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In this episode, Kalpana Sharma, who has worked at Times of India, The Indian Express and The Hindu, and is a columnist writing on the print media for the online platform Newslaundry, tells Savyasaachi Jain and Nirupama Subramanian that with a few exceptions, mainstream print media has failed its task of critical examination of politics, restricting themselves to coverage of events and speeches without questioning, fact-checking or investigation.
Kalpana recalls the years after the Emergency as a time when, according to her, the media was adversarial and unafraid. She talks about how “corporatisation of the media” — not referring to the ownership, which has always been private, but the approach to news as a consumer product rather than public goods — set the stage for what she describes as an overall decline of the print media. She praises non-mainstream online news portals for stepping up to the role journalists ought to be playing despite their scarce resources, with investigations, for example on the electoral bonds issue.
By Savyasaachi Jain and Nirupama SubramanianIn this episode, Kalpana Sharma, who has worked at Times of India, The Indian Express and The Hindu, and is a columnist writing on the print media for the online platform Newslaundry, tells Savyasaachi Jain and Nirupama Subramanian that with a few exceptions, mainstream print media has failed its task of critical examination of politics, restricting themselves to coverage of events and speeches without questioning, fact-checking or investigation.
Kalpana recalls the years after the Emergency as a time when, according to her, the media was adversarial and unafraid. She talks about how “corporatisation of the media” — not referring to the ownership, which has always been private, but the approach to news as a consumer product rather than public goods — set the stage for what she describes as an overall decline of the print media. She praises non-mainstream online news portals for stepping up to the role journalists ought to be playing despite their scarce resources, with investigations, for example on the electoral bonds issue.