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바카라Both-sides바카라 Journalism Is At The Core Of Unbiased, Fair Media

To be a fair media, 바카라both-sides바카라 journalism is not just a pre-requisite; it바카라s a given. And this extends beyond the Opinions and Ideas pages.

바카라Both-sides바카라 Journalism Is At The Core Of Unbiased, Fair Media
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We may be free, but are we also a fair democracy? 

The media mirrors the democracy that we are. Many would say we get the media we deserve. With its imperfections, prejudices and biases, the Indian media remains amongst the freest in the world. It, however, also needs to be amongst the fairest. Debates like the one on Outlook recently on 바카라both-sides바카라 journalism are welcome and would add to the momentum. 

The media is not merely any actor in a democracy. Not for nothing it바카라s called the fourth pillar of democracy. The media must actively play the role of a watchdog, especially in an unequal democracy like ours, which, according to many, remains a work in progress.

To be a fair media, 바카라both-sides바카라 journalism is not just a pre-requisite; it바카라s a given. And this extends beyond the Opinions and Ideas pages. 바카라Both-sides바카라 journalism is at the core of what should be unbiased, fair journalism. This, then, should be seen in news stories, news management, and, indeed, in newsrooms.

Does our free media practise and promote unbiased journalism? Perhaps, the question to be asked is: 바카라Can a reporter ever be an unbiased observer바카라?

We humans are also political beings. What is personal is also political. Quite often it바카라s possible that the personal opinion colours the professional journalistic account that we present to our readers. How do we then ensure a semblance of 바카라unbiasedness바카라 and 바카라fairness바카라 in what is dished out to readers? By ensuring 바카라both-sides바카라 journalism, of course.

The relationship between the media and the government or a reporter and the authority must necessarily be adversarial. It바카라s only then that the media can live up to its role of the watchdog. As we have always been told, even in this arrangement, a news story is incomplete without the version of the side that is supposedly on the side of the wrong.

If the media is supposed to be unbiased, and free, how do we account for the high TRPs of TV news channels which run like propaganda channels? They are known to invite the 바카라other side바카라 only to berate and lampoon. 

There바카라s a thin line between popularity and credibility. A media organisation and a reporter must be known by their credibility. TRPs may be important for ad revenues, but for fairness, credibility is the key.

I am reminded of a session I had with L K Advani during my years of covering the BJP. Advani바카라s name evokes extreme reactions 바카라 he바카라s known as the architect of the modern BJP; but a section also sees him as a polarising figure, and a divisive politician.

I asked Advani about his favourite newspaper. He named two바카라The Hindu and The Pioneer. The Pioneer was easy to understand바카라it was then ideologically aligned with his vision. I asked why The Hindu. He said, 바카라If you say something, it will be recorded in The Hindu, and it won바카라t be distorted.바카라 Many leading channels that boast of high TRPs cannot claim to have this crucial touchstone of credibility (or 바카라both-sides바카라 journalism) today when it concerns the Opposition.

But if a large section of popular TV news media cannot pass this credibility test today, we must ask, 바카라Was the Indian media fair earlier?바카라

Anecdotal evidence suggests (and I have some experience of this too) that legacy media in India has traditionally been dominated by the Left. This is true of academia too. This, perhaps, has to do with the education system that we followed since the 1960s. This dominant academia-media ecosystem created a web where 바카라both-sides바카라 journalism was next to impossible to practise.

Recently, there have been edit page articles on how social media in India may actually be harming democracy.

It바카라s true that fake news and questionable claims routinely find space on social media platforms. But had the traditional media honestly reflected the changing Indian realities, social media would not have seen the boom and gained the legitimacy it did. The traditional media, at least large sections of it, miserably failed the 바카라both-sides바카라 fairness test.

This is one of the reasons, I think, that the Prime Minister chooses to communicate through social media, rather than holding press conferences. The social media explosion has forced the traditional media to opt for course correction. 

The spirit of inquiry and critical thinking must form a journalist바카라s existence. Ideas, as is only to be expected, would always be contested. So, the Constitutional values provide a common minimum agenda for the media. 

If journalism is the first draft of history, it바카라s a sociological account as well. For a journalistic work to be credible, it may be useful to employ some tools of social research. While many journalists cross the lakshman rekha and become participant observers, a sympathetic observer would always faithfully capture the other side, even if the media-authority relationship is adversarial.

There are many other issues like women in leadership roles in newsrooms, newsroom diversity, English vs vernacular divide, among others, that need to be addressed if we aspire to be among the fairest media. 바카라Both-sides바카라 journalism is always a good starting point. 

(The author, a former journalist, majored in Sociology from JNU. Views expressed are personal)

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