Comparisons are odious only for those who fear comparative results, so I feel no compunction in saying that compared to the British and American news organizations the Indian Press lacks intelligence, integrity, research and analytical skills.
Hounding of Narendra Modi with Godhra without mentioning his track record in speeding justice and giving basic human rights to his constituents like water and electricity is a witch hunt; everyone is trying to outdo the Tehelka sting with their own vitriol.
Were the press balanced they would equally hound Mulayam Singh because, and this is not condoning carnage, he has a personal criminal record, Modi doesn¿t, and Mulayam¿s performance is comparatively dismal. It could focus on things Modi has done to raise the bar of performance of his government therefore also raised the bar of expectation of the electorate, as a model to be followed across the country.
Instead the Indian Press makes a race, nation, pride issue out of a personal scuffle between two TV show contestants making Shilpa Shetty a national hero. That¿s a pretty low bar for heroism - to start it wasn¿t a celebrity Big Brother with other major Stars, she was squabbling with a nobody, so to say she¿s made India proud is lowering the bar of pride.
Being proud of little things keeps us from reaching higher because we¿ve lowered our thresholds, and the Indian Press does it daily.
It reveres Gurus and Socialites, while being dismissive of Biyani, Modi and other heavy hitters who are taking
Many will jump to say comparing Indian press with foreign press is wrong because
It is for every journalist - who isn¿t into yellow - to raise the level of intelligence of his/ her reader, not dumb it down. Movie reviews don¿t talk about direction, set, acting, script, location, music, but preachingly promote or dismiss films. False stories like Mukesh Ambani is the richest man in the world and an Indian Wins Nobel Peace Prize are routinely circulated.
Seems to me the idea is to keep an average Indian agitated - with false fear or pride. Godhra is done. It¿s time to move on and away from communal divides to unifying initiatives of growth and sustenance, because India needs real things for real people in real time, all the time. And what it needs from the press is - news based on empirical research and analysis.
Hope The Hoot will be a wake call for Indian Press¿ conscience.
VikasJeet Puri, CEO
gking,
OrthoSys, Seattle
November 19, 2007