The elders’ reprimand to keep quiet if I spoke during the news
on radio is an abiding childhood memory. News was timed — morning and
evening on the radio; the local morning newspaper; and the national
newspaper that came in the afternoon by train in the city I grew up.
News was not as easily accessible as it is now. If one missed it, there
was no way of checking it immediately. If ignorance wasn’t bliss, it was
at least less overwhelming. Now it seems there’s no getting away. We
are drowning in information.
Twelve-year old Sana was
looking forward to visiting her grandparents in the summer vacations.
When the family decided to do the long journey from Bangalore to Delhi
by train, her first reaction was a worried, ‘What if the train meets
with an accident?’ Train accidents were all she has seen and known of
train journeys from watching news. That was her immediate recall. All
around us there is news of corruption, scams, killings, abductions,
rape, poverty, negligence, injustice. It does not help that news doesn’t
‘come to us’ like it did about two decades ago, but we ‘go’ to it. In
our Internet-enabled, connected world, we are constantly being bombarded
with news and very often rumour, scandal or expose in the garb of news.
Breaking news — and all of it is breaking — comes streaming to
us as it is unfolding. If it does not update in two seconds on our
phones and computers, we refresh and reboot, panicking about what we may
be missing out — a catastrophe worse than any tragedy we may be
following on news. The FOMO or fear of missing out makes us compulsive
news seekers.
In the past few years, I have seen many friends
trying to shut out news completely by not subscribing to newspapers or
watching it on television. Though how one can insulate oneself thus in
times when news has a way of getting to us and not the other way around,
is a wonder. How are the readers and viewers coping? What keeps their
hopes for a better world alive?
Choose & filter
Girish
Ananth, a software professional, says he would gladly rid himself of
the habit of reading news online and offline that lead to a nagging
sense of despair and depression, but he is addicted. That his job keeps
him in front of an Internet-connected computer at all times makes the
escape impossible. But he has gradually learned to read between the
lines and recognise at a glance whether a news item is sensationalist or
agenda-driven or deserving of more attention.
Tisha Srivastav
moderates a closed group called ‘Lifeistan’ on Facebook. In the group
description she states, ‘I will delete pointlessly negative comments’. A
former journalist, Tisha rejects opinionated accounts in favour of
field reportage. She believes that people are cynical because they are
passive receivers of news. People must exercise what she calls the
‘powerful choice of rejection’ of news. So does Varun Pai, interaction
designer, who disregards stories that do not present the ‘other side’
that allow him to put things into perspective and form an independent
opinion for himself.
Reading news is part of her job as
publication and advocacy officer with the World Health Organization, and
Vismita Gupta Smith who was recently in Kathmandu to report the relief
operations says depressing as it is, she cannot switch off from news
because of her need to stay informed. Marzia Ibrahim, young student and
staunch nationalist at heart, wonders how much news is too much. She
supports the freedom of the media to report stories, but feels strongly
about the ethics that they must follow so as to not infringe on the
rights of the people who are part of their stories. Sensationalism and
public shaming needs to stop, something that has spiralled out of
control with the rise of social media, she rues.
Remedy & recourse
We
are moved by make-believe; we cry and laugh while watching films. How
is it possible that real life events that give rise to fear, anger,
frustration or anxiety will not affect our moods and consequently our
psychological health? Writer and life coach, Eshwar Sundaresan, says
that negative news impacts those already depressed and he has sometimes
advised depressed clients to avoid watching news or reading newspapers
till they feel better about their own lives.
I asked Sapna G K, a
senior counsellor, how despairing news affects people’s overall
perception of life. Her response was matter-of-fact, “If one cannot
control the events that happen in the world, and if there are more bad
things than good, then that is the reality of the situation, which we
need to come to terms with.” She says, “If it bothers you to the extent
that it’s affecting your personal life, you can choose how much news you
want to take in or not at all. Otherwise, do something to make the
world a better place in the ways you can — like volunteering and helping
others.”
Girish too believes that all sorts of unpleasant
things happen over which we have no control, “The world is not a fair
place, so why get involved emotionally? Why not just work on our own
‘circle of concern’?” He takes recourse in classical music.
Sandeep
Bekal, entrepreneur, is a regular newspaper reader who tries not to get
too perturbed over bad news because he believes there is a lot good
happening too which does not get reported. Spiritualism helps him keep
his hope that things will change for the better. Kahkashan Ahmad, mother
of teenagers who works with an NGO that helps with the education of
underprivileged children, comes across very inspiring stories of the
potential and talents of these children, but regrets that such uplifting
news has no takers. Volunteering keeps her hope alive.
Editor
and translator, Keerti Ramachandra, often shares on Facebook stories of
human kindness that she encounters — a passport officer or a cop who
goes out of their way and sometimes beyond their call of duty to be
helpful. She says that generally news makes her angry and frustrated by
its content, but when some act of kindness, some generosity from an
unexpected quarter comes by, she is moved enough to believe in the
innate goodness of human beings and is immediately hopeful.
Immediacy of sharing
The
same items pop up on our newsfeeds again and again. We share easily on
social media. Many-a-times it is not the need to inform, but a need to
show our stand which drives this. In hindsight, a lot of what we share
and say may seem unfair or reactionary. A lot of the sensational news on
social media remains unauthenticated. Displaying poor taste and
discretion, tragedies are laid threadbare for the sake of TRPs because
we have become voyeurs of mourning. This adds to a sense of collective
gloom and hopelessness. Tisha is very clear in her approach to news
consumption — to witness and not react. She says she’s always careful
while sharing — never sharing while witnessing, always later. But such a
sagacious mindset is not easy to sustain on social media which comes
with readers’ reactions. Everyone has a say and it is not always
pleasant or thought out. Most responses are not just lacking in
sensitivity, propriety and grace, but are often caustic and unfair.
Over
the last two decades, the line between news and news features has
blurred with news becoming not just emotionalised, but ‘tabloidised’.
Our reaction to it is consequently, emotional. Lapses of judgement are
not on the part of the media alone, it is a reflection of the
reactionary mood of society today — our hurry, our frailty of speaking
too soon. These are our failings. We have fed the monster.
Close
to the immediacy of sharing comes what I call the ‘immediacy of
caring’, an irrepressible phenomenon that has burgeoned out of the
quick, cheap and easy means of communication — Internet and mobile
phones. My daughter was at school during the serial bomb blasts of July
2008 in Bangalore. My phone began to ring within minutes of the news
breaking on television and well-wishers from all parts of the country
began to ask if I wasn’t going to fetch her. It wasn’t closing time yet,
so I was sure she would be safe in school. I trusted the school
authorities to ensure the students’ safety and had no reason to worry as
long as she was inside the school with the rest. But pushed thus, I
began to panic. The television news was showing the same clips over and
over, there was fear of the phone lines getting jammed. Many in my
situation would have felt compelled to venture out themselves and create
more panic and confusion when there was absolutely no need.
Exploitive
and yellow journalism creates scaremongering in the most harmless
situations. Film Editor Amitabh Shukla says his father calls him every
time it rains in Mumbai. The TV shows everything in the city submerged,
without clarifying that it is in pockets. His family’s entire perception
of Mumbai floods is based not on what he tells them, but what the TV
shows.
A paradigm shift
Sometime around
the 2010s, some people began to feel strongly about showcasing
positive, inspiring stories. These soup for soul stories quickly caught
up the imagination of the readers who were desperate for stories of
courage and motivation as a foil for all the depressing news they were
surrounded with. The reach of digital media provided these new news
websites a comfortable foothold, and gradually, mass following. These
social media-supported news websites like Better India and Love
Hindustan were able to start an alternative news medium and stick their
heads out of the media clutter by carrying positive stories alone.
‘We
feature positive news across India, celebrate the successes of unsung
heroes and change makers, showcase the little known good things about
our country...’ Better India declares. “We believed despairing news
could not make people contribute and change,” says Dhimant Parekh,
founder, Better India, that started as a two-member team. They began by
linking positive articles from various publications on a blog, but it
was difficult because there were so few positive stories. Then they
started covering feel-good and motivational news themselves and as more
people joined and volunteered, the articles became more varied. Today,
Better India has more than 1,00,000 followers on Facebook and about
20,000 followers on Twitter.
Love Hindustan too is a news portal
exclusively dedicated to giving readers ‘the other side of India that
everyday newspapers and websites don’t’. They link positive news
articles from other sources and do some stories themselves. The Logical
Indian is another much-followed news website that focuses on bringing to
its readers social issues that according to them ‘often miss the
limelight in the traditional media’. They have a following of over two
million. They have not limited their content to positive news stories
alone and prefer to call their work, ‘efforts for good’.
Striking a balance
“We
need the media to highlight failings of government bodies, injustices,
wrong doings and social problems to create awareness and get people
moving towards positive action and hold the government agencies
accountable,” says Keerti.
This is exactly what Satyen Bordoloi
feels. And there are many like him who are okay with despairing news
because it tells them how and where they can channelise their efforts.
An activist and documentary filmmaker, Satyen does not want to receive
only feel-good, uplifting news. If there is despairing news, it only
means he needs to ‘pull up my sleeves to try and do something about it’.
He considers all news positive because once reported, all misdeeds and
malpractices, corruption and scams can only lead to corrective and
positive changes in the society.
Also, news may be upsetting
because distressful news sticks to us more easily and surely than
feel-good news, says game developer Anando Banerjee. If there were two
headlines, ‘India jumps up five places on the Global Happiness Index’
and ‘People die in wall collapse’, we are likely to read and remember
the latter better. There is no doubt there is a kind of voyeuristic
pleasure in others’ misfortunes, but there is also a sense of relief
that ‘it didn’t happen to me’, he adds.
As with everything else
in life, we need a balanced dose of news — with the not-so-good must
come the good. News media should make a consistent effort to report
uplifting news along with the disturbing headlines that cannot be
ignored. Political analyst Prashanth Potluri is of the view that
newspapers should ensure that at least the front page always has
positive news so that people have a good start to their day.
News
media gives us what we sanction, it runs on our choices. We have to
stop feeding the monster we have created by rejecting sensationalism.
Mountain-out-of-molehill news would have to stop if we didn’t consume
it. It will seem unthinkable today, but on April 18, 1930, the BBC had
no news for the evening and it announced, “There is no news today.” The
announcement was followed by piano music.
No comments:
Post a Comment