“These two presenters are broadcast professionals. They
can't play dumb now.”
According to a story at theage.com, the claim appears to
contradict interviews given by DJs Michael Christian and Mel Greig where they
said they were not aware of the approval process for prank calls.
The source said all 2Day FM presenters, producers and
content managers were compelled to undergo "decency and standards"
training every six months, in compliance with a ruling from the industry
watchdog.
The training sessions, run by 2Day FM's in-house lawyer
Tania Petsinis, include the specific instruction "not to air prank calls
unless they get the subject's permission ... if there is doubt about a prank
call, there is a clear chain of command in management that we have to escalate
the call through".
The training sessions also advised on "how to not cause
distress to callers ... there is a lot of stuff about taste and decency."
The claims about the training sessions – particularly the
advice not to air prank calls without the subject's consent – appear to
conflict with Christian's claim on A Current Affair that "[we were] not
privy to what happens with this call ... I'm certainly not aware of what
filters it needs to pass through. All we know is that it's passed on and then
we're told either yay or nay."
Greig added, "It's not up to us to make that decision.
We just record it and then it goes to the other departments to work it out. I
don't know what they then do with it. We just do what we do which is make those
calls."
The source said, "I find it hard to believe that if you
scored the scoop of the year in entertainment radio, you'd be so flippant as to
not be aware of the approval process.
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