

“People are often not aware of the other team members behind the scenes,” says Debora. “I have a very strong team and they work incredibly hard.  It’s great to work with such talented people.  It makes my job much easier and so much more exciting.” 

She says that their current team consist or around twelve people, which is only slightly larger than the team that created 3rd Degree’s first episodes.

How does one qualify a most memorable interview after two decades of reporting? “As a journalist it is difficult to remember beyond your last interview,” says Debora. “Although there have been certain highlights. Most recently was the Leonard Chuene confrontation, when we exposed his Caster Semenya gender test lies. You don’t often get an opportunity to get such a clear-cut way to expose somebody.  Another was the interview with General Andrew Masondo. I think it was in 2001. He was the head of the ANC’s Veterans Programme for the Defence Force at the time. He reacted so badly on-air after I confronted him about his gross misconduct.”

Tipping over the rocks under which such high-powered and ruthless law breakers live must surely pose a certain amount of risk? “I think people exaggerate the dangers that we are under,” Debora says. “We are wise and sensible and don’t do anything stupid.  We take calculated risks. If I have a bad feeling about something, I will not go in. Occasionally we use security guards. Not often though, as it is too off-putting. I have always maintained that the best place to hide is under the lights. Once you are out there in the open, what can people really do? So you have to be quick to get the story to air. I guess there still is a certain amount of risk involved. I think it is harder dealing with the emotional impact; the tragedy of some stories.” 

Debora recalls fighting back the tears while interviewing Debbie Addlington as she described how her husband axed her three young children to death before turning on her.

“But I’ve been doing this a long time.  So I am very used to the emotional aspects,” she says. “I have very strong coping mechanisms and a supportive family. I exercise a lot and make sure that I stay very, very healthy. All these things help me deal with the stress.”

3rd Degree has a very active Facebook page filled with robust debates, which at times end up in vicious insults being traded.  “I must be honest: sometimes I find the level of debate on Facebook quite juvenile,” she says, with a hint of irritation in her voice. “And other times it’s really good. The audience that debates on our Facebook page is very different to our hardcore loyal fanbase; a lot younger. I think you can get too hung up on what’s happening on Facebook. Sometimes if you read Facebook, you think we are on the brink of a civil war. Whether it is good or bad, it gives people a chance to interact with the show.”

Debora says she does not think television will ever lose its wow factor. “At the end of the day an opinion piece in a reputable newspaper carries more weight than a blog,” she explains. “And an incredible story on CNN is infinitely preferable to the stopping and stuttering of YouTube. You’ve got to work the two hand-in-hand. I think there is a great need for quality investigative journalism.  I remember thinking if we make it to 2010, I will be thrilled. Now that we are here I think we are just getting going. One thing we’ve learned after democracy is that we are not short of stories in South Africa. I think there will always be a role for a show like 3rd Degree. Whether or not I am involved, I would hope that a brand like this would continue.”
Astrid Stark

 



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