Media of India

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Publicity poster for the film Raja Harishchandra (1913) at Coronation Hall, Girgaon, Mumbai.

Media of India consist of several different types of Indian communications media: television, radio, cinema, newspapers, magazines, and Internet-based Web sites. Many of the media are controlled by large, for-profit corporations which reap revenue from advertising, subscriptions, and sale of copyrighted material. India also has a strong music and film industry. India has more than 70,000 newspapers and over 690 satellite channels (more than 80 are news channels) and is the biggest newspaper market in the world - over 100 million copies sold each day.[1]

The first Indian media were established in the late 18th century with print media started in 1780. Auguste and Louis Lumière moving pictures were screened in Bombay during July 1895; and radio broadcasting began in 1927.[2] Indian media—private media in particular—have been "free and independent" throughout most of their history.[3] The period of emergency (1975–1977), declared by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, was the brief period when India's media were faced with potential government retribution.[3][4]

The French NGO Reporters Without Borders compiles and publishes an annual ranking of countries based upon the organisation's assessment of its Press Freedom Index. In 2011-12 India was ranked 131st out of 179 countries, which was a setback from the preceding year,[5] while Freedom house, a U.S. based NGO rates India, in its latest report, as "Partly Free".[6]

Overview

The traditional print media, but also the television media, are largely family-owned and often partake in self-censorship, primarily due to political ties by the owner and the establishment. However, the new media are generally more professional and corporate-owned, though these, too, have been acquired or affiliated with established figures. At the same time, the Indian media, viewed as "feisty," have also not reported on issues of the media itself.[7]

Print

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The headquarters of Doordarshan, for which experimental telecast started in September 1959. Regular daily transmission followed in 1965 as a part of All India Radio.

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The first major newspaper in India—The Bengal Gazette—was started in 1780 under the British Raj by James Augustus Hickey.[3] Other newspapers such as The India Gazette, The Calcutta Gazette, The Madras Courier (1785), The Bombay Herald (1789) etc. soon followed.[3] These newspapers carried news of the areas under the British rule.[3] The Bombay Samachar, founded in 1822 and printed in Gujarati is the oldest newspaper in Asia still in print.[8] On May 30, 1826 Udant Martand (The Rising Sun), the first Hindi-language newspaper published in India, started from Calcutta (now Kolkata), published every Tuesday by Pt. Jugal Kishore Shukla.[9][10]

The Times of India was founded in 1838 as The Bombay Times and Journal of Commerce by Bennett, Coleman and Company, a colonial enterprise now owned by an Indian conglomerate.[11] The Times Group publishes The Economic Times (launched in 1961), Navbharat Times (Hindi language), and the Maharashtra Times (Marathi language).[11]

In the 1950s 214 daily newspapers were published in the country.[3] Out of these, 44 were English language dailies while the rest were published in various regional and national languages.[3] This number rose to 2,856 dailies in 1990 with 209 English dailies.[3] The total number of newspapers published in the country reached 35,595 newspapers by 1993 (3,805 dailies).[3]

The main regional newspapers of India include the Malayalam language Malayala Manorama (published from: Kerala, daily circulation: 673,000), the Hindi-language Dainik Jagran (published from: Uttar Pradesh, daily circulation in 2006: 580,000), and the Anandabazar Patrika (published from: Kolkata, daily circulation in 2013 ( ABC Jan - Jun 2013 ) : 11,93,000).[12] The Times of India Group, the Indian Express Group, the Hindustan Times Group, the Hindu Group and the Anandabazar Patrika Group are the main print media houses of the country.[12] The Anandabazar Patrika group runs the oldest surviving Hindi newspaper in India.

Newspaper sale in the country increased by 11.22% in 2007.[13] By 2007, 62 of the world's best selling newspaper dailies were published in China, Japan, and India.[13] India consumed 99 million newspaper copies as of 2007—making it the second largest market in the world for newspapers.[13]

Dailies in India

  1. Dainik Jagran (Hindi)
  2. Malayala Manorama (Malayalam)
  3. Daily Thanthi (Tamil)
  4. Sakshi (Telugu)
  5. Eenadu (Telugu)
  6. Namasthe Telangana (Telugu)
  7. Dainik Bhaskar (Hindi)
  8. Gujarat Times(Hindi)
  9. Prajavani (Kannada)
  10. Amar Ujala (Hindi)
  11. Hindustan Times (English)
  12. The Times Of India (English)
  13. Lokmat (Marathi)
  14. Rajasthan Patrika (Hindi)
  15. Sanmarg (Hindi)
  16. Anondobazar Patrika (Bengali)

Ref: Indian Readership Survey [10]

  1. Rashtriya sahara (urdu)

Magazines in India by readership

  1. Vanitha (Malayalam)
  2. Pratiyogita Darpan (Hindi)
  3. Samanya Gyan Darpan (Hindi)
  4. India Today (English)
  5. Saras Salil (Hindi)
  6. Swathi weekly (Telugu)
  7. Geetura weekly (Telugu)
  8. AnupamaWomen's Monthly Islamic Magazine (Telugu)
  9. Fire (Malayalam)
  10. suthesamithran(Tamil)

Ref: Indian Readership Survey [11]

Broadcasting

Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee (office: 19 March 1998 – 22 May 2004) placed the development of Information Technology among his top five priorities and formed the Indian National Task Force on Information Technology and Software Development.

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Radio broadcasting was initiated in 1927 but became a state responsibility only in 1930.[14] In 1937 it was given the name All India Radio and since 1957 it has been called Akashvani.[14] Limited duration of television programming began in 1959, and complete broadcasting followed in 1965.[14] The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting owned and maintained the audio-visual apparatus—including the television channel Doordarshan—in the country prior to the economic reforms of 1991.[12] The Government of India played a significant role in using the audio-visual media for increasing mass education in India's rural swathes.[3] Projected television screens provided engaging education in India's villages by the 1990s.[3] In 1997, an autonomous body was established in the name of Prasar Bharti to take care of the public service broadcasting under the Prasar Bharti Act. All India Radio and Doordarshan, which earlier were working as media units under the Ministry of I&B became constituents of the body.

Following the economic reforms satellite television channels from around the world—including BBC, CNN, CNBC, and other foreign television channels gained a foothold in the country.[15] 47 million household with television sets emerged in 1993, which was also the year when Rupert Murdoch entered the Indian market.[16] Satellite and cable television soon gained a foothold.[16] Doordarshan, in turn, initiated reforms and modernisation.[16] With 1,400 television stations as of 2009, the country ranks 4th in the list of countries by number of television broadcast stations.[17]

On 16 November 2006, the Government of India released the community radio policy which allowed agricultural centres, educational institutions and civil society organisations to apply for community based FM broadcasting licence. Community Radio is allowed 100 Watt Effective Radiated Power (ERP) with a maximum tower height of 30 metres. The licence is valid for five years and one organisation can only get one licence, which is non-transferable and to be used for community development purposes.

Communications

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The Indian Government acquired ES EVM computers from the Soviet Union, which were used in large companies and research laboratories.[18] Tata Consultancy Services – established in 1968 by the Tata Group – were the country's largest software producers during the 1960s.[18] The 'microchip revolution' of the 1980s had convinced both Indira Gandhi and her successor Rajiv Gandhi that electronics and telecommunications were vital to India's growth and development.[19] MTNL underwent technological improvements.[19] Between 1986–1987, the Indian government embarked upon the creation of three wide-area computer networking schemes: INDONET (intended to serve the IBM mainframes in India), NICNET (network for the National Informatics Centre), and the academic research oriented Education and Research Network (ERNET).[20]

The Indian economy underwent economic reforms in 1991, leading to a new era of globalisation and international economic integration.[21] Economic growth of over 6% annually was seen between 1993–2002.[21] The economic reforms were driven in part by significant the internet usage in India.[22] The new administration under Atal Bihari Vajpayee—which placed the development of Information Technology among its top five priorities— formed the Indian National Task Force on Information Technology and Software Development.[23] Internet gained a foothold in India by 1998.[18] India had a total of 100 million Internet users—comprising 8.5% of the country's population—by 2010.[24] By 2010, 13 million people in India also had access to broadband Internet— making it the 10th largest country in the world in terms of broadband Internet users.

India had a total of 34 million fixed lines in use by 2011.[25] In the fixed line arena, BSNL and MTNL are the incumbents in their respective areas of operation and continue to enjoy the dominant service provider status in the domain of fixed line services.[26] BSNL controls 79% of fixed line share in the country.[26]

In the mobile telephony sector, Bharti Airtel controls 24.3% subscriber base followed by Reliance Communications with 18.9%, Vodafone with 18.8%, BSNL with 12.7% subscriber base as of June-2009.[26] India had a total of 880 million mobile phone connexions by 2011.[27] Total fixed-line and wireless subscribers reached 688 million as of August 2010.[28]

Motion pictures

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The history of film in India begins with the screening of Auguste and Louis Lumière moving pictures in Bombay during the July 1895.[29] Raja Harishchandra—a full-length feature film—was initiated in 1912 and completed later.[29] Alam Ara (released 14 March 1931) —directed by Ardeshir Irani—was the first Indian movie with dialogues.[30]

Indian films were soon being followed throughout Southeast Asia and the Middle East—where modest dressing and subdued sexuality of these films was found to be acceptable to the sensibilities of the audience belonging to the various Islamic countries of the region.[31] As cinema as a medium gained popularity in the country as many as 1, 000 films in various languages of India were produced annually.[31] Hollywood also gained a foothold in India with special effects films such as Jurassic Park (1993) and Speed (1994) being specially appreciated by the local audiences.[31] Expatriates throughout the United Kingdom and in the United States continued to give rise to an international audiences to Indian movies, which, according to The Encyclopædia Britannica (2008) entry on Bollywood, "continued to be formulaic story lines, expertly choreographed fight scenes, spectacular song-and-dance routines, emotion-charged melodrama, and larger-than-life heroes".[32] Present day India produces the most films of any country in the world.[33] Major media investors in country are Yash Raj Films, Dharma Productions, Aamir Khan Productions, UTV Disney, Reliance Entertainment. Most of these productions are funded by investors since there is limited banking and credit facilities maturity in India for motion picture industry. Many international corporations, such as Disney (UTV), Viacom (Network18 Studio), and Fuse Global (AKP) have entered the nation's media industry on a large scale.

Complaints

Some Indian media, controlled by businessmen, politicians, govt. bureaucrats, are facing criticism for biased, motivated reporting, and selective presentation. Recently, after the devastating Earth quake in Nepal on 25 April 2015, in spite of India helping, tweets from Nepal trended effectively saying, "Go home, Indian Media".[34] Journalists cover Businessmen, Filmstars & other Intentional topics more for TRP. Disturbed by corruption, Delhi chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal suggested on 3 May 2015 to have public trial of Indian Media.[35][36][37] On 8 May 2015, I & B Minister, Arun Jaitley echoed similar saying "Flood of channels but dearth of facts".[38][39] Off late a lot of mainstream media channels have been accused of printing and telecasting unverified and biased news which they retracted later. In few instances content from Twitter's parody accounts were cited as a source. Indian mainstream media has often been accused for showing sensationalized news items.[40][41][42]

See also

Notes

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  2. See Thomas 2006 and Burra & Rao 2006.
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 Thomas, 105
  4. On the whole, the press functions with little government censorship, and serious controls have been imposed only in matters of national security, in times of emergency, or when it is deemed necessary to avoid inflaming passions (e.g., after communal riots or comparable disturbances) —Schwartzberg (2008)
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  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2013/11/india-media-20131119151238287298.html
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  9. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Thomas, 105–106
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Thomas, 106
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Schwartzberg (2008)
  15. Thomas, 106–107
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Thomas, 107
  17. CIA World Factbook: Field Listing – Television broadcast stations.
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 Desai (2006)
  19. 19.0 19.1 Chand, 86
  20. Wolcott & Goodman, 568
  21. 21.0 21.1 Sharma (2006)
  22. Wolcott & Goodman, 564
  23. Wolcott & Goodman, 564–565
  24. See The World Factbook: Internet users and Internet World Stats.
  25. CIA World Factbook: Rank Order – Telephones – main lines in use.
  26. 26.0 26.1 26.2 From the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India see Study paper on State of Indian Telecom Network and Telecom Regulatory Authority of India Press Release No. 89 /2006.
  27. CIA World Factbook: Rank Order – Telephones – mobile cellular.
  28. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  29. 29.0 29.1 Burra & Rao, 252
  30. Burra & Rao, 253
  31. 31.0 31.1 31.2 Watson (2008)
  32. Encyclopædia Britannica (2008), Bollywood.
  33. Nation Master: Films produced (most recent) by country
  34. [1]
  35. [2]
  36. [3]
  37. [4]
  38. [5]
  39. [6]
  40. [7]
  41. [8]
  42. [9]

References

  • Burra, Rani Day & Rao, Maithili (2006), "Cinema", Encyclopaedia of India (vol. 1) edited by Stanley Wolpert, pp. 252–259, Thomson Gale, ISBN 0-684-31350-2.
  • Chand, Vikram K. (2006), Reinventing public service delivery in India: Selected Case Studies, Sage Publications, ISBN 0-7619-3489-8.
  • Desai, Ashok V. (2006), "Information and other Technology Development", Encyclopaedia of India (vol. 2) edited by Stanley Wolpert, pp. 269–273, Thomson Gale, ISBN 0-684-31351-0.
  • Schwartzberg, Joseph E. (2008), India, Encyclopædia Britannica.
  • Sharma, Shalendra D. (2006), "Globalisation", Encyclopaedia of India (vol. 2) edited by Stanley Wolpert, pp. 146–149, Thomson Gale, ISBN 0-684-31351-0.
  • Thomas, Raju G. C. (2006), "Media", Encyclopaedia of India (vol. 3) edited by Stanley Wolpert, pp. 105–107, Thomson Gale, ISBN 0-684-31352-9.
  • Watson, James L. (2008), Globalisation, Encyclopædia Britannica.
  • Wolcott, P. & Goodman, S. E. (2003), Global Diffusion of the Internet – I India: Is the Elephant Learning to Dance?, Communications of the Association for Information Systems, 11: 560–646.

External links