Key issues to journalists discussed at media forum

IANS  |  New Delhi 

Issues such as licensing, policy, and in the context of the were extensively discussed and debated at the opening day of a two-day international at Habitat Centre here.

Moderated by Apar Gupta, the panel included Nikhil Pahwa, and of MediaNama; Manish Tewari,former and Broadcasting; S.M. Khan, retired senior civil servant and former Kalam and distinguished public policy professional, Subi Chaturvedi.

Pahwa brought up patterns of content consumerism and highlighted how increasingly lower percentages -- as low as 20 per cent of -- are going to traditional media like print and TV.

The traditional media therefore, Pahwa pointed out, tries to generate "sensational" news which could border on fake news.

The panel further discussed that while licensing was no longer a control mechanism for the government, the hardware of the is still used discreetly by governments to control news about political unrest.

Tewari pointed out "the vast abyss of grey", which still dominates India's laws on cybersecurity and the internet.

In another session "Sleeping with the Adversary", the panelists sought to answer whether or not journalists should take up public offices and if doing so tarnishes their

Pankaj Pachauri, of GoNews, said that the has become "self-serving" and "subservient" to the government of the day. Ashish Khetan, an investigative turned (with the Aam Aadmi Party) and now a practising lawyer, asserted that "as a journalist, you cannot express your allegiance".

In an attempt to find a more nuanced view, and digital commentator said that one should not be of the opinion that journalists are absolutely neutral or absolutely aligned.

In another session during the day "Is There A Post Advertising Revenue Media Business Model?" the discussion veered around how innovation is the key to disruption in

The new avenues of revenue, felt the panelists, place power in the hands of the consumers who are in a frenzy of demanding content which is forcing the industry to pay attention to what the consumer wants and make connections between content and people.

The last session of the day, 'Patriotism vs Journalism', started off with the moderator, Shiv Aroor mentioning the problems faced by journalists on who have a discerning point of view and how often the patriotism of a is brought to question.

Commenting on the theme of the session, said: "I think journalists are patriots. We have to talk when people are being manipulated, when thousands die in a drug war. This is precisely why we do journalism."

Diplomatic of The Hindu, stated: "Each time someone tries to stand up to a government policy, they are pushed aside as anti-national."

The Media Rumble also featured interactive masterclasses and presentations on covering parliament, the state of in India, freelance journalism, among others.

The long day of deliberations ended with a special performance of "Aisi Taisi Democracy" -- part stand-up comedy, part-musical and part-biting diatribe on socio-political issues -- by Indian Ocean's Rahul Ram, satirist and lyricist/comedian Varun Grover.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, August 04 2018. 13:40 IST