Abstract
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s (ABC) weekly political discussion program Q&A aims to make Australian politics more engaging to ordinary citizens by allowing direct access between ‘punters’ and ‘pollies’. The program is a unique forum in the Australian political public sphere where citizens (represented by the studio audience) are awarded greater power than in conventional political news and current affairs formats. However, some critics have argued that the program is, among other things, overly editorialized and contrived and more autocratic than democratic, where the power of the citizen is superficial only. Using data gathered from focus groups, this article explores attitudes toward the role of the audience questioners on Q&A – one of the defining ‘democratizing’ features of the program. Considering responses of viewers with both high and low levels of political engagement has led to interesting findings about how motivations for watching Q&A, as well as expectations about how it should function, differ according to viewers’ pre-existing level of political interest.
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