biographiesofFranzKafka

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Monday, 3 June 2013

Sandeep Bhushan - Manufacturing News

Posted on 09:30 by Unknown
News studios have gradually become the site where news is "manufactured". Indeed, the very definition of "news" has changed as Indian television networks become increasingly promoter-driven. There are severe cutbacks in news gathering, reporters have been marginalised and the focus has shifted to studio-driven news presentations with outside "experts". From his perspective as a former television reporter, the writer analyses the current state of broadcast media.

As a journalist associated with television broadcast news for the last two decades, how and where does one begin talking about television broadcast journalism? As both a participant and an avid consumer of news, lines blur easily, making it extremely difficult to find any sense of objectivity. But having “hung up my mike” in a manner of speaking, I believe the ringside view afforded to me both as a reporter and a desk hand privileges me with insights not easily available to the growing mass of critics and media sociologists struggling to make sense of prime time television – opinionated, loud, rude anchors, endless talking heads, studio-hopping experts, flashing graphics and even absurd soaked-in-theatre “live” visuals. All this is consumed by viewership, day after day, given the omnipresence of television in the intimacy of our living rooms.

A good starting point would be an observation made by the US regulatory authority, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) which in a recent report said:
The Walter Cronkites and John Chancellors (both deceased, but widely accepted as America’s most credible TV journalists) are a dying breed. In many cases you don’t have journalists. You have performers.1
This observation, made in the backdrop of the financial meltdown in the US, accurately sums up the television scenario in India. Post-2008, there has been a profusion of studio-based “performers” rather than news professionals across India’s broadcast landscape, transforming the manner in which news content is packaged, delivered and consumed by the viewing audience.

The news studio has become the site for “manufacturing” news and consent on behalf of the beleaguered state. This is largely the product of an unprecedented financial crisis which has threatened media’s advertisement-based revenue model,2 forcing it to cut costs and increase dependence on the state, the financial market, and other cash-rich promoters who are jostling to move into, arguably, India’s most powerful medium. Taken together, these have ended up making the owners/promoters, rather than editors, the prime drivers of television news content – a point eloquently made by the latest Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) report.3

Owners in the Studio
The Zee “extortion” case is perhaps the best illustration of the role of owners in the studio. The Hindi news network launched a shrill “probity” campaign against Congress Member of Parliament and steel tycoon Navin Jindal for allegedly using his clout to swing favourable deals in coal block allocations. Later, as it turned out, the campaign was eyeing Jindal’s riches, Rs 100 crore to be exact, as a price for rolling back the campaign. Ironically, the matter hit the headlines after two of the network’s editors were caught on hidden camera allegedly “extorting” money from Jindal officials. Later, both the editors, Sudhir Choudhary4 and Samir Ahluwalia spent nearly 20 days in Delhi’s Tihar jail. The Delhi police are now investigating the complicity of both the owners and the editors in the alleged extortion incident.5

In its brief history spanning not more than 20 years, the Indian television broadcast industry has been largely perceived as a handmaiden of the state owing to its emergence within the womb of Doordarshan (DD) – a legacy it still finds tough to live down. In the recent past, however, major private players especially from the non-media sector have also moved in on account of its growing commercial and political clout.

As one of the “midwives” who ushered in this change, former DD boss and secretary Information and Broadcasting (I and B), Bhaskar Ghose discusses pointedly in his book6 how the government sold airtime to private producers for an “irrationally modest” amount. The producers in turn not only charged the sponsors the sky but also sold approximately three to four minutes of free commercial time (FCT) to advertisers. Secondly, “the producer or the sponsor kept the copyright...repeats of popular serials meant paying a fortune (by DD) to the copyright holder.” Ghose mentions the “Ramayana” example where the producer retained all the video rights.7

Finally, as the Central Bureau of Investigation case relating to India’s premier news network New Delhi Television (NDTV) shows, there was extensive patronage and quid pro quo at play.8 The then director general DD, Rathikant Basu is alleged to have “manipulated” the placement of NDTV promoter Prannoy Roy’s pioneering programme, “The World This Week” (TWTW) in a “superior” category which, according to a report of Parliament’s Public Account Committee (PAC), caused the government a loss of Rs 3.52 crore. NDTV is also alleged to have wrangled more than $20 lakh in foreign exchange for the production of TWTW from the Ministry of Economic Affairs on Basu’s recommendation. Crucially, there was no attempt to figure out how the money was used. In its letter to the PAC, NDTV denied these charges,9 alleging that the I&B ministry had provided erroneous data.

But it is not just NDTV. Aaj Tak, India TV, News 24 are some of the other channels that have apparently drawn heavily upon DD’s fabled generosity. Of course, their rise and consolidation was a product of a number of other factors, chief among them being conditions of economic boom and early bird advantage.

In the post-2008 phase, the state-media nexus thrives. But a little differently. The state appears to be actively playing stranger to the growing consolidation underway in the media space on the back of a general slowdown and steadily deteriorating fortunes of media networks.10
Newsroom Meltdown
Post the economic meltdown, the most grievous blow has been suffered by two key institutions that are lynchpins of news systems anywhere in the world, the editor and the reporter. Increasingly, the locus of power in news operations has shifted to the studios – the promoters and their hand-picked editors. This has resulted in a near complete centralisation of news-gathering operations. The shift in power equations chiefly reflects the political sensitivities of the emerging news ecosystem which calls for the involvement of the promoters in cost-cutting operations at various levels on a day-to-day basis (from transportation, outstation shoot, type of hotel accommodation, buying footage, retrenchment, etc).

Cost-cutting apart, every day the promoter walks the thin line balancing several conflicting interests such as businessmen and politicians of all hues in an era of coalition, by no means an easy task in the relentless 24×7 news cycle. A pliable editor provides a way out by not merely filling in but also ensuring that a chain of command is created whose primary mandate is to protect the promoter’s interests. In virtually every newsroom (both in Hindi and English news networks), there is a long unwritten list with regard to covering politicians – depending on their proximity to the promoter (the Ambanis and the Gandhi family, for example, are a complete no-no in most newsrooms).11.. 

read more: http://www.epw.in/commentary/manufacturing-news.html-0

Also see: Hans Magnus Enzensberger, The Industrialization of the Mind

The rise of the tycoons Economic crisis and changing media ownership in central Europe
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in current affairs - India, media | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home
View mobile version

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Book review: The Frankfurt School at War - the Marxists Who Explained the Nazis to Washington
    Secret Reports on Nazi Germany: The Frankfurt School Contribution to the War Effort ,  by FRANZ NEUMANN, HERBERT MARCUSE, and OTTO KIRCHHEIM...
  • Academic reforms and DU's circus of reason
    हम होंगे baccalaureate  हम होंगे baccalaureate  Associate baccalaureate  एक दिन हमे VC में है विश्वास पूरा है विश्वास हम होंगे baccalaureate...
  • Al Worden: ‘The loneliest human being’
    What’s it like to be the most isolated human in all eternity? BBC space correspondent meets Al Worden, command module pilot of Apollo 15, wh...
  • PAUL KRUGMAN - Hitting China’s Wall
    All economic data are best viewed as a peculiarly boring genre of science fiction, but Chinese data are even more fictional than most. Add a...
  • अयोध्या : तीन पीढ़ियां तीन दृष्टिकोण - के पी सिंह, फैजाबाद
    जन्नतनशीन रहीमुल्ला के एक दिसम्बर, 1936 को पैदा हुए बेटे लाल मोहम्मद 22-23 दिसम्बर, 1949 की उस रात के गिने-चुने प्रत्यक्षदर्शियों में से हैं...
  • VIJAY PRASHAD: Mr. Modi Wants to Come to America
    ... Modi has been at the helm in that state since 2001. The following year, in 2002, Modi presided over the mass killing of Muslims by his p...
  • Atheist Siddaramaiah and God's changing role in politics
    K. Siddaramaiah, a rare Indian politician who wears his atheism on his sleeve, took the oath as the next chief minister of Karnataka on Mond...
  • Kabita Chakma: Sexual violence, indigenous Jumma women & Chittagong Hill Tracts, Bangladesh
    There has been a high rate of violence against women all over Bangladesh in recent years. Kapaeeng Foundation figures for January 2007 to De...
  • The Act of Killing is being hailed by critics as one of the best films of the year
    'You celebrate mass killing so you don't have to look yourself in the mirror'  Joshua Oppenheimer went to Indonesia to make a d...
  • Aligarh academics call for reinstating Durga Nagpal
    The Aligarh-based Forum for Muslim Studies and Analysis and Milat Bidari Muhim Committee have passed a  resolution  demanding immediate rein...

Categories

  • A K Ramanujan's Three Hundred Ramayanas (1)
  • Afghanistan (7)
  • Africa (9)
  • Ahimsa (17)
  • animals (2)
  • Art (4)
  • Astronomy (9)
  • Bangladesh (23)
  • birds (5)
  • Books and literature (40)
  • Burma (4)
  • CARTOONS (2)
  • censorship (33)
  • childhood (15)
  • China (23)
  • communalism (85)
  • corruption (24)
  • critical theory (34)
  • current affairs - India (139)
  • current affairs - international (51)
  • democratic protest (40)
  • Dilip's notes and articles (6)
  • ecology (36)
  • economics (23)
  • education (14)
  • energy (2)
  • Evolution (2)
  • films (3)
  • Global War and Violence (52)
  • history (81)
  • human rights (89)
  • Indian culture (13)
  • Japan (2)
  • justice (100)
  • labour matters (27)
  • media (26)
  • medicine (6)
  • Middle East (27)
  • mining (13)
  • music (2)
  • naxalism (20)
  • Nepal (2)
  • Obituary (6)
  • organised crime (30)
  • Pakistan (30)
  • Palestine / Israel (5)
  • Partition related texts (3)
  • philosophy (10)
  • Photos (16)
  • Poetry (2)
  • religion (23)
  • Russia (10)
  • Sampradayikta Virodhi Andolan (2)
  • satire (2)
  • science (20)
  • short stories (2)
  • Social networking (8)
  • Sri Lanka (2)
  • the human mind (36)
  • the oceans (6)
  • thinking about fascism (68)
  • Tibet (3)
  • women's rights (32)
  • Workers' movements (9)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  August (29)
    • ►  July (119)
    • ▼  June (133)
      • NAPM - People’s Commission Report on Special Rehab...
      • Pakistan — no country for foreign journalists
      • Nanga Parbat - Chinese mountaineer narrates dramat...
      • Sadiq Jamal Case: CBI Files Affidavit, Says Probe ...
      • Pakistan's 'blasphemy' girl moves to Canada
      • At the end of the day, you've given 110 per cent -...
      • UK's ancient forests could spread again thanks to ...
      • Amita Baviskar - Uttarakhand: For richer, but poorer
      • Tony Judt - The ‘Problem of Evil’ in Postwar Europ...
      • Cambodia's vast lost city: world's greatest pre-in...
      • Bahuguna kept eyes wide shut as Uttarakhand govt i...
      • German woman and son clear litter in Rishikesh // ...
      • Alexis Coe - The Nobel Peace Prize For Espionage. ...
      • Never the twain shall meet - Harris Khalique on Im...
      • Udisa Islam - Forced conversions in Bangladesh (Dh...
      • Gujarat Police killed Sadiq Jamal despite Intellig...
      • Seema Sirohi - Why US shouldn’t accept Dalrymple’s...
      • Jyoti Punwani - EVEN UTTARAKHAND TRAGEDY WILL NOT ...
      • माटू: उत्तराखंड से बर्बादी की रिर्पोट-1 - श्रीनगर ...
      • Statement on Uttrakhand Catastrophe by India Clima...
      • Vamsee Juluri - Hinduism and its Culture Wars
      • SABA NAQVI - The Dark Knights And The Dead Damsel
      • International Delegation Releases Report on Violat...
      • Probe larger conspiracy says Zakia Jafri's counsel...
      • Physicians for Human Rights - Using science & medi...
      • A lethal 'non-lethal' weapon - the growing market ...
      • Book review: Nobility in Motion: Nelson Mandela's ...
      • Alex Vatanka - The Guardian of Pakistan's Shia
      • Hooligans rule the roads in the name of Shab-e-Barat
      • Jyoti Punwani - Putting faith in the secular courts
      • God vs Darwin? Three Questions for America by Rona...
      • Moors murderer Ian Brady breaks his silence after ...
      • Brazil riots raise questions over sporting mega-ev...
      • China's Shenzhou-10 astronauts return to Earth
      • Cambodian tailorbird: A new species seen in Phnom ...
      • Air Force tribute to officers who died in Uttarakhand
      • माटू जनसंगठन - पुर्ननिर्माण हेतु अपील
      • Abheek Barman - Narendra Modi’s Himalayan miracle
      • Phone tapping - 90,000 cases in Gujarat intrigue c...
      • Narendra Modi 'warns' the CBI
      • MURTAZA HAIDER - Islam at war – with itself
      • MEREDITH TAX - Fundamentalism and education
      • Tufail Ahmad - The Next Decade of Jihadism in Paki...
      • Prasanta Chakravarty, Brinda Bose - The Confucian ...
      • BISHAL THAPA on Nepal politics: Vilifying Prachanda
      • Chitrangada Choudhury, Ajay Dandekar - Dealing Wit...
      • Karima Bennoune on Islamofascism in Algeria: Twent...
      • Saturn images from Cassini probe as it prepares to...
      • O3b space constellation to launch
      • Al Worden: ‘The loneliest human being’
      • Delhi court directs Raj Thackeray to appear before it
      • VIVEK KATJU - In Afghanistan, back to the future
      • The NSA's metastasised intelligence-industrial com...
      • Book review - Seeing reason: Jonathan Israel's rad...
      • Anger over violence against women in West Bengal s...
      • Brazil protests: How Ronaldo, Pele betrayed their ...
      • Public Appeal by R.B. SREEKUMAR, FORMER DGP, GUJARAT
      • Syria's lost treasure: How the civil war is ruinin...
      • 13 P.G. Wodehouse Quotes Guaranteed To Make Your D...
      • Brazil protests draw vast crowds - total turnout e...
      • British spy agency taps fibre-optic cables for sec...
      • Mihir Sharma - Tales of two riots
      • The Act of Killing is being hailed by critics as o...
      • Pambazuka News: Mobilising youth in Africa and the...
      • Death toll could multiply; Is this really a 'natur...
      • Ishrat Jehan's mother appeals for justice // CBI P...
      • YUDIT KISS - Letter from Tirana: Who is a guest in...
      • KHALID ANIS ANSARI - Muslims that ‘minority politi...
      • सत्यपाल डांग को याद करते हुए.. RIP comrade Satyapa...
      • Book review: Berkeley: What We Didn’t Know
      • Books reviewed: Pope Pius XII, Hitler’s pawn?
      • Cryptic Overtures and a Clandestine Meeting Gave B...
      • Cry for Help From China Labor Camp
      • Turkish police storm protest camp using teargas an...
      • Bomb attack destroys Jinnah's residency in Ziarat
      • Coal Scam: Congress MP Naveen Jindal faces CBI gri...
      • Babu Bokhariya, minister in Narendra Modi's cabine...
      • SACW Special on Taksim Square protests in Turkey
      • LAUNCH OF REPORT ASSESSING THE DAMAGE DURING THE A...
      • Media & police ducking the question of Hindutva te...
      • Kabita Chakma: Sexual violence, indigenous Jumma w...
      • Ishrat Jahan case: Gujarat High Court raps CBI ove...
      • Book review - Churning the Earth: The Making of a ...
      • Townshend and Daltrey: Quadrophenia's enduring rel...
      • Pacific island nation of Kiribati - in pictures
      • New Layer Of Human Eye,'Dua's Layer,' Discovered B...
      • Purushottam Agrawal - Why does the RSS hate the id...
      • Taksim, Convergence, and Secular Space // Turkey, ...
      • JOHN MILLS - The scale of debt in the western worl...
      • On 'terrorism' & the recent killings in the UK - b...
      • CBI Summons IB Special Director Rajinder Kumar In ...
      • Bharat Bhushan: If Modi takes power, it will be ab...
      • The Guantánamo Memoirs of Mohamedou Ould Slahi
      • German Soldiers React to Footage of Concentration ...
      • Seeing stars: Visions of the Universe exhibition
      • कर्णपुरा की कहानी...India's Coal Rush: Interview W...
      • Himanshu Kumar - They Are Not The “Others”, We Are
      • Mohan Guruswamy - Who lit the Godhra fire? (July ...
      • Racing Towards a Global Spring
      • Turkish riot police move into Taksim Square
    • ►  May (114)
    • ►  April (100)
    • ►  March (5)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile