When the story is big,when it plays out for hours but real,hard information comes in dribbles,news TV can keep the story on the front-burner and keep coming back to it and get on with other news. Hoping this happens figures in the short list of things I want from life that I know are unlikely to happen.
When Pramod Mahajan was in hospital,there was at least a hospital for TV crews to stand in front of and provide updates. It didnt,of course,make for pretty viewing. But when even the comfort of stationing news crews at what news TV so fondly calls ground zero is denied,which is what happened when the story on YSRs missing helicopter broke,news TV poses a formidable challenge to news consumers.
How can you not be baffled when an NDTV anchor asks his co-anchor,with grave ceremony,to explain the search and rescue mission and the latter,despite all the marvels a video wall can provide,adds absolutely nothing that wasnt already known? It wasnt his fault really; nothing new had happened. When you see an Aaj Tak anchor standing in front of a video wall that shows a chopper flying from left to right and an aircraft (ISROs remote sensing plane? IAFs Sukhoi?) flying from right to left,why do you feel a surge of sympathy for the anchor? When you see English channels carrying live broadcast of the Andhra finance ministers press conference,the minister speaking in the vernacular,no translation forthcoming,you wonder whether the fact that something is happening at last trumps the necessity of explaining what is happening.
By Thursday we all knew what had happened. There was a ground zero too. But,still,so many questions. Was it imperative for Times Now to say three times in a short report that body parts are strewn at the crash site? And why did CNN-IBN,in assessing YSRs career,think realpolitik was the key? Should you use realpolitik in this context? And if you use it to mean politics thats practical,not always clean and not always possessing a moral/ideological core,was YSR the only practitioner?
What were we getting into? Unreal-politik,perhaps. Note,in this respect and in conclusion,that the same CNN-IBN show also told me that Charles Bronson can be an Indian political metaphor.
saubhik.chakrabarti@expressindia.com