"Just a few years ago, the corporate
media houses, including the multinational news corporations in India were euphoric
of the so called ‘growth’ of our economy and were celebrating Ambani’s, Tata’s
and the other modern lords of Indian capitalism. An average Indian or “aam
adami” was influenced by this gold rush which was very obviously accessible for
the privileged corporate at the expenses of the vast majority of our hard
working people.

"Corporate
media" is termed to refer the system of mass media production,
distribution, ownership, and funding which is dominated by corporations and big
businesses with a motive to make profit. In simpler words, the accumulating
money of huge proportions, in a corporate scale by making and selling News or
information.
Traditionally
the popular media like news paper, magazines, Radio and Television broadcast
was controlled both by private and public or state entities, a lot according to
the type of economy; in a closed economy where usually the state or the public
sector play an important role and subsequently their strong influence obviously
due to their ownership of the Media. Quite similarly in an open economy, the
crystal clear influence of private ownership in the media and in a mixed
economy both the public and private media exist together often serving their
own interests which frequently reflect through their selection of news and
equally important the distortion of news.
The printing
press dating back to the Holy Roman Empire around the midst of the 15th
century enabled the spread of Renaissance and triggered the democratization of
knowledge and the Enlightenment or Age of Reason. The printing press also set
off and revolutionised the production and the concept of daily news papers and
in its very beginning the news papers were mostly owned privately and was
circulated within the establishment network consisting rulers, their associates
and the other privileged like the traders, merchants, industrialists and the intellectuals
often from a wealthy background. Nevertheless, as the widespread availability
of the printing press and the following mass production of newspapers in
reduced costs resulted into a wider circulation among the public.
The printing
press were often privately owned in the beginning and hence the news papers.
The published news was duly selected to representing the interests of the socio
economically powerful groups and frequently took a conciliatory approach
towards the establishment henceforth reinforcing them. Lucrative markets were
created for sensational news and celebrities were created by the sensational
news for it to thrive. Science, technology and industrialisation poured in the
other sources of mass media including radio, Television, internet and its
online literatures.
The
political bias that was inherent within the mass media has hardly changed in
its fundamentals, even in this modern information age. The much researched
account of Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky’s “Manufacturing Consent: The
Political Economy of the Mass Media (1988)”, employs the propaganda model,
analyses the mass media- the news media in particular- and reveals that the
multimillion corporate possessed news communication media, the press, radio and
television are profit oriented businesses subject to commercial competition for
advertising revenue and profit.
Manufacturing consent uses the terms “distortion” or “editorial bias” as
an inherent part of the news reportage. The news that are being reported and
also how they are being reported are all direct outcomes of the profit motives,
commercial interests of those big media moguls’ and the level of its dependency
over the involved parties in the news reportage. There are also state-owned or more likely
state oppressed media institutions that serve the role of the propagandist for
the government/ state policies and also fulfil their need for public relations.
It is often
a Good News Procuring Practice to analyse the various stakeholders or the
interest groups involved in any particular bit of news of your concern. Corporate
and big businesses are funding the corporate media in India like anywhere in
the present world. Therefore the news would be obviously biased towards their
interests. In other words, this would encourage the corporate media, to spread
the news to favourable to the privately owned big business corporations and
multinationals which would be justifying privatisation of the Indian state
owned companies, deregulation of petrol prices, showcasing luxury goods in the
news channels, selecting and deselecting the news according to the interests of
those big businesses; and above all, lobbying among the millions of households
for the interests of the very tiny minority of those rich and powerful people.
Free,
politically neutral and non biased Mass media is essential for a healthy and
transparent democracy, from which the society could achieve the change and
development in both political and socio-economic relations. The mass media
could only be independent when it is publically owned under democratic workers’
control and also in the control of a wider community with the procurement of
news to be more decentralised where the concept of the freedom of the press
holds any meaning. Only then it could be the media of the masses.
-Sajith Attepuram
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