The business of news

The business of news

How the editorial and factual veracity of news is being threatened.

Sukumar Muralidharan teachescf at the Jindal School of Journalism and Communication, O.P. Jindal Global University, Sonipat, India.

Published on

Practice is never quite perfect, but certain fine distinctions in principle have been embedded in the identity of the news media as part of its compact with the public. Over the last quarter century, these distinctions have gradually been effaced, often by stealth, and almost always without penalties. Today, the greatest rewards are assured to those who profess least respect for once honoured media conventions.

Ownership interests in the Indian media, as against the public news dissemination function, were already unfettered by the early-1990s, when economic policy underwent a radical transformation. The quarter century beginning 1991, when India entered into a policy of economic liberalisation and integration with the global economy, generated its own dynamics in terms of the journalistic function. Technological changes, typified by the explosion of cable, satellite television and the internet, were the most visible face of this new dynamic.

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