Headlines you will never see
There are varying degrees of ethical deficit in media organisations. But neither the government nor civil society will do anything about it because they all need each other,
says SEVANTI NINAN
For the record
Reprinted from the Sunday magazine of The Hindu, September 25, incorporating the names of publications and media houses which the paper dropped.
Sevanti Ninan
Last fortnight a new documentary screened in Delhi had a packed hall in thrall. Called ‘Brokering News’, it glided effortlessly through a succession of sound bites and TV news clips to suggest a range of unethical practices prevalent in the media. The existence of election time paid news, of complicity between stock market experts and the TV channels that feature their tips, of a cosy deal that enables each newly released film to get varying degrees of prime time pre-release exposure, of increasingly political ownership of channels, of seductions to journos, ‘reviews’ of new gadgets and automobiles, and so on.
This documentary has been made by Umesh Aggarwal for the Public Service Broadcasting Trust, and will be shown on Doordarshan, which will doubtless be delighted to air it.
It is a brisk film built largely on circumstantial evidence and assertions of a general kind. Sucheta Dalal saying for instance that “Every single aspect of news we think is for sale,” or Mahesh Bhatt saying that the publicity a film gets is what it negotiates, not what it deserves. Or sports journalist Pradeep Magazine revisiting the cosy relationship that existed between media houses and the Indian Premier League until things went sour for IPL. The documentary had one compelling case study of Dainik Jagran where the media house was named and specific accusations were levelled by a journalist who said he quit in disgust.
The audience loved it.
In a country consumed with the issue of corruption, the discussion on degrees of ethical deficit in the media never moves beyond first base. Noteworthy, but unsurprising. Media corruption is not an issue that the state wants to tackle seriously for the same reason that corporate corruption is not an issue for the media until it becomes impossible to ignore. You need each other. Where would a politician be without publicity of any kind, where would a media house be without corporate advertising?
There is also another reason why the state will not stick its neck out on this issue. When a media house is raided the community shrieks about violation of press freedom. It happened with the allegations of FERA violations against the Times Group (1997-98), then the income tax raids a few years later of the Rahejas who own Outlook (2001), then more recently with the Andhra Pradesh government investigations (2009of the Margadarsi Chit fund of Ramoji Rao, proprietor of Eenadu.
During the Anna agitation Law Minister Salman Khurshid asked on Headlines Today why Team Anna’s draft of the Lokpal Bill had not called for investigation of corruption in the media and the NGO sector. The anchor asked him in turn why the government had not chosen to investigate those who figured in the Radia Tapes. And the good minister said that if he did so the government would be criticized.”“Now you are asking why the government has not investigated. If we go ahead with the investigation, we would be accused of being insensitive. If we do, there would be a mass movement for the media.”
The major difference between corruption in public life and corruption in media, is that one has become a raging issue, and the other not enough of an issue. To the extent that you need the media to make corruption an issue, media corruption will never become a big ticket item on the national agenda. And the interesting thing is, to the extent that civil society cannot fulfill any of its own agendas without using the media to ride on, it will leave media corruption well alone. Of all the country’s problems Indian NGOs work like gnomes to address, those involving the media are not to be found.
We did not invent media corruption, nor do we have a monopoly on it. Trawl the Net and you will find journalists from Kenya, Phillippines and Nepal speaking on the subject. The Phillipines too has paid news.
And then ‘corruption’ is a not sufficiently nuanced word to describe the problem. Paid news and journalists big and small on the take are the relatively uncomplicated face of it. What of journalists not doing their job, and going only after soft targets rather than big corporate or government fish because they need advertising from them?
At the bottom of the pile it is because journalists are not paid enough, at the top it is at the management level and because the advertising the channel or paper is able to summon is not enough to cover costs, particularly since the cover price is low and no costs are covered at all. You sell a newspaper that costs Rs 15 to produce, at Rs 3.
Desperate measures to finance escalating costs of production are also happening because hordes of players enter the media sector for a variety of reasons. There are no less than 40 news channels across the country financed by political parties or families, the documentary says.
A highly fragmented media market that shows no signs of consolidating.
The more expensive news gets to produce, and the less advertising there is to go round, the more shows you will get on gadgets and cars and movies. And fewer news crews going off to the countryside to report what is happening to ordinary people. Not reporting is not a cognizable offence, but it undermines the reason for the existence of journalism in a free society.
So who will bell the cat? Not civil society, not government, not the corporate sector, not the media themselves, not the political class. We should look around at other societies to see what mechanisms they have come up with and pursue a variety of solutions. Until then we will titter every time the Radia Tapes sound bites are played, but nothing will change on the ground.