Where's our broadband? Telstra wants fans to demand action on fibre to the node.
Photo: Jon Reid
In its latest attempt to put pressure on the Federal Government, Telstra has threatened to continue to run the ads across radio, high-speed broadband network.
attempt by Telstra to further its interests.
Communications Minister, Helen Coonan, about plans for a $4 month. Telstra blamed this on the competition regulator, which has months.
Melbourne and Geelong, less than a week after Telstra ran advertisements in Sunday newspapers along the eastern seaboard.
weeks depending on what comes out of Canberra," Telstra spokesman Andrew Maiden said.
pollster Crosby/Textor, which Telstra said was providing "advice on executive director, David Forman, said the use of Crosby/Textor was one of the more bizarre elements of the campaign, given the lobbyist's close relationship with the Government.
"It's hard to broadband a political issue," he said.
acting altruistically in its campaign for regulatory changes.
"The more they shout, the more people see through them," he said.
"People are not stupid and they know a self-interest con job when they see one." A spokeswoman for the Communications Minister alter the Government's course.
He's a bona fide Hollywood star, and Steven Spielberg and Brad Pitt are among his fans, but what Eric Bana treasures most is his life as a suburban dad.