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Subject: [TriumphOfContent] The Fall of India's Katie Couric?


  



 The Fall of India's Katie Couric? 

by Tunku Varadarajan
November 30, 2010 | 1:21am

Barkha Dutt, one of the country's pre-eminent news anchors, faced a grilling
today over an ethics scandal that has India abuzz-and lays bare the
corruption at the heart of Indian journalism, says Tunku Varadarajan.

Years from now, earnest journalism majors will study an episode that aired
on Indian television Tuesday, in which Barkha Dutt, a massively influential
but ethically embattled TV news anchor, submit herself to public inquisition
by a panel of her peers. Four flinty journalists grilled the anchor on the
extent of her relationship with one of India's most influential (and, some
would say, murky) corporate lobbyists, with whom the anchor was
clandestinely taped talking about how to get a pliable politician a job in
the Indian cabinet-a placement that would have benefitted the lobbyist's
corporate clients to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars. (One
assumes that clips of the inquisition will be posted on Ms. Dutt's NDTV
website <http://www.ndtv.com/> .)

Think-and I offer this rough-hewn equivalent only to bring the matter to
life for an American readership-of Katie Couric
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-10-25/katie-couric-on-h
er-contract-cbs-and-love-of-the-campaign-trail/>  as the anchor, caught on
tape talking to the flack for Halliburton, on the subject of getting
Halliburton's preferred candidate the job of defense secretary in the run-up
to a major war. And think, then, of an hour-long segment in which Couric
sits down with, say, Charles Krauthammer, Fred Hiatt, Ken Auletta, and
Katrina vandel Heuvel
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/author/katrina-vanden-heuvel/> , and submits
herself to on-air questioning on the subject-with the aim of explaining, as
Dutt has sought to do, on Twitter, Facebook, and in a press release, how her
conversation with the lobbyist was within the bounds of ethically acceptable
journalism.

Dutt has said, in a nutshell, that the uber-influential lobbyist was just a
source, and that she was stringing the source along in order to milk her for
as much information as she could get-both immediately, and as editorial
investment for the future. Although there is absolutely no evidence that
Dutt stood to gain financially from discussing how to place the lobbyist's
man in the Indian cabinet, the conversation reeked of an unseemly proximity
between journalist, lobbyist, and corporate interests, so much so that there
are vociferous, and entirely reasonable, campaigns to bounce Dutt, as well
as many other senior journalists who were also caught on tape, out of a job.
The fact that the journalists canoodling on tape with the lobbyist were a
"Who's Who" of sorts of New Delhi's journalistic elite has fueled a sense of
public chagrin that will not easily be quelled. Indians are cynical by
nature; and so, when they feel betrayed by the few figures they trust, the
disappointment is acute-and irrepressible.

Indian journalism is regarded by many in America (including by my own
sainted editor, Tina  <http://www.thedailybeast.com/author/tina-brown/>
Brown) as vibrant, rich, and healthy; by contrast, journalism in the West is
believed to be in the grip of an existential and financial crisis. But the
recent lobbyist-journalist-politician scandal in India (of which everything
you could wish to read can be found inOutlook magazine
<http://www.outlookindia.com/> , and here
<http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/columns/siddharth-varadarajan/article920054
.ece?homepage=true> , in this incisively compendious newspaper piece by my
brother, an editor at The Hindu newspaper) has dynamited the Potemkin
village that is Indian journalism. What has looked to us to be healthy,
roseate, and vigorous is, in fact, rotten, corrupt, and frequently amoral.

 Article - Varadarajan Indian Journalist
<http://www.tdbimg.com/files/2010/11/30/img-article---varadarajan-indian-jou
rnalist_063904219504.jpg> Barkha Dutt during the Closing Plenary; From Delhi
to Davos: The Road to Inclusive Growth at the World Economic Forum's India
Economic Summit 2010 held in New Delhi of Nov. 2010. (Photo: Eric Miller /
World Economic Forum)

Indian journalism is woefully bereft of an institutional ethical
architecture, relying instead on the ethical instincts of individual
journalists. As such, there is a sort of ethical free market in operation,
in which readers or viewers make up their own minds on whether so-and-so can
be trusted as a columnist, whether this or that anchor can be relied upon to
hold no brief for politicians or corporations, whether this newspaper or
that can be trusted to report the news without fear or favor. As N. Ram,
editor of The Hindu, pointed out in a recent debate on Indian TV
<http://ibnlive.in.com/videos/135633/face-the-nation-with-sagarika-ghose.htm
l> , the journalists in question, here, would not have survived five minutes
at The New York Times, or the FT.

In truth, Indian journalism is a vast field inhabited by a multitude of
interests and abilities, an anarchic Klondike in which fortunes and
reputations are being made, and in which the kind of anal but indispensable
ethical standards that make the better stratum of American journalism
reliable are broadly absent. Many major Indian newspapers practice something
called "paid news," with unofficial rate cards, in which people and
companies can get their stories and photographs on Page 1, or their books
reviewed, on payment of a fee to the news corporation in question.
Politicians, too, must pay, particularly at election time, to get up-front
coverage. In the same vein, Indian journalists seldom, if ever, disclose
their interests in stories they write about. (An Indian journalist once
berated me for "all this American disclosure crap.")

The lobbyist-journalist-politician scandal has dynamited the Potemkin
village that is Indian journalism. What has looked to us to be healthy and
vigorous is, in fact, rotten.

There is, also, a curious demographic problem: Virtually all the super-elite
journalists in New Delhi and Bombay are from families with corporate or
bureaucratic connections, men and women who would, in previous generations,
have entered the elite bureaucracy themselves, whether it be the Indian
Foreign Service or the Indian Administrative Service. Journalism today
offers a quicker and more effective route to power, especially now that the
bureaucratic services have been opened up to a wider swath of Indians as a
result of affirmative action. In essence, the "babalog"-the well-born-who
used to dominate the country's administrative cadres are now crammed into
the media. It is the one avenue of real power for India's otherwise somewhat
disenfranchised elites, in the sense that they can't ever get elected to
parliament. So they have turned the media into a form of socio-cultural
Establishment and feel quite at home with the other "establishments,"
whether business or political, that are to be found in modern, democratic
India, regarding theirs as in no way inferior.

A final word: India's media is still an insulated and protected sector. To
this day, foreign media companies cannot own more than 26 percent of an
Indian imprint. This has made for an insular press, a corrupt press, an
Indian media untested not merely against global standards of journalistic
craft, but also against Western standards of journalistic ethics. Dutt,
surely, has a heckuva lot of explaining to do. But she's not the only one in
that position-by any stretch.

Tunku Varadarajan is a national affairs correspondent and writer at large
for The Daily Beast. He is also the Virginia Hobbs Carpenter Fellow in
Journalism at Stanford's Hoover Institution and a professor at NYU's Stern
Business School. He is a former assistant managing editor at The Wall Street
Journal. (Follow him on Twitter here <http://twitter.com/tunkuv> .)

http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-11-30/barkha-dutt-indias
-katie-couric-caught-in-ethics-scandal/

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