Tag: Republic TV

  • Republic expands top deck

    Republic Media Network has expanded its top management team. Objective: “solidifying” its position for a “mega growth journey ahead”.

    Here are the higlights:

    • Arun Rawat takes over as the Nation Head for Republic Bharat
    • Satabadi Sharma Pathak takes over as the Head of Republic Kannada
    • Purnasha Sharraf takes over as the National Head of Republic Bangla
    • Abhinav Sharma takes over as the Head of Republic TV
    • Sanjukta Kapoor takes a leadership role in Business Branded Content
    • Joy Michael Dsouza takes a leadership role in Government Business

    Commenting on the appointments, Hersh Bhandari, CEO (Broadcast Business) of Republic Media Network said: “I am delighted today and wish the leaders all the very best on their new roles. We know they’re going to deliver exceptionally and take Republic Media Network to heights yet to be reached in Indian media. What’s particularly satisfying to me today is that Republic cultivates talent and unleashes them in positions of top decision-making. At a time that the Network is on the brink of a mega wave of expansion, we are confident that this team will shoulder the business objectives with passion, aggression, and innovation.”

  • India TV gets Republic’s Priya Mukherjee as Group Prez – Network Development

    By Our Staff
    Priya Mukherjee
    Priya Mukherjee

    The move has been doing the rounds of broadcast circles for a while, but it’s now official. On Saturday evening, India TV announced the appointment of Priya Mukherjee as Group President- Network Development. Mukherjee will drive domestic and global distribution for Linear TV and OTT.

    Mukherjee comes with over two decades of experience in broadcast distribution and marketing. She started her career with print at the the Indian Express and later moved to Discovery, Sony Entertainment Television, Network 18, Den Networks, Bloomberg Quint, Republic Media Network and GTPL. Mukherjee will report to Group CEO Vinay Maheshwari.

    Said Ritu Dhawan, Managing Director, India TV: “Priya brings to her position a series of stellar achievements and rich industry experience, which will further help us move strongly towards achieving our mission and creating new industry benchmarks.”

    Commenting on the appointment, Maheshwari added: “We are glad to have Priya on board. I am sure her rich experience of managing distribution will help India TV scale new heights”

    At Republic, Mukherjee was COO – Distribution, International Revenue and OTT and is said to have been key to the successful reach (and hence ratings) of its English and Hindi channels.

  • Vikas Khanchandani quits Republic. Hersh Bhandari to take charge as Group COO. Darius Maneckji is Business Head

    By Our Staff

     

    Vikas Khanchandani
    Vikas Khanchandani

    Republic Media Network Group CEO Vikas Khanchandani has decided to move on from the organisation. The departure is with immediate effect and MxMIndia has confirmed the development. It is not known where Khanchandani will be moving to.

     

    Meanwhile, Republic has announced a restructure of its management, effective immediately. Newly-inducted Darius Maneckji will report to Hersh Bhandari, who has been elevated to Group COO – Broadcasting Division. Bhandari will be incharge of the entire broadcasting businesses of the network.

     

    Hersh-Bhandari
    Hersh Bhandari
    Darius-Maneckji
    Darius-Maneckji

    Maneckji will be Business Head-Republic TV and Senior EVP. He will now lead the national operations for Republic TV, including the channel’s offices in Bengaluru, Noida, Gurugram, Kolkata and Mumbai. He has been National Sales Head in the past for Times Now and also National Sales Head for the English Movie Cluster at Turner International India.  Before onboarding with Republic TV, his last assignment was with TV Today.

     

    Arnab Goswami

    Said Arnab Goswami, Founder and Editor-in-Chief of the Republic Media Network: “The induction of strong business talent is part of the expansion of the Network and creation of a strong organizational base to take the plans forward,: adding: “I am excited about the new roles for both Hersh and Darius. The broadcasting division under Hersh will see rapid growth, like never before. Our digital business is being expanded by 100 percent and together with our Strategic Business partnerships, will be hived off into separate business divisions, each with their own leadership and goals. At a consolidated level, this should place us in a fantastic position to be the number one TV+Digital News company across the board in two years.”

     

    On his elevation, Bhandari said: “At Republic Media Network, we continue to consolidate and strengthen ourselves with speed for the growth that beckons us. I’m energised by the trust reposed in me by the Board, Management, and my colleagues, to help shape and deliver the next phase of growth. We think and move as one, shoulder-to-shoulder.”

    Added Maneckji: “I’m excited to join India’s fastest growing news Network. I look forward to working with one of the best teams in the business to ensure we continue to command and establish our leadership role in the English News genre.”

     

    Priya Mukherjee
    Priya Mukherjee

    Khanchandani is the second senior person in the founding team of Republic TV. Distribution head Priya Mukherjee had moved out last year. Both Khanchandani and Mukherjee were part of Republic from before it started in 2017.

     

  • Republic expands footprint in UK

    By Our Staff

     

    Republic TV, which is already available on Hotstar and Yupp TV in the UK market, has now added Distro TV pivoting to digital, OTT and smart TV distribution to serve the diaspora in the UK market.

     

    Commenting on the strategy, Vikas Khanchandani, Group CEO, Republic Media Network said: “Republic TV is a news media technology company and has been the front runner to make its streaming services available across smart phones and connected TVs with its partnerships with OTT, OEMs and Telco platforms both within India and globally. The pandemic has accelerated streaming TV consumption driven by news & sports.  It’s an opportune moment for us to pivot our strategy in the UK market as streaming is outpacing pay TV in UK.”

     

    Added Priya Mukherjee, COO – India Distribution head and International markets:  “The channel has performed much ahead of legacy players, reaching a peak of 421K and maintaining an average reach around 200K in the last quarter during the pandemic. Many platforms have approached us given the leadership position and the loyal audiences we built in the UK, in such a short time.  Our Distribution Capabilities, give us an opportunity, to approach each market differently and we are looking at all possible models that are best suited to our expansion plans.”

     

  • We’re No 1 by OTS, says Republic, quoting Chrome data

    By A Correspondent

     

    Given the recent controversies around ratings etc, the Republic Media Network finds itself with competition out to get at it. Especially on the all-important issue of ratings.

     

    Republic’s contention is that being free-to-air, its reach is phenomenal. And in order to drive that point home, it supplied us with Chrome DM data of over the last four years.

     

    MxMIndia has over recent years not reported on any Chrome DM findings, but given that Republic had a fair point in giving us the data on OTS (Opportunity To See), we examined it.

     

    This is what we got as part of a communique from Republic TV.

    Year Republic Times Now Difference
    Avg. of 2017 61% 65% -4%
    Avg. of 2018 66% 63% 3%
    Avg. of 2019 91% 53% 38%
    Avg. of 2020 86% 60% 26%

    Source: Chrome Live, Mkt- All India Urban, 2017-2020

     

    The Republic TV release added: “As seen the Republic TV OTS in Urban homes has been higher than Times Now since 2019 making it the largest available English brand in Urban Homes in India. Republic TV OTS has been higher than Times NOW since 2018. The distribution and availability of the channel has been extremely high in comparison to any other channel in the genre.  The gap has widened into “Reach” in 2019 and 2020 as the TRAI implemented the New Tariff Order making sure Republic TV’s free to air offering in English increased its footprint across homes through India.  It is very much evident from the chart that the share of news genre got expanded from 2017, post the entry of Republic TV.”

     

    Pankaj Krishna
    Pankaj Krishna

    Said Pankaj Krishna, Founder and CEO, Chrome DM in the communique: “After a point and irrespective of genre, the key differentiator amongst players within the genre boils down to the availability of content. Considering the fact that distribution is still contingent on a 1000+ variables (DPOs/ CNOs) and is one of the biggest cost centres for running a linear TV channel – unless of course it is a hugely appointment led genre, for instance for Hindi GEC. Most of the genres – be it News (Hindi/  English/ Regional), Music, Infotainment, the time spent per viewer limits to less than ten minutes a week and is mostly driven by channel surfing or flirting, if I may call it. A differentiator of 15-20% on distribution between any 2-3 players within a genre would probably be the factor deciding the lead in the consumption / viewership / ratings within the genre. LCN (logical channel number), Placement (where your channel falls), Neighbourhood (the channel that precedes you), the packages that you are on (whether your channel reaches 100% audiences and the penetrations of the packages that your channel is a part of) – all of these factors determine the OTS (Opportunity to See) or the availability of a channel which is the primary key factor in determining the dominance of one over the other.”

    Vikas Khanchandani

    Added Vikas Khanchandani – Group CEO Republic Media Network: “Republic Network has focused and delivered the largest reach platforms in its respective genres. The above data sourced from Chrome DM (also readily available across the industry) is yet another data point that reflects on the growth and leadership that our brand enjoys. There are multiple data points like the engagement of Republic TV on social media which is also highest within its genre reflecting the stickiness of our brand and reflective of high TSV that the brand enjoys. We have similar data points for our humongous consumption on OTT as our brand has very wide availability on connected devices and I am more than confident that we will continue to bring the largest English and Hindi news platforms for consumers and advertisers”.

     

    We chatted with Pankaj Krishna via WhatApp and asked him to validate the data. Our conversation:

    Us: Since I don’t track Chrome data on a regular basis, I would like to know if this data is good to be carried and inferred that Republic TV (English) has better OTS than Times Now. Or has it been sliced in a way that Republic OTS is seen to be better than Times Now when actually the converse is true?

    His answer: The data is fine. Also since Republic is Free to Air…

    Our revert: Thanks. Is there any data like this that could also place Times Now or any other channel ahead?

    Him: Negative – this is Universe data.

    Us, trying our luck: Given that broadcasters are known to slice data so that what is put across is favourable to them?

    Him: Correct. This can’t be discrete to cherrypicked data points

    Last one: Frankly, I don’t want to be seen having a bias in favour of any channel? 🙂

    Him: Same here…. I don’t have any inclination to any channel or newsroom or point of view- but beyond a point with proliferation of content, it does become a commodity – where availability plays a bigger role…

  • Is Group CEO Vikas Khanchandani paying the price for Republic TV’s journalism?

     

     

    By Pradyuman Maheshwari

     

    On Sunday, December 13, 2020, Republic Media Network Group Chief Executive Officer Vikas Khanchandani had stepped out on his morning walk in suburban Mumbai. A little after 8am, when he got back home, there was a police contingent waiting for him. He was arrested on the TRP Scam case that has been raging in the industry for a few months. There was some hope still since the matter was going to come for hearing in the presence of the Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, but rather than secure bail or release, he was remanded to police custody till tomorrow (December 15).

     

    Khanchandani is the fourth Republic TV employee who has been arrested by the Mumbai police including founder, editor-in-chief and managing director Arnab Goswami. Last week, he was summoned several times by the police for questioning.

     

    So what is Khanchandani’s crime?

     

    1. He is Group CEO of Republic Media Network, and is hence responsible for all business functions of the organisation. He reports to Arnab Goswami who is also managing director and the primary promoter.

     

    2. As per the Companies Act of 2013, the law clearly lists  the key managerial personnel included – in this order: The MD or CEO or Manager and in their absence: a whole-time director. These are followed by the Company Secretary and then the Chief Financial Officer. In Republic’s case, the MD and promoter is the key official, but guess arresting him again would be too hot to handle

     

    3. The police says that as Group CEO and to whom Chief Operating Officer Priya Mukherjee reported, Khanchandani instructed her and the team on all the allegedly illegal actions.

     

    4. Republic TV, as per the police claims, had allegedly indulged in activities that regulatory body TRAI (short for Telecom Regulatory Authority of India) frowns upon

     

    It may be noted that Khanchandani was arrested a day before his anticipatory bail application was to be heard by the Sessions Court in Mumbai. He was represented by Senior Advocate and Republic TV’s lawyer, Aabad Ponda.

     

    So what you have above is the official stand, but it’s clear that Khanchandani was arrested given the ongoing slugfest on between Goswami and the Maharashtra government and Mumbai Police. Both have been equally critical of each other, but Goswami has gone a step further to damn and provoke the government and the Police Commissioner. On air. In English and in Hindi.

     

    Logically, Khanchandani should have had the industry come out in support. This writer was among the first to do that, only to be ridiculed and questioned on Twitter that Khanchandani was party to all the excesses of Goswami on television. The media trial that happened post the actor Sushant Singh Rajput death and the manner in which Rajput’s friend and actor Rhea Chakraborty was being targeted ensured that even Goswami’s well-wishers (like this writer) turned against him.

     

    And then there is Goswami’s very open praise of the BJP-led NDA government’s policies and actions. While the channel owner may say that it’s his nationalism that governs him, it’s a clear pursuit of ratings (nothing wrong with it) and commerce at all cost that is driving him. Thankfully for him, the BJP is firmly in the saddle till mid-2024, but the result is that all the goodwill that the channel and its founder have had had has been lost. Khanchandani, as Goswami’s second-in-command, bears the brunt of this legacy.

     

    Sample the tweet by Raj Nayak, a senior mediaperson who is known to be a friend and mentor to Khanchandani: “I am really saddened by the arrest of my dear friend #VikasKhanchandani. We’ve been close for over 2 decades. I can vouch for his integrity. His only fault being at the wrong place at the wrong time and getting caught in the crossfire. Praying that he is safe and released soon.”

     

    I am really saddened by the arrest of my dear friend #VikasKhanchandani. We’ve been close for over 2 decades. I can vouch for his integrity. His only fault being at the wrong place at the wrong time and getting caught in the crossfire.  Praying that he is safe and released soon.

    — Raj Nayak (@rajcheerfull) December 13, 2020

     

     

    Let’s read this line from Nayak’s tweet again: His only fault being at the wrong place at the wrong time and getting caught in the crossfire.

     

    Clearly, there is nothing that’s left unsaid. Khanchandani is a good guy, but at the wrong place – Republic Media Network.

     

    So what must be done:

     

    1. Khanchandani, his family and friends and the industry must prevail upon Goswami to cease and desist from provoking the government and courts any longer. On Sunday, when the Court order came in, Goswami was on air and was virtually questioning the Court verdict. If it is examined for Contempt of Court and found to disobeying the judiciary, Khanchandani could have problems. In fact, if the government is provoked further, it will only delay the decision to free Khanchandani

     

    2. This is a personal and professional decision, but it’s time that Khanchandani and all right-thinking (right as in correct and not the politically right) people working with Republic Media Network weigh how their continuance in the organisation impacts their moral and legal standing.

     

    My tweet expressing sadness at Khanchandani’s arrest and assertion that he has a squeaky clean reputation had some who endorsed his professional standards but also drew some angry feedback. Sample this: “… the fact remains that he has been part of a hate factory that has been selling ads to promote more hate based on gaming the system because of inefficiencies”.

     

    Sad to see @republic TV CEO Vikas Khanchandani being arrested. I have known him for many years and can say he’s squeaky clean. Yes, he works with Republic. But is that his primary crime? @VickMaverick @rajcheerfull @TheAdClub_India @IAA_India

    — Pradyuman Maheshwari (@pmahesh) December 13, 2020

     

    Another comment said: “… would you say that he somewhere profited when the whole SSR debacle was taking place on his network, where the so called ‘guilty’ were charged even before a proper trial. Even if he did what he did while being aware of the right or wrong then I guess Karma’s a bitch.”

     

    The decision on what next is clearly with Goswami and Khanchandani. And whether Khanchandani spends two or more days depends on how Goswami conducts himself. On television.

     

    He was an excellent journalist, is well-educated, has impeccable social skills, but when he’s on camera and in his studio, he’s a different being.

     

    The Shiv Sena-led MVA government has such stalwarts like Sharad Pawar mentoring it. The fact that the combine could outwit a BJP with superpowers like Narendra Modi and Amit Shah speaks volumes for what they can achieve.

     

    Sadly, Khanchandani and his family are paying the price for all of Goswami’s actions.

     

    Pradyuman Maheshwari is a senior journalist and media commentator. He is also Founder and Editor-in-Chief, MxMIndia. His views here are personal

     

  • Shailesh Kapoor: Whose Ratings Are They, Anyway?

     

    By Shailesh Kapoor

     

    The last few weeks have seen eruption of a fresh debate around television ratings. Before the formation of BARC India, ratings-related controversies in the TAM era were frequent, and different broadcasters, at different times, expressed their discontentment privately and publically, with some like NDTV even taking the legal route. When the currency shifted to BARC India in 2015, these debates expectedly became less frequent. The key difference, of course, was that BARC India is an industry body, and not a private organisation like TAM.

     

    For the last five years, despite stray voices and uncalled-for government interference, there has been an overall sense of calm around TV ratings in India. But trust 2020 to challenge the status quo. One concern after the other, the ratings system has come under the scanner again in recent weeks.

     

    It started with BARC India’s decision to use an algorithm to remove the impact of landing pages on viewership. This evidently-controversial decision has not gone down well with several news broadcasters. Even as we await the unfolding of this contentious piece, the Peoplemeter-tampering controversy came to the fore, wherein the Mumbai police charged certain news channels, most noticeably the Republic TV network, of breach.

     

    In a large, pan-India panel that’s being managed manually at the last mile, some Peoplemeter homes being compromised is not such a surprising development. It’s bound to happen once in a while, and a swift and decisive response it all that such incidents needs, on behalf of BARC India.

     

    But such incidents bring the topic up in the media, and we know that questioning voices don’t worry much about facts and details anymore. By suspending channel-level ratings for the news genre, BARC India has, in effect, admitted there’s a need to get things in order. And that can, arguably, be called a constructive decision.

     

    t the events of the last two months have worked as a perfect trigger for the ever-eager I&B ministry and TRAI to step in. Last week, the ministry constituted a four-member committee to review the existing guidelines on television ratings agencies in India.

     

    The government’s interference in the television industry can be exasperating for any sane mind that has the industry’s best interest at heart. Under the excuse of protecting consumer interest, TRAI has interfered repeatedly by setting the price points and guidelines regarding pay TV subscription. Why TV industry even comes under TRAI is a larger question in the first place. But even if one ignores that by seeing TRAI and the I&B ministry or any other such body as a generic entity called the Government of India, the interference is a blatant violation of the principles on which a free market operates. Why are cinema and live event ticket prices not regulated? I hope I’m not giving them more ideas to widen their interference net, but the Government could have done well to stay away from areas it has no business of being a part of. But that ain’t happening anytime soon. In fact, the latest development, that online news portals and the OTT category will come under the I&B ministry, is a new cause of concern.

     

    The ratings committee has two months to put up its recommendations. Irrespective of how good a job they do of it, the direction in which this discourse is going is deeply problematic. It’s been a tough year for all industries, and television broadcasting is no exception. Hope some common sense prevails, and trigger-happy authorities stay away from shooting at will. Else, 2021 could spell some more trouble for the business. Trouble that, unlike the pandemic, is eminently avoidable.

     

     

  • Future tense for Arnab Goswami?

     

     

    By Pradyuman Maheshwari

     

     

    In early 2009, I was grilled by a hundred-odd students at the Jamnalal Bajaj Institute of Management on the role of Barkha Dutt and Rajdeep Sardesai in the coverage of the Mumbai terror siege in November the previous year. Student – mostly millennials –  were incensed with the way they covered the terror attack, and expected me to endorse their sentiments. I didn’t, though I did acknowledge that things weren’t done right.

     

     

    In the last few months, I am being quizzed similarly about the role of the media given the Sushant Singh Rajput death, and even before that the entire coverage of the Narendra Modi government and its actions and policies. An interview with Arnab Goswami a few months ago, where I thought I asked some direct questions, actually got me brickbats. Why the hell did I have to interview him? Why give him any importance, I was asked. A few thought I was being soft on him. And some believe that he is a friend.

     

     

    If a friendly acquaintance can be called a friend, then so be it. I have admired his skills as a businessman. And he was indeed a really sharp journalist.

     

     

    I use a ‘was’ because I too honestly believe he has ceased to be a journalist, in the way I define it. The dictionary definition of journalism though doesn’t require a practitioner to be conducting oneself in a non-partisan manner. Journalism doesn’t mean that you have to be honest, fair and sincere. People who deploy paid content also fashion themselves as journalists, publications which sell content for cash by a just-for-the-sake-of-putting-it disclaimer also say they are doing great journalism. Current affairs is as much about the Bihar as it’s about Ranbir Kapoor and Alia Bhatt. Chill, I used these two filmi names for want of a better example. Stay here, there’s no khaas khabar about them.

     

     

    I read the statement of Arnab Goswami’s wife that was doing the rounds on the internet. At a purely personal level, I feel for his family. Though I wonder whether they felt the same when Republic TV was gunning for Rhea Chakraborty. Did they worry about the actor being tortured, beaten up, whatever? I am convinced that what Arnab is being subjected to is vendetta. The Maharashtra government is out to get him. And try and hope he is finished. Ensure Republic TV and Republic Bharat go off the EPG.

     

    Just about everyone I’ve interacted with believes he deserves to be punished for attempting to demolish Chakraborty. Just about, not all.

     

     

    But when Arnab Goswami was granted bail on Wednesday by a Supreme Court vacation bench comprising Justice DY Chandrachud, one of the most erudite and stylish judges of our time, and Justice Indira Banerjee, they surely corrected what was legally wrong.

     

    Corrected a wrong, because I believe the arrest was misplaced, and from what some learned folks tell me, it wasn’t done in the right way.

     

    Goswami had filed a special leave petition seeking interim bail. He was arrested by the Raigad police in Maharashtra and was moved to Taloja jail over the weekend. Goswami had been in judicial custody in a case regarding the suicide of a Mumbai interior designer and his mother in 2018. Earlier, Goswami’s plea to the Bombay High Court was rejected and he was asked to approach the Sessions Court. The abetment to suicide case was just a bahana.

     

    I had thought Arnab Goswami would mend his ways. Would ease the shrill. But a few hours into watching his channel had me convinced that he was all set to up the ante. The picture you see above and in the slideshow are grabs from RepublicWorld.com. The way Arnab dared Maharashtra Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray to arrest him is surely not going to be taken very kindly. The Supreme Court judges are reported to have asked the Maharashtra government not to take all of Arnab’s provocations seriously. Even if UT chills, the Sena cadres are known to be a sensitive lot.

     

     

    If Arnab gone to the newsroom, hugged a few of his staff, shed a tear and choked while speaking, he would earned a million wah-wahs. The number of tweets would’ve galloped ahead to 4x what the telecast generated.

     

     

    I have been asked a dozen-odd friends to request Arnab to take it easy. Not result in saying something that would appear to be interfering in the investigations.

     

     

    But if his performance last evening was any indicator, there’s just no way he’s going to change. In fact he is all set to go on a rampage. Arnab has also announced his foray into regions  and an international channel as well, but that was announced last year as well. In fact one report said the foray was to be start in Jan 2020. That was pre-Covid, so no downturn could’ve impacted. I am sure the regional foray will happen, esp if it’s digital and streamed.

     

     

    The concern here is not about meeting promises and announcements. He has announced a 17-month window. Which is one-and-a-half years. So, if Republic Media Network continues have a leadership position, it will happen sooner.

     

     

    The worry is that if Arnab continues to take on the Maharashtra government and if his channel takes up most of primetime reporting on what its bossman and now a senior executive are going through, then the ratings are bound to suffer.

     

     

    There were worries about advertisers backing out if Arnab would be off-air for too long. That thankfully for Republic will not happen. But it’s critical that the channel starts airing news beyond its legal tangles. And if the channel management and its minority shareholders really worry about its main man not getting embroiled in court cases, appearances etc, then the channel content and the business will suffer.

     

     

    The ball is clearly in the courts of Arnab Goswami and the Maharashtra government. We think there should be climbdown of sorts at both ends. Will it happen? I doubt. Thackeray & Co want Arnab to apologise. He won’t. Goswami will want the Police Commissioner to be transferred. They won’t do that.

     

    Future tense indeed.

     

     

     

  • Ranjona Banerji: Party propagandist Arnab Goswami’s plywood martyrdom

    By Ranjona Banerji

     

    Moses was a reporter working with the Tamilan TV channel in Tamil Nadu. On the night of November 8, he was brutally hacked with sickles near his home on the outskirts of Chennai. He was rushed to hospital, but it was too late. Moses was 29. He had been covering illegal land sales in the area and his murder appears to be connected to his work.

    https://www.thenewsminute.com/article/29-year-old-reporter-covering-illegal-land-sale-hacked-death-near-chennai-137229

    Moses is one of many journalists across the world who are attacked and often killed for doing their jobs. Their deaths receive almost no recognition, not least from within the journalistic community nor in the world at large, barring international organisations like the Committee to Protect Journalists or Reporters Without Borders.

    The harsh truth is because they are not important enough in the larger scheme of attention-grabbing high-profile “journalists” or they are too regional, too local, too remote. Also, people are just too cynical and uncaring. Whatever the reason, Moses will never get the same amount of attention, or forget that, Moses will not get even a 100th of the attention, being given to that imposter Arnab Goswami of Republic TV.

    Moses was killed in the line of duty. Goswami was arrested in an abetment to suicide case from 2018 and has been screaming blue murder about a scratch he received on his arm ostensibly due to “police brutality”. Did I mention that Moses was hacked to death by sickles because he was investigating illegal land sales?

    Yet, there are those amongst us who plead that we must support Goswami because he is being hounded by a vindictive Maharashtra government. Probably, he is. The current dispensation ruling Maharashtra is not known for its love of journalists nor even for its great regard for freedom of expression. But you could also argue that it was Goswami who gave them the handle. The case he has been arrested for its related to non-payment of dues for work he had commissioned and the subsequent resultant suicide of the man who named Goswami in his suicide note.

    There is the additional problem that the earlier government in power in Maharashtra, headed by Devendra Fadnavis of the BJP, did not investigate the case fully. And the fact that the current chief minister Uddhav Thackeray of the Shiv Sena is at loggerheads with his former allies. Plus, the Maharashtra government had made it clear that the “abetment to suicide” case would be reopened. And the pressure being put on them by the victim Anvay Naik’s family, especially his daughter who has provided evidence of intimidation by Goswami. And let’s also add that Goswami’s channel also has complaints of TRP manipulation and fraud against it.

    No possible argument can therefore be made that Goswami has been targeted for his “journalism” inasmuch that he has even practised journalism for the past seven years. It is hard to imagine what argument must be made to convince us that Anvay Naik and his family do not deserve justice because Goswami is a person of “stature” as Union minister Ravi Shankar Prasad kindly informed the people of India. Or that TRP fraud must now be deemed acceptable.

    Let Goswami play the Indian legal system on his own time and money and plot his plywood martyrdom with the help of his party and fellow propagandists.

    Senior journalist Smruti Koppikar explains the ins and outs and underlying details of the Goswami case in this insightful analysis:

    Journalists can cover the spectacle. No need for tears.

    **

    The American media appears to have reset itself for the new presidency after the tumultuous Trump years. CNN has been airing the quite funny spectacle of Fox News reporters correcting their pro-Trump anchors over election fraud. The Earth rotates. Worms turn.

     

    Ranjona Banerji is a senior editor and commentator. She writes on MxMIndia every Tuesday and Friday. Her views here are personal

  • Comment: Not right to arrest Arnab!

     

    By Pradyuman Maheshwari

     

     

     

    On issues like these, we can’t be sitting on the fence. It’s important to say where we stand. Upfront. Unambiguously.

     

    But before we do that: We must say that we don’t believe in or endorse Arnab Goswami’s journalism. Friend, Consulting Editor and our founding columnist, Ranjona Banerji, in fact goes a step further: she feels Arnab doesn’t practise journalism.

     

    It’s ditto with many other journalists and news media ventures. Sadly.

     

    Since Republic TV has been in the business, MxMIndia has helped produce 10-odd A&M shows for the channel. But that was purely a business decision. We didn’t go to town that we did it. But we must add here: no one then said they don’t want to be interviewed by the channel. They enjoyed the reach it offers.

     

    We admire Arnab Goswami’s business sense. He was our MxMIndia Mediaperson of the Year for 2017, thanks to the super success that he made of the channel. He’s a journalist, yes, but also a very shrewd businessperson.

     

    So enough of reinforcing our standpoint on Republic. Yes, we think it’s incorrect to arrest Arnab Goswami. It is clearly a blow to the freedom of the media, and the attempt is to muzzle and damn him. Even finish him as a journalist and close his media company.

     

    There may be many who say that Arnab asked for it. By damning the Uddhav Thackeray, Sharad Pawar, Sonia Gandhi belligerently in a way that only he can, he wasn’t going to get away with it easily.

     

    Then there is this senior police official who is now reported to have called him a hawala operator. It was clearly incorrect for the Mumbai Police Commissioner Param Bir Singh to indict Arnab in a press conference, without adequate proof. But in the height of the Sushant Singh Rajput case, Arnab also asked for the CP’s sacking.

     

     

    However, as we said earlier, it is incorrect to arrest Arnab Goswami. The 2018 suicide abetment case which had been reopened by the Maharashtra home minister, a fact he tweeted about in May 2020 We are surprised that the Republic TV founder, with Senior advocate Haresh Salve as his advisor, did not seek anticipatory bail. Even when the case first came up in 2018, it was considered very sensitive and there were fears of an arrest.

     

    Home Minister Amit Shah and a variety of political leaders, lawyers and other biggies have damned the arrest. Some of them weren’t as vociferous on the attack on freedom of speech when a few others were put behind bars for dubious reasons. That though is a different story. Arnab Goswami must be released. If his 20-year son was also assaulted, check the CC TV footage and someone must pay a price for that.

     

     

    But, Arnab also must take it easy. Practise your journalism. Take on the world. Expose people. But don’t go on to demolish them.

     

     

    For, by taking that route, he could well get caught in the crossfire.

     

    Editor’s Guild of India and News Broadcasters Association issue statements:

     

  • Hansa clarifies on Republic payments

    By A Correspondent

     

    We’ve held back on the communiques that we have received around Hansa in the past. But this one is important. Hansa Research has stated that it has had no business dealings with Republic TV and no payment has been made to the channel nor received from the channel. This was in response in a statement reported in the media, where the Mumbai police has alleged that Hansa Research has made a payment of Rs 32 lakh to Republic TV which is incorrect.

     

    Said Shekar Swamy, Group CEO Hansa, in the statement: “Our group company Hansa Vision India Pvt Ltd is in the advertising business. It purchases advertising time and space in various TV channels, newspapers, radio, digital platforms, and other media regularly for its clients. This is normal, routine business. The last time Hansa Vision has purchased advertising time in Republic TV was two years ago for the period from Sept 2017 to Oct 2018 for a value of Rs 108 lakhs. The Mumbai Police is perhaps incorrectly linking this with the current TRP related investigation.”

     

    Asserts the statement: “In the past two years, as part of its business, Hansa Vision has purchased TV advertising time from 55 TV channels for a total value of Rs 13.42 crs on behalf of its clients. In 2019 and 2020, Hansa Vision has not bought any advertising time from Republic TV.”

     

    Swamy also added that: “The Hansa Research CEO and team have been repeatedly called by API Mr Sachin Vaze of the Crime Branch, and asked to stay till late hours. They are cooperating with the investigation and have submitted various documents as asked for. Hansa Research and the people working for this company, have nothing to do with the advertising activities of the group company Hansa Vision.”

     

     

  • Ranjona Banerji: Republic TV: Journalism, Bad/ Annoying Journalism or no Journalism at all?

    By Ranjona Banerji

     

    This is not a sinkhole I’m falling into. The great liberal intelligentsia might have to force itself to appear “fair”. The new Editors Guild of India might have words of advice and opprobrium for “both sides” of the battle. But this trap is not for me. And like all traps, this one is extremely dangerous for the future of journalistic credibility.

    It is, of course, the fallout of the Television Ratings Points scam, Republic TV’s role in rigging TRPs, the police action against Republic TV and the judiciary’s comments. Arnab Goswami and his channel have moved courts here and there to wriggle out of the TRP scam they are being investigated for and also for the despicable assault on the character of actress Rhea Chakraborty during the massive drama they concocted over this spurious desire for “justice” for actor Sushant Singh Rajput.

    The Editors Guild walks a fine line, where it is “pained” to see hundreds of FIRS filed by the Mumbai Police against employees of Republic TV. That done, it ends on a stronger note as far as the innumerable transgressions of Goswami and his channel are concerned: “It is high time the channel behaves responsibly and not compromises (sic) the safety of its journalists as well as hurt the collective credibility of media”.

    The Chief Justice of India, SA Bobde, meanwhile observed that the Supreme Court would like an “assurance of responsible reporting” from Republic TV.

    https://www.barandbench.com/news/litigation/want-assurance-responsible-reporting-republic-tv-cji-sa-bobde

    This an extremely noble sentiment but it is patently impossible for Republic TV to fulfil. It is neither responsible nor does it display any semblance of reporting as understood by any journalist.

    Is Republic TV a journalistic enterprise at all? It may employ journalists or former journalists but in its very core, in its practice, in its behaviour and its presentation, it is an assault on the very notion of journalism. It is not just bad journalism or annoying journalism or low-level journalism, it is not journalism at all.

    But by being part of the mass media – as in anything that broadcasts or sends out matter into the public domain – Republic TV has managed to seriously taint the image of journalism, even really bad journalism, everywhere.

    Is there a distinction to be made between the really bad journalism practised by Times Now, Zee News, Aaj Tak, India Today and sometimes other “news” channels as well, apart from several journals? After all, most of them were completely despicable in their targeting of Chakraborty and in building up a completely dangerous, destructive “campaign for justice” after the death of Sushant Singh Rajput. But many of them, unlike Republic TV, did not abandon all elements of journalism all the time.

    How does a lay person tell the difference? Last week, the rumour mill was buzzing with the “news” of civil war in Pakistan and pitched battles on the streets of Karachi between the police and the army. But as you tried to investigate, the main sources of this “information” were BJP propaganda outlets like OpIndia and so on, which have no connection with journalism. They picked the notion from a tweet and then built up stories without any corroboration, fact-checking, reporting, editing. All pure fantasy based on one political incident in Pakistan.

    Sadly, given the abdication of responsibility and total capitulation by many senior journalists and journalistic organisations when it comes to making clear the differences between news organisations and propaganda machines, the general public has been left to fend for itself. This capitulation to the regime by senior journalists and traditional news outlets in power has also severely destroyed the credibility of the journalistic media as much as the propaganda machinery’s appropriation of journalism.

    In its earlier avatar, before the complete change of guard within The Editors’ Guild, let us not forget on 2018 how long and how much pressure it took for the Guild to comment on the sacking of journalists at ABPNews for daring to criticise Narendra Modi. But how quickly the Guild jumped to defence of Smita Prakash of ANI because Rahul Gandhi called her a pliable journalist. How promptly the Guild tried to save Goswami, also in 2018 but how less well-known journalists were largely ignored in spite of the might of the state falling on them.

    Of course, the collapse of journalism cannot be attributed solely to the likes of Republic TV. The screenshot is from a Times of India front page last week. As we can see, the head of the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh, that shadowy organisation that controls the BJP but has no Constitutional role, gets prominence as the main story of the day over all else.

    When you open the doors like this, just about anyone is free walk in.

     

    Ranjona Banerji is a senior journalist and commentator. She writes on MxMIndia every Tuesday and Friday. Her views here are personal. She can be reached via Twitter at @ranjona