January 21, 2010

A lazy bunch called Journalists


Journalists are like sitting ducks. Not because they are prone to attacks and have no defense but this is connoted in a different way. They sit like ducks in their offices and look for gossips of film personalities or Page Three crowds. I have seldom seen journalists getting back to their basics – reporting. In an era where news comes in capsules and bytes, journalists say they give news that people want. But that is wrong. People get what journalists offers. If they don’t have anything to offer, readers are not going to complain. They have no mechanism to file a complaint against a newspaper for not reporting the news they want.
We are in a period where RTI to right to recall is getting implemented. But media is a sector that has been aloof from all these regulations. How can a viewer or a reader file a complaint against a newspaper or a TV channel for reporting stories that they are least interested in? For example, what will a Hindi migrant of Chennai has to do with live telecast of a minor rainfall in Gurgaon – which could be breaking news in Aaj Tak? How on earth can he communicate to the channel authorities that he wants to see national news and not regional news.
Newspaper barons have stopped asking journalists to travel for hard news. Television channels have put local video camera owners (mostly covering marriages and other social functions) to act as their local henchmen in moffusil places. This has turned to be a boon for journalists who need not take their bumps from their revolving chair to anywhere except perhaps their dwelling place. This saves a lot of money for newspaper owners. But in bargain what they get is amateur news and unprofessional journalism.
The focus today is to see what film stars are indulging while totally ignoring whether a family starves in a far flung place because of government apathy or negligence on part of local officials. They reach only those places where Rahul Gandhi dines with a poor family and them make those families a national heritage. There are millions of other starving families with whom Gandhis have not dined with and is suffering just because there are no checks and balances in the system, a role media is duty bound to investigate and report.
It doesn’t matter to millions of Indians if N D Tiwari, at the fag end of his life, is sexually active or if Amar Singh fires his salvo from Dubai to his mentor at Etawah. The poor in India have no regrets if they are offered Bt. Brinjals. What they need is a morsel whether it is genetically modified or not is irrelevant.
For one Ruchika, hundreds gathered with candles just because media highlighted how the perpetrator, DGP Rathore got away with a mild sentence. There are hundreds and thousands of Ruchikas all over the country where their Rathores are roaming free and preying on the future Ruchikas.
In my 16 years of journalism, I have spent 13 years traveling all across the country for news. I had to record my bytes for radio, have photographs of the subjects and then write stories describing minute details of the subject. So I had no option but to travel since I was reporting to print, radio and photo journalism mediums. Since the last three years, my travel is limited to some towns where I reach the nearest place by air, take a taxi or have a friend with me and travel comfortably by car. But the charm of reporting on rickety buses, staying in badly maintained hotels, using Sulabh toilets, sleeping on railway platform benches and trekking for stories is not there in the fast reporting that I do now. But I save money and so I have become lazy. One among the lazy bunch of journalist tribes that we have in India.


2 comments:

Sreekumar Raghavan said...

Now the journalist and the editor are no longer the important people in a media organisation. The publisher decides the content and readers gulp it.

開心果 said...

願你心情如秋高氣爽!笑臉如鮮花常開! ....................................................