Indian media more
focussed on Bollywood, cricket: Sam Pitroda
source.http://zeenews.india.com/ |
Chairman of National
Innovation Council Sam Pitroda on Tuesday expressed concern about the role
being played by media in India as it focusses more on cricket and
Bollywood rather than development and nation building.
Pitroda, who is also the Chairman of an Expert Committee set up to review
the functioning of India's largest public broadcaster Prasar Bharati, said
public media is not in tune with the technological developments.
"In India, media has changed in the last decade like everywhere else. From
my perspective, it bothers me because the conversation today is not about
development, nation building, real concerns about the needs of people.
Conversation in media is more about cricket, Bollywood and gossip," he
said at a Google Hangout session.
Adding that the Internet has changed business models, delivery systems and
content for media, Pitroda said that the "key question then remains who
makes the news".
"I believe public media everywhere is just not in tune with the change in
technology. In India particularly, we do recognise that private media has
grown substantially and as a result public media, inspite of the fact that
it has far bigger reach, it doesn't have the kind of richness in content
that people are looking for," he said.
Actor Nandita Das, also a part of the Hangout, said the political
discussion on television is not in-depth as media chooses to run down
someone and often thrusts "certain perspectives" onto viewers.
She added that urban-centric news takes centrestage, even in newspapers
these days.
Pitroda also expressed concern on the nature of debates on television
saying these become "very personal" and people often fail to distinguish
between an idea and an individual.
"Everyone gets connected with their idea and they think if you don't like
their idea, you don't like that person. Its not a very balanced
discussion, its always fights. The level of their voice is so high,
everyone is angry and irritated. Its not a genuine discussion, its an
argument," he added.
Pitroda was also worried about the trend of "trial by media".
"I don't think trial by media is a valid thing. Media decided you have
made a mistake. Some anchors say you answer the public as if you are in
the court. They have their own views and they become prominent and rather
than being fair, they take sides," he added.
He further said there is too much emphasis on people rather than on
vernacular media.
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