POPPING
THE ELECTION CHAMPAGNE
In the
West, elections are fought as much on TV as in the ballot booth. The more
telegenic and articulate a politician, the more likely he/she is to swing
votes. Appearances count, and thats why it does seem as if the election
coverage on our channels is practically centered around Sonia and Priyanka
Gandhi they make better visuals.
The
hope was that Indian television would absorb the professionalism of Western
television, minus the tabloid-ish frivolity, but that hasnt happened.
If there is a short cut to get viewers and that involves reducing serious
issues to trivia, television will do it.
But then
our TV programmes are dead earnest even when they are trivial. The irreverence
of say a Jay Leno is lacking, as is the incisiveness of newspaper coverage
that quarries our past promises, manifestoes ignored and of course pictures
to illustrate everything. Television hasnt been around long enough
to accumulate enough visual material.
Wars, elections
and other natural or man-made disasters always spell boom time for the television
industry. During the last elections, psephology and election coverage had
come of age on Indian television, thanks to the entry of satellite channels.
While politicians were fighting over constituencies, channels were fighting
for a bigger slice of the viewership cake. Apparently, Indian audiences are
now even more open to real infotainment, and the elections came at an opportune
time to test just how ready they were to accept news and current affairs
programmes in large doses.
This
time, everybody was better prepared, since they had foreseen the fall of
the unstable government and imminent elections. It is not surprising that
the 1998 elections caused the birth of two channels devoted to news and current
affairs STAR News and the Zee India TV, the new incarnation of EL
TV.
STAR News
channel has bagged Prannoy Roy and his excellent team plus, according to
reports, the best equipment money can buy apparently $10 million worth.
They also have programmes like Village Voice and Walkabout that capture the
mood of voters a mixture of anger and resignation.
BBC, CNN,
NBC are expected to cover the elections with the usual competence, but
entertainment and general-interest channels like Zee, Sony and TVI, also
climbed on to the election bandwagon with exclusive, and some imaginative
shows relating to the elections.
But it is
really not their fault that most of our politicians do not have telegenic
personalities. They neither look good on TV, nor do they speak well. So most
interview and debate shows rely almost entirely on the skills of the
presenter/moderator.
A
revelation this time has been the emergence of Javed Akhtar as television
luminary. Face Off, the interview show he presents alongwith Pritish Nandy
is an example of in-depth research, precise questioning and good television
on DD no less! (Interestingly, an insider reports that both Akhtar
and Nandy go on air absolutely unprepared and manage the questions solely
on the basis of their own reading and memory which makes the show
doubly commendable).
The
Javed-Pritish duo does not use the velvet glove approach, or give the interviewee
a chance to wriggle out with facile replies. More interviewers like that,
and we would have better informed and more eloquent politicians on television.
Not the line-up of usual suspects Atal Bihari Vajpayee, LK Advani,
Sitaram Kesri, Mulayam Singh Yadav and an overkill of IK Gujral and MS
Gill.
The other
high profile team of Vinod Dua and Mark Tully on Chunav Chunauti 98
(Sony) seemed to have gone on air without adequate preparation, it would
seem, and without really getting a handle on what was required to grab the
attention of viewers, snowed under a glut of election related
programmes.
But
in spite of its flaws (who is interested in what parties have to offer
do they have anything to offer at all?), Chunav Chunauti 98 benefits
from the experience of Dua and Tully and their ease before the cameras, which
comes from long years of working with the medium. And Dua may once in a while
be stumped by a smart interviewee, but he is a very effective moderator of
debates.
The Zee
Network came up with some interesting concepts The India Votes series
had funky stuff like Yehi Hai Politics doing take-offs on politicians, Poll
Top Ten, using the countdown format to present the important events of the
week. They managed to line up experts like M J Akbar, Udayan Sharma for the
debates and had extensive campaign trail coverage.
A mix of
the serious and the facetious is perhaps the best bet, since people are seeing
these elections as a bit of a bad joke.
STAR TV
went for the big names Madhu Trehan on Newstrack, Vir Sanghvi focussing more
on political issues on his excellent A Question Of Answers, Rajat Sharma
on Awaaz, Karan Thapar doing Special Session and Tavleen Singh being hands-on
as always with Ek Din Chunav Ka.
Other
media stars like Nalini Singh, Dilip Padgaonkar and Arun Shourie are splashed
on other channels, forcing viewers to perhaps stop channel surfing for a
while and watch what they have to offer.
Then there
are those smart little spots with film and sports stars and other celebs
exhorting viewers to vote wisely.
However,
all channels concentrating on election specials are faced with the tough
task of getting through the apathy of viewers. This is a cynical election,
with the public really past caring about who comes into power and
how.
The real
excitement will happen during the vote-counting and post-poll coverage.
Thats when the most pessimistic viewer will watch to see which way
the country will go in the coming months.
But news
and information doesnt stop when there is no mega-event happening.
After the elections, it would be up to the news channels to get viewers hooked
and keep them there even where isnt election glue to do the job for
them. |