Criticism of TV Globo
Criticism of TV Globo refers to the history of controversy concerning TV Globo, the television division of the media conglomerate Grupo Globo, owned by media proprietor Roberto Marinho. TV Globo was founded on April 26, 1965, just over one year after the Brazilian coup d'état by the Brazilian Armed Forces, and operated under the new military dictatorship in Brazil until March 15, 1985. TV Globo was criticized for censorship of pro-democracy broadcasting. In 2013, TV Globo apologised for its support of the military junta in the 1964 Brazilian coup d'état.
Time-Life
Although Marinho acquired a broadcast license in 1957, it was a contract with Time Life Television that allowed Rede Globo network to enter and expand in the Brazilian television market. Time-Life offered financial and technical support in return for a share of Rede Globo profits. Marinho's competitors argued this was unjust because it broke Brazil's constitutional laws concerning foreign media ownership. An inquiry found the laws had been broken and Time Life Television was paid out. Marinho was not convicted.Marinho's support for the military junta
In 2013, TV Globo news presenter, William Bonner read on-air during the national evening news, the Jornal Nacional, a formal public apology for Groupo Globo's support of the 1964 coup.He read, "In the light of history,... there is no reason not to acknowledge, today, explicitly, that the support for the 1964 coup was a mistake, as well as other wrong editorial decisions in the period elapsed since that original mistake. Democracy is an unconditional value. And, when in risk, it can only be saved by itself."
In refuting the accusation that Groupo Globo was pro-military rule, the group cited the difficulty in obtaining television licenses in João Pessoa and Curitiba in 1978; government censoring of its programming; and the presence of communists amongst its employees.
Government influence
Walter Clark, who was a general manager of Rede Globo, wrote in his autobiography that Rede Globo was heavily controlled by the government. For example, at the direction of Rio de Janeiro's chief of police, he had cancelled the programs of Carlos Heitor Cony, a journalist, and Roberto Campos, an economist.An advisory committee was convened to scrutinize Rede Globo's material. The committee included Paiva Chave and Edgardo Manoel Erikson, both generals. The military president Emílio Garrastazu Médici visited Clark on Sundays to watch football with him. According to Clark, the so-called "Globo standard of quality ended up "going through the looking-glass" of a regime which the Rede Globo professionals never agreed with".
In interviews made for the British documentary film Beyond Citizen Kane, the minister for finance in the military junta, Armando Falcão said, "Roberto Marinho never gave me any problems. When I was the minister in charge of censorship and he was the director of the TV Globo network, Radio Globo, Radio Mundial and Radio Eldorado, he never gave me any trouble."
Diretas Já protest
On 25 January 1984, the Rede Globo network broadcast the first large rally of the Diretas Já movement from the Praça da Sé public square of São Paulo. Rede Globo's Jornal Nacional program had planned a segment on the protests, lasting two minutes and seventeen seconds. However, there was a miscommunication during the transmission to the Jornal Nacional. 25 January was the foundation date of São Paulo and so the news reader assumed the vision to be broadcast was part of the city's 430th anniversary celebrations. Rede Globo was accused of manipulating the facts.José Bonifácio de Oliveira Sobrinho, known as Boni, the former vice president of Grupo Globo, commented on this during an interview with journalist Roberto D'Ávila in 2005. He confirmed that Roberto Marinho suppressed the coverage of the first large rally of the Diretas Já movement. Sobrinho said, "Mr. Roberto did not want mention of Diretas Já" and the event in Praça da Sé would be reported, "without any participation of any of the dissenters". This was in line with the demand of the government censors. The veracity of these facts is rejected in the book, Jornal Nacional - A Notícia Faz História.
Proconsult scheme
The Proconsult scheme was an alleged attempt to interfere with the Rio de Janeiro gubernatorial election of 1982 to prevent the election of Leonel Brizola, candidate for the Democratic Labour Party. On the eve of the election, O Globo published an editorial favourable to Brizola's opponent, Moreira Franco. The Proconsult company was engaged by the Brazilian Election Commission to use their computer system to tally the votes. It was alleged that the company awarded all blank, invalid, null, and hanging chad votes to Franco. Furthermore, the Proconsult result did not match an independent exit poll conducted by the newspaper Jornal do Brasil. O Globo did not challenge the count.Journalist at the Tribuna da Imprensa newspaper Hélio Fernandes reported that Maoel Vidal of the Rio de Janeiro Police, as an independent scrutineer, noticed irregularities in the count. Critics allege Groupo Globo influenced the result by reporting counts calculated from electoral map aggregate votes.
Purchase of NEC stock
Prior to the 1964 coup, the Nippon Electric Company was a major supplier of telecommunications equipment to Brazil. Afterwards, when NEC needed to nationalise the stock of its subsidiary NEC Brazil, it ceded shareholder control of the company to Mário Garnero's private equity firm, Brasilinvest.On 18 March 1985, the Central Bank of Brazil initiated the liquidation of Brasilinvest. Garnero was accused of insufficient liquidity and embezzlement. Garnero was unsuccessful in securing a preventive concordat to avoid insolvency. On 29 April 1986, Minister of Communications Antônio Carlos Magalhães suspended government contracts with Garnero's companies. In response to Brasilinvest's fall, NEC re-purchased part of the NEC Brazil stock.
In December 1986, the Brasilinvest stock was sold. Grupo Globo purchased 51% of the holdings and Garnero kept 25% as preferred stock. NEC purchased 58% of the stock. Government contracts with NEC continued.
In May 1987, Congressman Paulo Ramos sought a commission of enquiry to investigate the sale of NEC Brazil shares to Rede Globo via Garnero. On 17 November 1987, the commission found no fault of Magalhães. The president of the commission, Mussa Demes of the Democrats party said, "If Governor Antônio Carlos had acted differently, he would have irrevocably compromised the country's telecommunications system and could be answering today for omission ". This was in light of the government having suspended contracts with NEC to prevent Garnero using government resources to stop the liquidation of Brasilinvest.
The state-owned telecommunications company, Telebrás, was broken up and privatised in 1999. The new entities continued their affiliations with western companies for their technological needs. NEC Brazil shares were less attractive and Grupo Globo sold their holdings.
TV Aratu
On 10 November 1986, Rede Globo cancelled its long-standing contract with TV Aratu, a station in Bahia. TV Aratu ceased broadcasting Rede Globo content on 20 January 1987. TV Bahia, an entity owned by the family of Minister for Communications Antônio Carlos Magalhães, replaced TV Aratu. On 13 January 1987, Congressman Luís Viana Neto, a shareholder in TV Aratu, went to president José Sarney to complain about Magalhãe's apparent conflict of interest.On 15 January 1987, Judge Luiz Fux provided TV Aratu an injunction on TV Bahia's retransmission of the Rede Globo programming, however, it was dismissed 6 days later. Legal proceedings continued until 6 July 1987 with no success for TV Aratu. Without Rede Globo's programming, TV Aratu's ratings fell by 80%. In 1996, its assets were sold to pay its legal fees.
1989 election debate
Journalist Ricardo Noblat suggested Rede Globo had been biased in its reporting of the 1989 election by favouring the presidential candidate, Fernando Collor de Mello. Collor owned TV Gazeta, a Rede Globo affiliate broadcasting in Alagoas. Allegedly, Rede Globo manipulated segments of the pre-recorded final debate before the runoffs between Collor de Mello and Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of the Workers' Party. Before the debate, polling suggested the two candidates were equal in the presidential race. When Lula lost, the Worker's Party concluded the televised debate was a confounding factor.Initially, Rede Globo sought to recuse itself from the mandatory full coverage of the election. However, it went ahead when the tie between candidates became evident. On 15 December 1989, on the eve of the runoff voting, Rede Globo broadcast TV news reports on Jornal Hoje and on Jornal Nacional. The Jornal Nacional report was the more controversial of the two, highlighting the better of Collor's moments and the weaker of Lula's. The Workers' Party applied to the courts to invoke the right of reply article of the Brazilian Constitution and have parts of the debate re-broadcast but was unsuccessful.
Rede Globo agreed the broadcast of the debate was not balanced but denied it being intentional. In 2009, Collor said he had been favoured in the debate broadcast by Rede Globo in the contest. However, despite his success in the election, by 1992 Collor had been impeached for receiving kickbacks from the corporate sector.
Defamation of Leonel Brizola
In 1992, Leonel Brizola was the governor of Rio de Janeiro. Brizola had given the broadcasting rights for the 1992 Brazilian Carnival parade in Rio de Janeiro to Rede Globo's competitor, Rede Manchete. On 6 February 1992, O Globo published an editorial piece entitled "Understanding Brizola's Rage" which implied he was suffering from "declining mental health" and "management ineptitude".In March 1994, under judicial order, Jornal Nacional aired Brizola's right of reply. Brizola made a written response which was read on-air by the news reader, Cid Moreira. Brizola said he did not recognize Grupo Globo as an "authority in matters of freedom of the press" and that the media empire had a "long and friendly relationship with the authoritarian regime and with the 20-year dictatorship that had ruled our country". He said, "Now, I am 70 years-old, 16 less than my slanderer, Roberto Marinho, who is 86 years old. If this is your notion of men of a certain age, then apply it to yourself".
2006 election
Rede Globo provided coverage of the 2006 Brazil election. The broadcaster was accused of reporting in a way that was biased against the re-election campaign of the president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Rede Globo reporter Luiz Carlos Azenha gave the examples of economic reports favouring Lula being omitted from broadcasts and his negative report about José Serra being censored by Rede Globo.Gol Flight 1907
On the eve of the first round of voting, 29 September 2006, Gol Transportes Aéreos Flight 1907 crashed after a mid-air collision killing all 154 souls on board. Rede Globo did not focus on the tragic event. Instead, Jornal Nacional spent the program reporting about the "Dossiêgate" scandal. This scandal involved members of the Working Party were discovered paying cash for information that was critical to the candidates José Serra and Geraldo Alkmin.On the same day, an officer of the Brazil federal police invited four Rede Globo journalists to a private meeting and audio recorded the event. He passed to the journalists compact discs containing photographs of the members of the Working Party and the cash they used to purchase the dossier of information. The officer was heard on the recording asking the journalists to broadcast the images that evening on Jornal Nacional. Rede Globo responded to their lack of coverage of the aeroplane crash.
2010 election
Anniversary promotion
On 18 April 2010, Rede Globo launched a marketing campaign celebrating the 45th anniversary of its news magazine television program Fantástico. The date of Rede Globo's 45th anniversary was 26 April 2010. In the commercials, the network's logo appeared next to the number 45. Soap opera actors recited the line, "we all want more" and "we all want more education, health, and, of course, love and peace. Brazil? Much more". As it happened, 45 was the registration number of the Brazilian Social Democracy Party at the Superior Electoral Court of Brazil.André Luís Vargas Ilário, congressman from Paraná state and the press secretary for the Workers' Party at the time, said the advertisement was a jibe at the Workers' Party, whose campaign slogan was "Brazil can be more". Rede Globo ceased broadcasting the advertisement on the first day of the 45th company anniversary campaign. The network said the advertisement was created in November 2009, when "candidate's campaigns did not exist, let alone slogans, but Rede Globo will not give excuses for accusations of bias and it is suspending the ad".
José Serra assault
During the second round campaign of the 2010 election, video was recorded of José Serra being hit in the head with a ball of paper and later a roll of duct tape. The duct tape was thrown by Worker's Party supporters in Rio de Janeiro. A CT scan of Serra's head found no injury.Rede Globo reported the paper ball incident but not the duct tape ball incident, giving the impression that Serra was exaggerating the significance of the impact of the projectile. On 21 October 2010, the Folha de S.Paulo newspaper, which is independent of Rede Globo, confirmed that Serra was hit by a roll of duct tape after the paper ball. Sistema Brasileiro de Televisão confirmed the information on its television news program, SBT Brasil.
2012 municipal elections
Fernando Haddad was the 2012 São Paulo mayoral election Worker's Party candidate. Each evening, Rede Globo broadcast the propaganda eleitoral gratuita. Haddad's campaign spot was at the end of the program. The program was followed each evening by Jornal Nacional, which was reporting events in the Mensalão scandal, a corruption trial involving the Workers' Party.2013 protests
In 2013, a number of political demonstrations occurred in towns across Brazil. They concerned many different concerns including increasing cost of living, political corruption and deficiencies in public services. Some of the demonstrations occurred in front of the stations of Rede Globo. Manure was thrown at the network's headquarters in São Paulo and its walls were defaced. At the Rede Globo headquarters in Rio de Janeiro, protestors clashed with police. Protests against Rede Globo were organised via online social networks and community organizations.On 19 June 2013, the Rede Globo editorial response to the protests was read on Jornal Nacional by Patrícia Poeta. The following day, Rede Globo changed its programming schedule to cover the demonstrations. This included the broadcasting of one of the matches of the 2013 FIFA Confederations Cup being cancelled. Episodes of the soap operas Flor do Caribe and Sangue Bom were also cancelled. The editor of the online news and opinion site RINF opined that the Rede Globo reporting focused overly on acts of vandalism during the protests.
2014 elections
On 8 August 2014, two months before the 2014 elections, an article was published in O Globo that a device connected to the internet through the wireless network of the Palácio do Planalto, the official office of the President of Brazil, had changed information in the Portuguese Wikipedia pages of the Rede Globo journalists Miriam Leitão and with the intention of defamation.The edits, made in May 2013, targeted Leitão because on Grupo Globo's Central Brasileira de Notícias she defended Daniel Dantas, a businessman who had been arrested for white-collar crime. Dantas was later acquitted. Sardenberg was targeted for a presumed conflict of interest in his reporting on federal interest rate policy. His brother was working for the Brazilian Federation of Banks, a business association of private banks. The Wikipedia edits were made by a civil servant who was later dismissed. The left-leaning website, Vermhelo, opined that Grupo Globo should not have reported the edits to the Wikipedia pages because it was unverified information and, at the same time, that the information should have been reported earlier than August as that month was within the campaign season.
Vaza jato
Lava jato was an anti-corruption operation which began in 2014 with an investigation into money laundering in a car washing business. It uncovered widespread corruption in major entities, both public and corporate, in Brazil and abroad and in politics. Sergio Moro was the judge leading prosecutions.Vaza Jato was a play on words suggesting a leaking car wash and referring to leaking of information from Moro's office to the press. The origin of the leak was conversations taking place on the Telegram application software for text and audio messaging, which was launched in 2013.
Glenn Greenwald, an American lawyer, journalist and blogger, reported this in The Intercept, an American not for profit internet news outlet. A hacker had intercepted the Telegram conversations and gave the information to Greenwald. Greenwald reported that Rede Globo broadcast what Moro and the operation task force wanted.
Rede Globo countered this criticism saying Greenwald had contacted them for a partnership but that it could not go ahead because Greenwald would not reveal the hacker's identity. Greenwald replied that he had had no response from Rede Globo.
Brazilian journalist and author Ricardo Kotscho, writing to Observatório da Imprensa, said,
Sports controversies
Pre-recorded UFC fight
On 27 May 2012, an Ultimate Fighting Championship match was aired by Rede Globo, billed as a "live broadcast". However, the Globosat channel, Combate, broadcast the match 30 minutes earlier than Rede Globo.Sports coverage monopoly
Rede Globo, with Rede Bandeirantes, holds a near monopoly on sports broadcasts in Brazil, especially the broadcasting of the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A. The factors that contributed to this monopoly include the instigation of cable and satellite subscription television services in Brazil and the withdrawal of other networks from this type of broadcasting.On 20 October 2010, the Administrative Council for Economic Defense, a government antitrust agency, advised Clube dos 13 to diversify the number and type of broadcasting rights it offers between 2012 and 2014. Nevertheless, Clube dos 13 signed an all encompassing contract with Rede Globo. The contract meant that games did not commence until 10 p.m. so that a live broadcast would not clash with the 9 p.m. soap operas. With a 10 p.m. kick-off, this caused decreased numbers of spectators.
Other controversies
Tax irregularities and spending of charity funds
In November 2013, CartaCapital, a news magazine founded in 1994 and Groupo Globo's competitor, published a story that, in 2005, Rede Globo had negotiated debt relief with JPMorgan Chase, the multinational bank, to a value of. CartaCapital cited the documents of the revenue service.The revenue service, in 2006, investigated the finances of Rede Globo. Several of the resulting charges were dismissed except for one, which resulted in a fine of R$730 million in 2013. In its purchase of the broadcasting rights to the 2002 FIFA World Cup, a further fine of R$615 million was imposed due to tax avoidance. However, a few weeks later, civil service employee Cristina Maris Meinick Ribeiro lost the docket. Ribeiro was imprisoned for four years without implicating anyone else.
A document dated 15 September 2006, released by WikiLeaks in 2013, stated that Rede Globo gave UNESCO only 10% of the amount collected since 1986 through the annual Criança Esperança telethon, a charity fundraiser benefiting poor children and promoted in partnership with the United Nations. Rede Globo said "to ignore" this information and claimed that "all the money raised by the campaign is deposited directly to the UNESCO account".
Beyond Citizen Kane
Beyond Citizen Kane is a 1993 documentary film produced by Simon Hartog. The title references the anti-hero Charles Foster Kane in Orson Welles' 1941 film Citizen Kane which is based on the life of the American newspaper business magnate, William Randolph Hearst. The film focusses on the history of Rede Globo from its beginnings to 1990, presenting it as a media entity which uses ruthless manipulation to maintain its dominance in the media industry in Brazil.The documentary has four parts: Rede Globo's relationship with the military; the contract between Rede Globo and Time Life; Marinho's power and influence; and, Rede Globo's associations with government bodies.
The film was broadcast in the United Kingdom by the free-to-air Channel 4. Broadcasting of the film was prohibited in Brazil. This did not prevented private circulation and availability on the internet in Brazil. Rede Globo tried to purchase the rights to the film but was blocked by Hartog's estate. Rede Record also tried to purchase the rights to the film but arrived at difficulties due to copyright ownership of interviews from the Rede Globe archives. Nevertheless, Rede Record did complete the purchase in 2009.
Papa-Tudo
In 1985, businessman and banker, Artur Falk founded Interunion Capitalização, a stockbroking company. In the early 1990s, Falk and Marinho joined to create Papa-tudo, a prize-linked savings account.For R$3.00, one could purchase a bond from a post office, bookmaker or newsagency. In return for investing their money, they were promised return of their investment after a set period of time, a dividend and a chance in a weekly raffle of prize goods. Rede Globo broadcast promotions by celebrities such as César Filho, Fausto Silva and Xuxa Meneghel and the weekly Sunday draw.
Stock in Interunion Capitalização itself was also sold to a value of about R$200 million. When Interunion Capitalização defaulted on its stock and the Papa-tudo bonds and prizes, Superintendência de Seguros Privados intervened. Falk was prosecuted and convicted of fraud. He avoided punishment due to the expiry of the statute of limitations. Rede Globo was not held culpable.
Purchase of TV Paulista
In 1952, the TV Paulista television station opened in São Paulo. It was sold by its founder, Oswaldo Ortiz Monteiro in 1955 to Victor Costa. Victor Costa became a 55% share holder in the company. Costa died before the TV Paulista company title could be transferred by the Brazil Department of Communications. Costa's son and heir controlled TV Paulista but not its shares which remained with the Monteiro family. The transfer of Monteiro's shares to Marinho was certified by Dentel in 1977. TV Paulista was renamed TV Globo São Paulo.After Monteiro's death in 1990, his estate questioned the legality of the original sale. A questioned documents examiner, the Del Picchia Institute in São Paulo reported there was doubt over the authenticity of the sale documents. Rede Globo replied and in 2010, the matter was settled in the Supreme Federal Court in favour of Rede Globo.
TV Diário removed from satellite
On 25 February 2009, Sistema Verdes Mares, a large Brazilian media conglomerate, ceased broadcasting from its TV Diário network via satellite. Although based in Ceará, TV Diário had been expanding under the management of Edson Queiroz group which was associated with Grupo Globo, a competitor of Sistema Verdes Mares.Rede Globo explained, "TV Globo, as the flagship of Rede Globo network and formed by a group of 121 affiliate stations, seeks to accommodate VHF and UHF signals so that they are confined to their respective coverage areas. This way, through mutual understanding and respect for reciprocal interests, TV Diário operations will be restricted to its coverage territory, and it will no longer be available in the territories of other affiliates. Its signal will continue on satellite covering the state of Ceará, however, it will be scrambled".
A similar change in broadcasting occurred when Amazon Sat TV, the property of the Amazon Network, ceased free satellite and imposed the need of a digital satellite receiver and an access card. However, from 2014, Amazon Sat TV became available nationally through the satellite SES-6 used by Oi TV, which was not part of Grupo Globo.
Defamation complaint
On 16 September 2008, comedians Casseta & Planeta performed a sketch in their comedy show Casseta & Planeta, Urgente! which was broadcast by Rede Globo. The sketch featured a fictional political candidate who had no arms or legs, called "Tinoco the Stump Man". Tinoco states, "You know me: I am Tinoco the Stump Man. Vote for me, for I cannot rob without my hands, and if I do rob, I cannot run". The Brazilian Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transvestite and Transsexual Association filed a complaint about the sketch with the Regional Prosecutor for Citizen Rights in São Paulo for defamation against the physically disabled.Name mix-up
In 2011, Rede Globo was sued by bartender named Igor Pachi. His image was confused with that of a Big Brother Brazil contestant named Igor Gramani. Pachi's image appeared in promotions on the Rede Globo website and on the Multishow satellite television station programming. The court agreed Pachi could ask for retraction and was owed compensation.Report on women in the Arab world
On 29 June 2014, Rede Globo's Fantástico program aired a story entitled "Women are seen as the property of men in Lebanon". The story was about violence against women in Arab countries, particularly in Lebanon. This was controversial in the Arab commuinity. members of the Arab community wrote letters of protest to Rede Globo.The Federation of American-Arabs wrote, "It is imperative to address this problem, which acquires dramatic contours worldwide. But it is our duty to draw attention to the fact that, depending on how the information is conveyed, it completely distorts facts and contributes greatly to create prejudice, stereotypes, and negative social representations of an entire country, for example".
On 9 July 2014, members of São Paulo's Arab and Lebanese community gathered outside the headquarters of Rede Globo and held a protest against the report. The protesters demanded the right of reply and a retraction by Rede Globo.