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says
Sevanti Ninan, media columnist and editor,
The Hoot
What
are the challenges faced by the Indian media today?
Of
enforcing more rigorous professional standards,
of responding to the need for more serious reporting
on governance issues, of upholding its own freedom
to function in the face of browbeating by the
government of the day.
How
would you rate Indian journalism on a scale of
one to ten in terms of credibility, quality and
personnel?
There cannot be any consolidated rating of Indian
journalism because its quality varies so much
across publications, across regions. It is capable
of both outstanding professionalism as well as
cold-blooded communal mischief making. At the
top of the rung, personnel are brighter and better
educated than any time earlier. At the bottom,
non-journalists are increasingly employed as stringers,
which was not the case earlier. I think the big
problem in Indian journalism today is the lack
of experience and quality at the copy desk.
Despite
journalism in Indian languages coming of age,
the English-language media in the country continues
to dominate its vernacular cousins. What's your
view on this?
Dominate in what way? Hindi television gets more
advertising than programmes in English. Regional
publications dominate the readership figures.
In the latest Indian Readership Survey of the
top ten publications in terms of readership, only
the last one is an English publication. In magazines,
too, Hindi publications dominate. There may be
more traditional prestige associated with the
English media, but with the coming of the Hindi
news channels from major media houses and with
the growth of a newspaper like Dainik Bhaskar,
that is changing.
Some
observers of the Indian media contend that liberalisation
and consumerism have led to the trivialisation
of journalism in the country, to the triumph of
puff over 'real' issues. Does this charge hold
water and, if so, what does this development portend?
Liberalisation has led to the media targeting
readers as consumers rather than citizens. There
is a burgeoning of frothy supplements, loads of
newsprint devoted to non-issues. It leads to the
invisibility of those on the margin, which means
those who make policy don't read about them and
their problems as much as they should. Food and
fashion journalism is unfortunately no longer
confined to metropolitan cities, the regional
papers are going the same way increasingly, because
they too are targeting the upwardly mobile consumers
in their cities. It's a serious issue because
agriculture, education, employment and health
need more coverage than they presently get. We
have lots of newsprint devoted to food as a lifestyle
thing. None devoted to hunger which stalks substantial
sections of the population.
What
do you make of 'celebrity journalism' of the kind
indulged in by Arundhati Roy and others?
Arundhati Roy is intelligent, articulate and committed
to issues so its unfair to dismiss her writings
as celebrity journalism. I don't necessarily buy
her point of view or her selective use of facts.
The problem is that her celebrity status influences
readers who are dazzled by her wit and do not
care to think for themselves.
Is
the space for print journalism being eroded by
the expansion of the television medium and the
growing power of the Internet?
The space for print journalism is there but publications
abuse it by peddling froth and PR journalism.
What's
your stand on foreign direct investment (FDI)
in mainstream Indian print publications, and what's
the reason for the sharp divide on this issue?
There is no divide based on conviction. The biggest
opponents of FDI in print are papers who will
happily get a foreign partner tomorrow when the
rules are spelt out. Both The Times of India and
The Hindustan Times were themselves talking to
foreign publications about investment before they
began their campaign to keep the foreign media
out. I think FDI should be allowed on a case-by-case
basis.
How
bad is the problem of media publications pandering
to their business and political interests. Can
this be countered and, if so, how?
The problem is growing and would not be there
if the country had proper watchdog bodies for
the media. We need more ombudsmen in newspapers.
We need readers' editors, who take up cudgels
on behalf of readers when newspapers are misused
by proprietors. We need a press council with teeth.
The
independent journalist who can report any news
the way he or she sees it - is this creature more
of a myth than ever before?
If we had better training within newspapers, and
more refresher courses for working journalists,
the quality of journalism would be maintained.
There are lots of well-meaning, sincere journalists
around. If they don't do a good job it is not
because of a lack of independence. Everybody is
not bought out. It is because their notions of
journalism are not being constantly honed by seniors
who know better.
Is
there merit in the contention that Indian journalists
cannot - should not - operate by the rules of
the Western media (the truth above all else) when
it comes to issues such as communal clashes?
It is possible to report the truth sensitively
and responsibly.
Business
journalism has grown by leaps and bounds since
the beginning of the 1990s, and so has its influence.
What do you attribute this to?
The changes in the economy. The influx of multinational
advertising to support such publications. The
growth of PR agencies. The growth of the business
sector of the economy in general. The growth of
TV and its promotion of business programmes.
You
have been in journalism for long. Do you still
get a buzz from it?
Yes.
Which
Indian print publications do you rate as world
class and why?
The Indian Express, The Times of India, The Hindu,
Outlook, India Today, Business Standard, BusinessWorld,
Down to Earth. For different reasons: some are
lively and independent, others have some intellectual
pedigree, all of the above are pretty well produced.
In any case what is world class? Some of the stuff
Time Asia dishes out isn't all that classy.
Where
do you see the Indian media 25 years down the
road?
Substantially localised, as well as globalised.
The leading TV channels and publications will
grow outward into international editions, and
regional newspapers will complete their penetration
into villages when literacy is almost universal.
Ninan
has been in journalism since 1974. She worked
for The Hindustan Times and The Indian Express
before writing a media column for The Hindu for
the last 11 years. She now edits www.thehoot.org,
a media watch website for South Asia. She has
written three books that include Through The Magic
Window, which is about television and change in
India. She can be contacted at sevantininan@vsnl.com
By
arrangement with www.prdomain.com
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