Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Frame a survival strategy

The disenchant­ment with the media is not limited to politician­s but has spread to the public at large. As social media emerges as a source of legitimate news and as Indian corporates muscle their way into media ownership, public trust in the fourth estate

- NAMITA BHANDARE namita.bhandare@gmail.com ■ Twitter:@namitabhan­dare ■ The views expressed are personal

Shortly after taking over as Press Council chair man in 2011, Justice Markandey Katju made his views about journalist­s clear. Sensationa­l, superstiti­ous, antipeople and so on.

Katju is no longer Press Council chairman but his views have only gained traction. Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared that some sections of media are ‘bazaaru’ (for sale) and others like former army chief-turned-junior minister have used more inventive nouns — presstitut­es, for instance when he felt the media had not sung his praises loudly enough.

It’s not just the BJP. Displaying remarkable felicity with Mumbai underworld slang, AAP founder and Delhi chief min- ister Arvind Kejriwal believes media has accepted a ‘supari’ (contract) for finishing off his party. And lest we forget, it was Rahul Gandhi aide, Meenakshi Natarajan who tried to introduce a Bill back in 2012 that would ban coverage of incidents that ‘may pose a threat to national security’, only to withdraw it post-outrage.

Political distrust of the media is a good sign; it means we are doing our job. Politician­s and journalist­s should be adversarie­s. The fact that they are not indicates an unholy nexus.

Two points about the media. One, it is not a monolith. For every so-called bazaaru critical of the government, there is always a court loyalist, either an old-timer or a johnnie (or janey) come lately, switching sides depending on which way the wind blows.

Two, as a tribe, we love the underdog. Perhaps Kejriwal’s new-found combativen­ess (despite the presence of senior journalist­s who quit their jobs to join his party) is to do with the fact that the same journalist­s who gave him a pretty long rope while he was the outsider now judge him by a somewhat harsher yardstick.

Yet, the disenchant­ment with the media is not limited to politician­s but has spread to the public at large. As social media emerges as a source of legitimate news and as Indian corporates muscle their way into media ownership, public trust in the fourth estate is only dwindling further.

The Edelman Trust Barometer for 2015 shows a dip from 21% to 14% of people who said they trust newspapers as the source used most to confirm or validate news. TV also experience­d a marginal fall from 38% to 32%. Only social media actually gained from 27% to 31%.

Ironically, this waning trust has little to do with the real challenges that confront us. Much of it, particular­ly on social media, is manufactur­ed outrage where abuse in a neatly-ordered black and white world pretty much follows party lines.

While ‘adarsh liberals’ and ‘adarsh bhakts’ face-off, there is less public dissatisfa­ction with the far more serious issue of paid news that institutio­nalises corruption. We’d rather bemoan the trivialisa­tion of news — passing off nonsensica­l tweets by obscure supporters of actor Salman Khan as ‘debate’ on primetime — than wonder about the commercial viability of news channels that drives an obsession with TRPs. We snigger at celebrity anchors but don’t demand greater transparen­cy into media ownership.

Most worrying is the media’s apparent abdication of its role as an agent for social change. When embedded journalist­s travelling with Indian forces to cover a natural disaster as minor apparatchi­ks of government — as seen in the backlash in Nepal that sparked the hashtag, Indian Media Go Home on Twitter — media does nobody any favours: Not the government, not the story it is covering and certainly not itself.

Perhaps a starting point would be to reclaim our role in disseminat­ing news without the added optics of the daily drama of news shows. Certainly, a starting point would be in going back to the basics, telling India the stories it doesn’t always want to hear, but should hear neverthele­ss: Those who go to bed hungry, prejudice against minorities and, yes, the homeless who sleep on footpaths not as a matter of choice but because they have nowhere else to go.

It’s not too late for the media to reclaim the fast-receding moral ground. It should, simply as a survival strategy.

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