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Managing
the Mass Media
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Aug
31st 2010, Jayati Ghosh |
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The
Italian-born English poet Humbert Wolfe described
the press of his day in the following terms:
''You
cannot hope to bribe or twist,
Thank God! The British journalist.
But seeing what the man will do
Unbribed, there’s no occasion to.''
Things
have only got worse in this matter in the eighty-odd
years since these words were written, and they have
probably got worse in many more places. And so the age-old
dilemma between freedom of expression – including the
essential requirement in democracy to have free and
vibrant mass media – and any form of accountability
to society and the public at large, has become at once
more complex and more urgent.
In India, for example, there is general agreement now
that the mass media have become monsters of sorts, self-righteous
and unself-critical, sensationalist and scandal-obsessed,
often irresponsible and generally insensitive. The brilliant
new satirical film Peepli (Live) highlights this with
biting humour, through scenes that would appear to be
completely over the top if they were not so alarmingly
derivative of our recent experience.
It is not as if these general tendencies have not been
commented upon. There was widespread public condemnation
of the crassly insensitive and even downright dangerous
media handling of the terrorist attacks in Mumbai in
November last year. There are thoughtful media persons
who bemoan the tendency to sensationalism and obsession
with trivia and TRPs at the expense of honest reportage
of the events and issues that matter to most of the
people. More recently, there have been careful investigations
into - and shocking exposes of - the growing phenomenon
of ''paid news'' which increasingly mocks at any pretence
of objective and honest reporting.
Yet nothing seems to make any difference! Despite all
the criticism and complaints, often aired within the
same media, there has been hardly any change in the
general manner of functioning, especially of the more
''popular'' media. The explicit desire to sensationalise
and the implicit but equally strong desire to present
the news in ways that suit their corporate bosses has
come to define the way that most mass media in the country
operate today.
The valiant efforts by some journalists to reveal the
extent of the paid news scandal in both local language
and English language media did lead to an investigation
by the Press Council of India. But this supposedly august
institution set up to monitor and protect the integrity
of the media ended up by playing safe, avoiding any
naming that could also have led to shaming and more
restraint, and coming up with anodyne suggestions for
restraint and self-regulation, which have clearly not
worked so far. Meanwhile, the same TV channels and newspapers
that have shouted themselves hoarse over the evident
corruption in the preparations for the Commonwealth
Games were completely quiet on this major scandal of
corruption in their own ranks, to the point of almost
blacking out such coverage.
Even the promises made by Editors in the wake of the
outcry over the media role during the Mumbai attacks,
of greater control over reporters and more focus on
their sensitivity, have not been kept. Courts have had
to be moved to ensure the privacy of families in cases
of unsolved murders as the media persists in endless
speculation, unmindful of the grief and pain of those
involved.
Perhaps they have simply forgotten what sensitivity
is? The same week that Peepli (Live) was first shown
in cinemas in New Delhi, the news channel that was thanked
in the credits of the film for assisting in production
had a report on the ongoing floods in Pakistan. A young
reporter thrust a mike into the face of a man whose
house had been completely demolished in the floods,
with his family members and all his possessions buried
in the rubble. ''Now that you have lost everything, how
do you find courage (himmat)?'' she asked him briskly.
He broke into tears as he asked where such courage could
be found when he had been rendered all alone. Without
even waiting a minute, the reporter turned away from
him to face the camera, and pronounced dramatically
that the floods and lack of government response had
been so devastating that they had even taken away the
possibility of himmat from the local people.
So the question that more and more people are asking
is: how we ensure some accountability of the mass media,
some way of making them work for the public good? Almost
all the other major institutions of our democracy are
coming under some form of scrutiny and public accountability:
the politicians of course, but also the bureaucracy
and even now the judiciary. Only the media themselves,
who appear to be the arbiters of the fate of all the
others, seem to be exempt from any kind of answerability,
except to their owners and advertisers.
The problem is compounded for the ''new media'' which
is growing apace and often without even the loose self-regulation
that characterises other more established media. In
the case of online media, their power has increased
greatly without them having to answer to anyone, because
at present it is not even clear who they would have
to answer to!
The issue is a thorny one and not easily resolved, also
because as Denis McQuail has pointed out, ideas of accountability
''are not easily applied to a typical mass media situation,
because power is so imbalanced. Media publishers have
the means and the power to publish at will, protected
by legal rights and with no formal obligations beyond
those to their shareholders, within the limits of the
law. ...(T)here is no generally shared framework of
normative principles that is strong enough to justify
claims against the media that go beyond some very basic
legal rights. Claims also vary widely in their reference,
some concerning individual matters where law may provide
support, others referring to broad public issues that
are not covered by law or regulation. In the latter
case, most accountability claims can be rejected or
ignored.'' (Denis McQuail, Media Accountability and Freedom
of Publication, Oxford University Press 2003)
The solution cannot really be state regulation, because
of the inevitable conflicts of interest and propensity
of governments to try and control unfavourable media
presentations. And of course, there can never be complete
certainty or unanimity on what the public interest actually
is.
Yet, because the problem is getting so much worse and
because self-regulation does not seem have made much
impact, we urgently need to think of new and creative
ways to make sure that our media is actually accountable
to the general public, including those without any political
voice to speak of. The old dilemma, of who will guard
the so-called guardians (of democracy) themselves, has
never been so pressing.
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