Cutting Edge Lazy Journalism

SANTOSH DESAI

“YOU WOULD THINK a press release about a Nazi war criminal named
Johann Bach being caught in the jungles of Goa after trying to sell a
stolen 18th-century piano would be worth double-checking”, begins
Jonathan Allen’s post in the Reuters blogs. He is of course,
commenting on the astonishing gullibility of the mainstream Indian
media in swallowing the claim made by the intelligence agency Perus
Knarp (super Prank) with the motto “Eht rea enp cabk skripc”, (The Pen
Pricks are back) without bothering to double check the facts. As the
blog points out, it took 0.13 seconds to verify that the concentration
camp that Bach allegedly ran did not exist. And yet, The Indian
Express, The Telegraph and Deccan Herald ran the story, each adding
some embellishments of their own. As another site points out, no
newspaper has apologised, with The Indian Express blaming the hoax on
faulty local intelligence and The Telegraph hedging its bets by
claiming that ‘some blogs ‘ have described the story as a hoax. The
real winner in all this is, of course, DNA. The paper ran the story a
full day after it was revealed to be a hoax. Gives the whole idea of
lazy journalism a cutting edge.

The media storm over Shinchini, the young girl allegedly traumatised
by the harsh criticism offered by judges at a reality show continues.
In keeping with the new protocol of news making, channels blazed
judgement first and facts later. What is noticeable is the desire of
all parties to exploit the full sensationalist potential of any event
before any facts can arrive to temper its potency. So, not only did we
have the channels and the newspapers going at it, do-gooding activists
were not to be left behind. The blame game expanded beyond the
producers of the show and the judges. TOI reported NCPCR’s Sandhya
Bajaj ‘not ruling out stringent action if the parents were found to be
overzealous in pushing their daughter to perform’. What action, pray,
that might be? Arrest them? Confiscate their daughter?

HT’s luxury rag, Splurge, carried a photograph on its front page
captioned ‘Model Navina Bhatia is seen in the company of a Rolls Royce
Phantom dressed in a Christian Dior creation, with a limited edition
Karenina bag’. As a summary of what the supplement carries, that’s a
hard one to beat. The main newspaper meanwhile carried on its front
page a report about “City Prepares to party with Bollywood’s Hottest”,
a straightforward plug of a marketing promotion for HT City
masquerading as news.

Finally, Rakhi Sawant is back. The monsoons have arrived. Let the rain
dance begin.

Desai is the MD and CEO of Futurebrands.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




On Jul 7, 12:26 pm, renu ramanath <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey,
> did anyone in greenyouth notice the media scam that broke out on july 1 in 
> the national newspapers following a report on 'arrest of a former top Nazi 
> colonel in Goa'?
>  .co.in/cnk/cnk.do
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