Nation wants to know: Arnab Goswami gets a legal notice for the phrase

Goswami says the phrase belonged to the people and not to any media group

BS Web Team 

Arnab Goswami, Republic TV
Illustration: Binay Sinha

Who owns “nation wants to know”? That seems to be the question that will probably be answered by the courts. The catch-phrase popularised by former anchor, has become a bone of contention now.

According to a report in the newspaper Mint, has sent a legal notice to asking him not to use the phrase on his own news channel “Republic TV”. Arnab Goswami’s new channel has been in the news ever since it was announced late last year but its much anticipated launch has been delayed due to unspecified reasons.

is a channel owned by the and they contend that “nation wants to know” is their intellectual property. Goswami became synonymous with the use of this phrase.

Arnab has released an audio clip on YouTube informing people that he has received this notice. He has not revealed the name of the group that has sent him the notice. “A group has sent me a six-page letter threatening me with imprisonment if I ever use the phrase ‘Nation wants to know’. They say that they own the phrase.”

He further explained that the phrase belongs to “you, to me and to all of us, every citizen of this country. Every Indian has a right to use that phrase. And this phrase comes from the heart. Every Indian, through his or her questioning spirit, can use the phrase Nation Wants to Know.”

He says the group has been trying to delay the launch of
 

“ARG Outliers had filed for trademark for these and similar phrases which were already filed for and extensively used for years by We have responded with a standard caution notice. He (Arnab) is just trying to gain soundbytes from it,” a spokesperson for the Times Network informed Mint.

In the run-up to the launch of the show, Goswami has been travelling to various colleges across India, talking about his own “style of journalism”. is owned by Arnab Goswami’s  own company, ARG Outlier  NDA MP is the biggest investor in  

In an interview to Man's World, Goswami hinted about why he left
I don’t believe in journalism in which a film director can call up a proprietor and then shivers go down the spine of the proprietor. I have taken on a lot of people in this country. I have broken a lot of scams. I have taken on powerful people and terrorist groups. And I feel truly sad when some film director calls up a proprietor and says, ‘Why is this channel asking questions about me, and about why Pakistani artists are acting in my film?’ and the proprietor gets scared. That’s very unfortunate.
Man's World disclosed that they had been asked to avoid questions about the ownership structure of

Nation wants to know: Arnab Goswami gets a legal notice for the phrase

Goswami says the phrase belonged to the people and not to any media group

Goswami says the phrase belonged to the people and not to any media group
Who owns “nation wants to know”? That seems to be the question that will probably be answered by the courts. The catch-phrase popularised by former anchor, has become a bone of contention now.

According to a report in the newspaper Mint, has sent a legal notice to asking him not to use the phrase on his own news channel “Republic TV”. Arnab Goswami’s new channel has been in the news ever since it was announced late last year but its much anticipated launch has been delayed due to unspecified reasons.

is a channel owned by the and they contend that “nation wants to know” is their intellectual property. Goswami became synonymous with the use of this phrase.

Arnab has released an audio clip on YouTube informing people that he has received this notice. He has not revealed the name of the group that has sent him the notice. “A group has sent me a six-page letter threatening me with imprisonment if I ever use the phrase ‘Nation wants to know’. They say that they own the phrase.”

He further explained that the phrase belongs to “you, to me and to all of us, every citizen of this country. Every Indian has a right to use that phrase. And this phrase comes from the heart. Every Indian, through his or her questioning spirit, can use the phrase Nation Wants to Know.”

He says the group has been trying to delay the launch of
 

“ARG Outliers had filed for trademark for these and similar phrases which were already filed for and extensively used for years by We have responded with a standard caution notice. He (Arnab) is just trying to gain soundbytes from it,” a spokesperson for the Times Network informed Mint.

In the run-up to the launch of the show, Goswami has been travelling to various colleges across India, talking about his own “style of journalism”. is owned by Arnab Goswami’s  own company, ARG Outlier  NDA MP is the biggest investor in  

In an interview to Man's World, Goswami hinted about why he left
I don’t believe in journalism in which a film director can call up a proprietor and then shivers go down the spine of the proprietor. I have taken on a lot of people in this country. I have broken a lot of scams. I have taken on powerful people and terrorist groups. And I feel truly sad when some film director calls up a proprietor and says, ‘Why is this channel asking questions about me, and about why Pakistani artists are acting in my film?’ and the proprietor gets scared. That’s very unfortunate.
Man's World disclosed that they had been asked to avoid questions about the ownership structure of
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