To Blame 'Is' The Game
By Gajanan
Khergamker
The barrage of expletives and cusswords hurled on the 'media', to an arguable extent, is misplaced yet convenient. The media in India has never vouched against indulging in such acts, a self-righteous public considers an anomaly or an illegal diversion of sorts. As for the bias and sensationalism, the readers asked for it. It is the very basis of New Media.
Image is for representational purpose only |
Over the ages, Media, primarily Print, that went on to metamorphose into TV and then Online, exploded into the colossal Social Media that engulfed the rest. Social media, over the turn of the millennium, transformed from secretive chat platforms for the nubile underexposed few provided by selectively-public forums like Orkut and Yahoo, into 'discussion' fora.
Rabid, Staccato
Quipping Need Of The Hour
The public
discussion fora, some open for all while other few for closed 'like-minded'
sorts gave way to public opinion platforms where the opinionated could voice
their bits, however, skewed. All that was needed was a rabid staccato quipping
of sorts.
Most in the
media industry died a swift death crumbling under the weight of their collective
ego, exposing in ruin, the fallacy of the much-bragged-about 'readership' of
numbers that seemed magical at the onset. The magic of numbers did its
disappearing act.
And then,
came the resurrection of sorts.
The 'Find
Love Or A Lover' platforms got mature and developed sheens of sorts that ranged
from News to Opinion, Expert Advice to 'Groups' of select 'Loves' - Of 'common'
goals and potential 'careers'. News as such was relegated to just another
'Interest' like 'Travel' or 'Music.'
Journalism
Retired In Time
Erstwhile
careers of proofreaders who could comb out errors in the copies of the senior-most
journalist with unassuming ease came to an end. The proofreader died over time
with the profession. Today, mistakes are commonplace occurrences, and nobody
cares a fig.
The editor
who refused to let his copy go to print unless it was whetted by the
proofreader, almost always a senior of his ilk, too died over time. Today,
editors are mostly self-styled with no journalistic experience as a rule.
The senior
reporter, who retired as such after more than thousands of bylines generated at
the speed of two stories per day, as was the mandatory need of the hour in the
good ol' days, was relegated to a swiftly-dwindling memory. Today, anyone and
everyone with an opinion is a reporter if not an 'editor'.
Mistakes
made in print were grievous but only to the extent of 'spelling', 'dates' or
'terminology', and the reporting or editing perpetrator would be pulled up for
having committed murder. Today, the errors are dangerous and risk changing the
entire narrative intended, but nobody cares.
Risk of
Losing Job Was Real
The risks of
losing his/her job were high and the infamy associated with the faux pas spread
like fire across the industry - threatening career and a future in one clean
sweep. It didn't matter if you were male or female. What did was that you had
messed up and would 'have' to pay: If not with your job then with a cut in your
annual 'increment' for the slip. Now, retaining your job depends on how you
further the employer's narrative and not the credibility of your work.
Professional
memory would retain the news of errors in 'News' for years together and if you
were the perpetrator, you would mostly go underground, read 'on leave' or
simply lie low and hope for people to forget: Not that they would. Nobody
would.
The reader
would react faster than ever. The 'erring' scribe, then, would refuse to show
up to the office the next day professing some medical condition no one would
believe. Now, a reader cannot as much as reach a reporter on phone, leave aside
meeting him.
Media Out Of Reach Now
Almost
always a few readers would land up at the newspaper office with the copy in
hand demanding a refund of the price of the newspaper and answers from
none-less-than the editor. Then, the public had access to the newspaper office
and the editor was always accessible. Unthinkable today.
Over the
years, ethics and equity succumbed to the numbers game. The demon of
'readership' gave way to the dragon of 'views' and 'likes' as Twitter,
Instagram and Facebook took over public interest.
Sadly, today
everyone with a smartphone has turned into a ‘publisher’ of sorts. They
generate news, opine on it, distribute it widely, attribute it to all the wrong
entities and act on it without any thought. If and when things go wrong, which
almost always do, if not sooner than later, they blame the media.
And, the
media too, on their part, has, owing to the complete absence of checks and
accountability, lost the plot. To notch eyeballs and win the Numbers Game, they
give the usual ‘mandatory’ checks, the convenient miss.
So,
substantiating reports, checking sources for authenticity and conflict of
interest, weeding out bias and ensuring there isn't backlash or a law and order
problem are processes of the past and, now, relegated to textbooks.
This is the
reason, we find innumerable media reports of people testing positive for
COVID-19, even 'after' taking the vaccine, suggesting that the vaccine would
completely protect you from contracting COVID-19 or that taking the vaccine
was, in effect, useless. Now, protected by the Freedom of Speech and Expression
and spurred by the need for eyeballs and the time-tested sensationalism, the
media continues to post such dangerous stories. If they don't, few will visit
their portals, if they do, they are charged with being sensational.
My Way Or
The Highway
Governments
and the Who's Who began dealing directly with 'Followers' through personal and
official social media accounts. If they didn't wish to deal with you, they'd
'Block' you. It's either My Way Or The Highway.
Everything
in the media and Social Media has been restricted to posturing and has a
dedicated fan 'following' whose numbers are taken very seriously.
For a media
today, whose numbers are taken seriously and attributed a sense opf respect wholly
misplaced, considering the numbers themselves are falsified and procured
through dubious means, bias is a given.
For a reader,
who 'follows' a media house because it matches his ideology or belief, any
diversion from the narrative is 'fake' news or 'biased'. And why not? It just
doesn't suit him. But, that he chose to 'follow' it when it suited him, was an endorsement
of his bias, is conveniently glossed over.
Numbers
Game All That Matters
We are in the numbers game now. Now, 'influencers' on social media with a few thousand followers are sought after instead of authentic journalists. And we all know why influencers 'influence'; For their two-bit meal, trip or fame and, mostly, in that order. Forget about 'Objectivity', it's the view of one whose view matters to 'others'...however 'Subjective' it may be.
The discerning lines between media houses, social media players, and influencers are blurred with the viewer even the New-Age 'Editor' oblivious of the difference. At the bottom of the rung of 'Objective' writing lies the humble Freelancer simply owing to his supposed and misunderstood 'dependence' on the whim of a New-Age 'Editor', however unqualified.
Why, of
late, everyone with a Smart Phone takes the double ticks, blue ticks and
'status' on WhatsApp with utmost seriousness now. They are the new Publishers
who decide what to publish and who should read what they publish. Journalists, with their decades of experience, be damned.
Political
posturing, bias, sensationalism, and fake narratives are here to stay. And so
are the expletives and the cusswords. Like they say: You win some, you lose
some.