[Bare lengths of coverage, in terms of %age of time allotted, tells us just
half the story.
To make a meaningful assessment one must also know whether, or rather to
what extent, these coverages were positive, negative, laudatory or abusive.]

I/II.
http://m.thehindu.com/opinion/blogs/blog-datadelve/article6026050.ece/?maneref=http%3A%2F%2Ft.co%2FMJELzVmPiC

Losing the TV battle but winning the electoral war
Updated: May 19, 2014 08:23 PM , By Rukmini S
What's happening on TV?
Some parties got more TV coverage than their votes would seem to warrant,
while others got far too little.

Was television media's coverage of political parties a barometer of their
actual popularity, or did it overplay or underplay select leaders? The
numbers show that the coverage for the Aam Admi Party was the most
disproportionate to its actual popularity, and most unfair to the AIADMK.

CMS Media Lab, the non-partisan, not-for-profit media research arm of the
research group CMS, looked at the amount of time a sample of five major
news channels devoted to political leaders and parties in the election
season. *The Hindu*looked at their numbers for five channels - Aaj Tak, ABP
News, Zee News (all Hindi), NDTV 24x7 and CNN IBN - between March 1 and May
11, for prime-time shows between 8 pm and 10 pm. CMS researchers recorded
all coverage during these time slots and tabulated them by topic. They did
not differentiate between "positive" and "negative" news.

As I reported 
earlier<http://m.thehindu.com/opinion/blogs/blog-datadelve/article5989555.ece>,
the BJP got nearly 40% of all prime-time TV coverage during this period,
followed by the Congress and the Aam Aadmi Party. Among political leaders,
Prime Minister-elect Narendra Modi got nearly 37% of all coverage,
distantly followed by the AAP's leader Arvind Kejriwal and the Congress
leader Rahul Gandhi.

*The Hindu* compared each party's voteshares with prime-time TV coverage
numbers and found that the AIADMK, which swept Tamil Nadu, got the least
coverage proportionate to its voteshare. The Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool
Congress came next in disproportionately low coverage, followed by the
CPI(M).

At the other extreme, the AAP got the most disproportionately high coverage
followed by the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena, led by the combative Raj
Thackeray whose controversial statements get him on air frequently, which
won zero seats. Given its unprecedentedly poor performance despite being
the incumbent party, the Congress features next.

The BJP got slightly more TV coverage than its voteshare would seem to
warrant, but only very slightly. Essentially, the media would seem to have
covered the party and Mr. Modi in proportion to his popularity.

Editors of some of the channels defended their coverage to *The Hindu* but
declined to be quoted. "The AAP was a new party which had really captured
the urban imagination. There was huge viewer interest in everything they
did, and in Arvind [Kejriwal] in particular," an editor of one of the
sampled channels said. As for the Congress, much of the coverage was about
the fact that it was likely to do poorly, the editor said. It was however
true that parties in the south and east of the country got less coverage
than they deserved, partly on account of difficulties with translating
their speeches, the editor admitted.

And then there is the chicken-and-egg question. The reason that many in the
media and outside are concerned over the outsized coverage that some
leaders get is that the media can play a major role in people's
decision-making processes. So had people already made up their minds, and
the media picked up on those leaders' and parties' popularity? Or did the
media make up its mind, and voters picked up the signal? *That* the numbers
cannot answer.

II.
http://www.epw.in/editorials/fourth-estate-vanished.html

Fourth Estate That Vanished
Vol - XLIX No. 21, May 24, 2014

Was it an independent media or an extended arm of the Modi campaign that we
saw ahead of the polls?

Humbert Wolfe's early 20th century epigram on the British journalist serves
just as aptly in capturing the shenanigans of our celebrity tribe of
television news journalists and anchors this election season. Wolfe's
satirical verse went like a ditty, thus:








*You cannot hopeto bribe or twist,thank God! theBritish journalist.But,
seeing whatthe man will dounbribed, there'sno occasion to.*

The same honourable assumption of implicit integrity can, of course, be
made of the familiar screen faces whose elaborate performative manner is
that of being frontiersmen and women of our independent, commercially-run
electronic media. There was, surely, no larger plot scripted and directed
by their corporate bosses or benefactors which impelled them into their
collective Narendra Modi frenzy in the run-up to and through these
nine-phase, over a month long, polls. Could it then be that they just lost
the plot, and their professional sense of direction, and were carried
along, and away, with the rest into a Modi *leela*?

There seemed something almost inevitable about the privileged coverage -
nearly a third of television prime time, and rising, according to one media
survey earlier this month - accorded to Modi. Arvind Kejriwal came a
distant second with a little over 10.3% and Rahul Gandhi managed just about
4.3%. Professional distance and verification were the main casualties of
the Modi-centric coverage. The Modi campaign invariably got competitive (as
in vying with one another) live coverage from the major channels. Both his
freewheeling claims of achievements and impromptu allegations against his
political opposition went generally unverified. He was cast not just as a
challenger of the Congress and its corrupt rule, but as the messiah of a
new order. Much of this was, of course, as the Modi spin doctors would have
wanted. The media seemed to swallow the spin, hook, line and sinker.

That the TV media failed, with honourable exceptions, to prise themselves
out of this magnetic pull that the Modi public relations team had managed
to generate was bad enough. That they became force multipliers of that pull
made them compromised and complicit. So we had the rather unseemly sight on
our television screens of the Modi camp setting the agenda and a generally
compliant media building on it.

We had to remind ourselves that it was not all about Modi, but about the
principal national opposition party, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Even
Modi needed to remind himself of that. The BJP, it was clear, was riding on
Modi, and not Modi on the BJP. Which brings it somewhat on par with the
Congress Party and its parasitism on the personality cult (struggling to be
kept going, it would seem, under Rahul Gandhi) of the Nehru family.

"Replicate and pervade" seems to have been the aggressively proactive
strategy of the Modi campaign to dominate popular mind space and the formal
and informal media space. If Modi holograms and masks served as evocative
substitutes to his physical presence in mass rallies, his virtual presence
loomed large across the media. Even in the regional language media, both
television and print, while local issues naturally occupied centre stage
and even where the BJP may have had little or a marginal scope or role, the
Modi factor, like a subliminal awareness, informed the proceedings. Social
media seemed like one big Modi chorus drowning out any criticism of the man
in a deluge of taunts and rants. Much of this was of course all too
recognisably organised and orchestrated like vigilante groups patrolling
the online and social media ready to hit out at anyone who had less than a
good word for Modi.

The mainstream print media seemed to take a more cautious and incrementally
circumspect approach in their treatment of Modi. The discourse neatly
segued from his culpability in the 2002 riots to a more generic concern
about how his divisive and polarising persona would serve his prospects in
the elections and, perchance, national politics in the future, and then to
what his election rhetoric augured for national policy in a new government.
Some of this may have been resigned acceptance, some of it eager
anticipation. There was little in evidence, at least editorially, that went
against the tide.

For all the saturation coverage that Modi received, he remains, at the end
of it, both politically and personally, a bit of a mystery. We now know,
thanks to the submission made in his nomination form in Vadodara, that he
has an estranged wife. The opposition pounces on that and his alleged role
in spying on a woman, now touted as Snoopgate, as proof of his gender trust
deficit; but then there is his strong and demonstrative attachment to his
mother which does not quite fit the misogynistic stereotype. On governance
what we have to go by is the much hyped and contested Gujarat model; on
other national issues his responses seem driven not so much by the
manifesto of his party (which in any case seemed a token afterthought put
together for the sake of form), but ad hoc and tapping into local-specific
populist moods depending on where he was campaigning. We continue to,
despite the legalese, more than suspect his hidden hand in the carnage
against Muslims in Gujarat in 2002. But we do not really have a measure of
the man, and the media have not made a serious investigative bid to fully
demystify him for us. Diplomatic intelligence exposed by WikiLeaks,
however, offers a sobering profile of one who "hoards power" and "rules
with a small group of advisers...more by fear and intimidation than by
inclusiveness and consensus".

What did stand out during the election campaign were the periodic warning
missives to the people through the media by public intellectuals who stood
up to, and were not swept under by, the Modi wave and spoke of the likely
consequences if the man came to power and walked his talk. There were of
course other public intellectuals who seemed to make a fatuous virtue of a
Modi necessity and those abroad who had renounced Indian citizenship but
were quick to make gratuitous offers of their professional skills to a
future Modi regime.

In their blinkered and obsessive Modi coverage, the media failed to pick up
or develop interesting leads. There was this telling vox pop on an English
news channel where a voter from Tamil Nadu was forthright about how his
divided loyalties would play out. He was beholden to *amma* (Tamil Nadu
Chief Minister Jayalalithaa) for the many household and kitchen gadgets her
government had provided his family. Would he then vote for amma? No, he
would vote for the Pattali Makkal Katchi. Why? Well that, you see, was
about caste, and quite a different matter. One got a quick peep into the
undercurrent of sectarian fealty likely to pan out in many such situations
across the country, at once posing a challenge to enlightened electoral
democracy and bedevilling the calculations of pollsters. All in all, the
national media minus Modi added up to nought in this election.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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