Thursday, September 14, 2006

Transparency Begins at Home

So there are things worse than having pesticides. [Link via Kuffir] But more than this, it hurts to know that media has let off these guys easily.

Look at the way how they covered the reservation issue. They gave airtime to every remotely relevant point of view. Not that all of it was bad. While juvenile idiots were given opportunities to show off their pretensions of ‘saving the nation’, they also highlighted the status in media and various sociologists’ perspectives. There was an attempt, no matter how biased it was, to see issues other than what met the eye.

Or for that matter the rains in Mumbai. There was coverage even before the first cloud appeared. And then it was a deluge of reporting on the ill-preparedness of the Municipal Corporation. Views, suggestions, comments and alternatives followed.

But when it comes to Hero Honda's labour policy or Coca Cola's water policy, I wonder where is the "in-depth analysis brought by correspondents across the length and breadth of the nation"

No investigation, no follow-up stories, nothing. Mere mechanical reporting of what the CSE, Government and the suckers had to say.

It is not difficult to see the reason for the anomaly. Right in the midst of reporting on the suckers, we would find their advertisements during commercial breaks. Even respected newspapers seem to be succumbing to the lure of MNCs like never before. One such instance was highlighted some time back and the dialectics can be seen here.

Nearly after a month of the episode, the Apologist-in-Chief of Hindu presented the inside view of the journalism-advertising dynamics.

N. Ram spoke in detail about how he and the editorial team have been trying to keep intact the Lakshman Rekha between editorial and advertisement. It is only a conceptual line and no wall exists between the two areas of operation of the paper. There is continuous interaction between the two where the pressures and constraints are aired and discussed.

So it is just a conceptual line. That means it can be and will be subject to distortions due to the pull of advertising revenue.

Continuous interaction? Why should there be an interaction between the two at all? Why should the editorial department know who is funding their salaries and cost of operations? At the best, they might be informed of their budget to help them plan their operations. But why should they know the source of their revenues?

Mr. K. Narayanan’s views reflect the symptomatic malice that affects every media. Atleast he has been honest to admit it. If this is the status of a newspaper of Hindu’s stature, I dread to think the scenario in other media groups.

Would any media group bother to show the break up of their advertising revenues from different companies? Just as shareholders have the right to know the finances of their company, don’t the readers have the right to know the altruistic souls who are subsidizing their newspapers? Transparency and right to information, after all, should begin at home.

7 comments:

troubled said...

and here we stand.. with an oath to the public !

nice post.

mutRupuLLi said...

Have you read Chomsky's "Maufacturing Consent". He details as to how free press free media is not free at all, with his usual rigour. How can it be as long as it is either corporate controlled or governement controlled.

Cosmic Voices said...

@ troubled.

Thanks and welcome to my blog

Those who take the oath, don't have a newspaper and those who have don't take the oath. :-(

@ mutrupulli

Unfortunately not yet. I have been trying to read it since ages, somehow i am yet to get lucky.

But in a way, the problem lies with us. How many of us would buy a newspaper if it is priced at Rs 10?

A society gets what it aspires for. For all its pretentions of this era being an era of knowledge, no one really respects knowledge. Neither the west nor the east. All the matters is money.

No wonder we are fed with adultrated knowledge, which respects our money than our intellect.

mutRupuLLi said...

Point CV.
Digressing to add a philosophical point to your comment on "era of knowledge", I think we are living in an 'Information era' and not a 'knowldege era'. And there is a mighty difference between the too.

Cosmic Voices said...

@ mutrupulli

I totally totally agree with you and stand corrected.

@ vibhor

RTI is applicable only to the Government. So its applicability, irrespective of its efficiency, doesn't arise here.

can you elaborate on what you find vague about transperancy?

Vamsi said...

lets look at it in 2 ways. Does newspaper need to have its opinions to be aired or could it be one whihc reports the facts and lets you decide on the opinion.

I would prefer to be the second and would like to make my own analysis and let news channels provide information.

Cosmic Voices said...

But how can you make an objective analysis when you are not provided with the completer facts? And I would always like to know why certain facts are not reported.

If the spirit of journalism is to spread information, then why don't they begin with themselves