May 1 to 14, 2004
By
Sathya
Saran
Let's praise rather
than censure - it's more creative

HOW many column centimetres do you think were spent on debating
the life of Lakshmi Pandit? And how many television minutes? On prime time, over
news channels...
IF ever anyone wishes celeb status, all one has to
do is get on the wrong side of some rule.
SO it was that Lakshmi
Pandit, crowned ever so recently as Femina Miss India-World 2004, joined the
ranks of Harshad Mehta, Salman Khan, Sushil Sharma, the 'tandoor' case accused,
and the Apeman of Delhi as a seven-day wonder.
LITERALLY hours after
one channel discovered that she had stated that she was a married woman in a
document to her landlord, Lakshmi Pandit's name was a household word. And
brandishing an invisible tar brush, channel after channel, and tabloids too,
painted her black and called her a liar.
CARRIED onward by their own
momentum, channels went on to ask the 'aam junta', people who gloried in their
two seconds of sound-byte fame, to opine about whether a married woman had a
right to contest a contest that by its very name, assumed the contestants were
single.
RIGHTEOUS indignation, I-don't-really-care, live-and-let-live
opinions were floated over the airwaves.
AND with no proof, the media
decided that Lakshmi was guilty, and deserved national contempt.
I AM
not condoning the fact that she did not play fair with the organisers of a
contest that today has an entire nation's eyes turned on it. In fact, despite
some columnists stating that the Femina Miss India Contest has become a jaded
affair, the fact remains that it does fuel the dreams and aspirations of an
entire generation of girls that dreams of wearing the crown and stepping on to
an international stage.
I AM also not condoning the fact that Lakshmi
proved wanting on other counts. For whatever mistakes she made, she has paid
heavily.
I AM only writing this because I am aghast at the way we
journalists seem to live only on blood and gore these days.
LOOK at
the way the Sachin-Dravid divide was created. At least the media tried its best.
Why did Sachin go public with his ire? Was he right in doing so? Why did Dravid
end the match robbing Sachin of his chance of a double century... such questions
almost overshadowed the joy of a sweet victory. If Sachin and Dravid had their
differences on the latter's decision, it would have been so much nicer to let
them sort it out in the privacy of their locker rooms, instead of making it a
national issue, and fanning a smouldering ember into a full fledged
fire.
IT is as if the media has no joys left in positive news.
Everything has to be wrong for it to make it to the headlines.
AND
news is that which is fresh, bloody and full of meat.
THUS the media
ignores follow-up stories about alleged murderers who walk free, scams that have
yet to get their perpetuators booked, rapists who have ruined the lives of
innocents... and chases a story that will really not make a difference to
anyone's life.
TODAY, it is a Lakshmi or a Dravid; tomorrow... does
it matter?