The Indian Newsroom
Description:
An account of the Indian television newsroom is, in some ways, the story of post-liberalisation India itself. In just two decades, the country grew from state-owned Doordarshans monopoly to a market dominated by umpteen private news channels. English-language news has a particularly interesting trajectory here, both because of its disproportionate inuence on the national conversation and its proximity to power. In this personal-is-political history of the television industry in India, veteran journalist Sandeep Bhushan takes an uninching look at his own profession. What caused the death of eld-based reportage, and the marginalisation of reporters? What is access journalism, and whats wrong with it? How did India evolve the star system? How did technology inuence the development of the Indian newsroom? Is the reportereditor relationship necessarily adversarial? How does the owner-editor system, perhaps unique to India, work in practice? What about corporate ownership? And importantly, how does India compare to more mature industries, like those in the USA or UK? The Indian Newsroom is a straight-talking, behind-the-scenes look at the crisis in Indian news television by one of the best in the business, offering an examination of the choices that lie ahead for Indiaand the industry.