Critical mass for an Asian television news network
David Hazinksi, a professor of communications from Georgia (USA), wants to see the end of the Western networks' media monopoly.
The government-controlled media in Pakistan is being given a run for its money by upcoming private satellite television, which is providing viewers with independently produced news programmes. This is also the case in Bangladesh, where the satellite-cum-terrestial channel Ekushay has established itself as a force to be reckoned with, while India's Zee, Star and Aaj Tak have been giving stodgy old Doordarshan stiff competition for some time now.
But the time has come to take all this technology and information a step further, reckons David Hazinski, the larger-than-life associate professor of communications and media consultant from Georgia, USA. Sent to Vietnam as a sailor in 1969, he spent 14 months there trying to "string for whomever would read anything I wrote", he says with characteristic good humour. "I ended up sending some stuff to a correspondent I met from Newsweek… can't remember his name now, but never got any byline credit. It still helped me with perspective… of seeing what I saw, sending in what I sent in, then reading something else".