Europe’s TV pipeline faces a new political choke point
A report by the Federation of Screenwriters in Europe, released during Series Mania, argues that far-right movements across Europe are increasingly threatening artistic freedom in television through pressure on media institutions, regulators, and cultural bodies. It says the most immediate risk for writers is financial and structural, citing attacks on public service broadcasting as a key pillar of European commissioning and production funding, alongside growing self-censorship and portfolio “risk management” by broadcasters and producers. The report also warns that potential weakening of EU audiovisual regulatory frameworks could have lasting consequences for Europe’s audiovisual ecosystem.
Key Takeaways
- FSE says far-right parties are in government (alone or in coalition) in seven EU member states, with more countries at risk of near-term power shifts.
- The report flags PSB defunding/capture as the most immediate financial hit, since PSBs are a core pillar of European commissioning and production funding.
- Broadcasters and producers are reportedly “risk-managing” development slates away from themes likely to trigger political backlash—leading to de facto self-censorship.
- Creators may adjust pitches toward politically favored genres, sidelining immigrant and LGBTQ stories even without formal bans.
- Potential weakening of EU audiovisual regulatory frameworks could reshape market structure and creative livelihoods long after election cycles.
Why It Matters
For streamers, this is a supply-chain risk disguised as a culture-war story. Europe’s PSBs function like a stabilizing co-investor: they anchor commissioning, underwrite local production, and help keep premium scripted volumes predictable. If PSB budgets or independence erode, fewer projects get greenlit—and the projects that do skew toward low-controversy “portfolio insurance.” Layer in regulatory uncertainty (AVMSD-style obligations, funding mechanisms, quotas), and Europe becomes harder to model for return on content and compliance. The meme: political volatility is now a programming constraint, not just a headline.
Read full article at broadcastnow.co.uk