This is Not Funny. This is Not Journalism. This is Disgraceful.

Posted on January 16, 2011
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Media Matters, Women
83 Comments
Total Views: 76669

Adil Najam

I have been forwarded a link to this video over a dozen times since yesterday. Like some of those who forwarded this to me, I do not find this video funny. And I certainly do not see any journalistic value in it. In fact, I find it rather disturbing, sometimes disgusting, and entirely disgraceful. I don’t really want you to see the video, but I do want us all – and especially our electronic media managers – to think real hard about what we are doing in our totally laissez-faire (the better phrase would be ‘mader, pidder, aazad’) attitude to what goes out as information, infotainment, and entertainment these days.

Note that the so-called “reporter” Shahid Hussain of Samaa TV tells us nothing about what the protest march is about or for. He finds that irrelevant and assumes everyone else will too. He accuses everyone of ogling and leering at the young nurses and is interested only in the fact that it is a march by young women. Why they march in protest, who they are, what their demands are – all of that matters not to him. I, for one, find all that relevant, but have no idea what this is about. Nor is there any condemnation of the ogling that he is supposedly ‘reporting’; only an expression of his own amusement and rather cheap and demeaning puns (‘nazaroun kay hifazati hisaar‘)!

Yet, the only thing that can be said with certainty is that it is the reporter Shahid Hussain and Samaa TV (through their cameras and narration) who are ogling indecently, misrepresenting and demeaning young working women in Pakistan and possibly also lying in what is supposed to be a “news” report (Do we have any evidence that the rickshaw actually got stuck because the driver was ogling? Did the policemen actually tell the reporter that this duty was good for tucking in their tummies and that they would like more such duty? Or is all of this just made up for by reporter’s wild imagination?)

I am not a prude. I think I can enjoy a good laugh and appreciate the pressures of live television with good humor. Nor would I ever think of advocating media clampdown or censorship (I was a working journalist during Zia-ul-Haq’s time when censorship was real as well as ugly; my commitment to a free media is absolute and unwavering). But I do know what is clearly not funny and what is disgusting. This is both.

This is not a call for clampdown or censorship; this is just a call for basic decency and reasonable taste. This is about the media making bad choices. Really bad choices. And making them again and again. These are not just ‘mistakes’. These are willful and deliberate attempts to sensationalize, trivialize, sexualize and dehmanize important issues.

With the case of Salman Taseer’s murder and the role of the media in fueling hatred so recent, would this not be the time for the media to think introspectively about what values they are promoting and what prejudice they are spreading? Some will no doubt accuse me to making too much of this. Maybe I am. But at a time when we have seen the destructive power of the media and of anchors to ruin lives, instigate frayed nerves, and spread venom in an already fractured society, it is the responsibility of the media to monitor itself.

The issue may be different as might be the stakes, but the dynamics of instigation, of misinformation, of legitimizing anti-social behavior and of dehumanization are exactly the same. And so is the damage to society as a whole. What are the values being promoting here: The disrespect of women? The trivialization of worker concerns? Raw chauvinism? Even if these are values already in society, is it the role of the media to trivialize, evangelize and celebrate them?

All those who habitually lie to themselves about how we have great respect for women in our society; well, this is the respect we have!

There is a great line in the movie Spider-Man: “With great power comes great responsibility.” The media in Pakistan today has assumed great power. I wish it would also learn to demonstrate some responsibility.

83 responses to “This is Not Funny. This is Not Journalism. This is Disgraceful.”

  1. Viol-8-r says:

    ATP , 4.6 Years of age
    5712 readers
    1777 follower
    72381 comments

    One Question and Only.

    What change it brought to the life and daily living of a poor and common citizen of Pakistan; who is living an unsecured ; far below the poverty level life every day. And there is NO HOPE at all any time soon in the next 5-10-15-20 years.

    Comment, Argue, Criticize, Argue, criticize everything and anything and hope that it will change by itself one day.

  2. Viol-8-r says:

    PRESS is just a mere reflection of what you don’t want to see but it is there and the you need a JUSTIFICATION to BLAME somemone else and prove yourself INNOCENT.

    But my deal Pakistani fellows, don’t try put some fog on the mirror and deny the FACT.

    FACE it and CHANGE.

    Start from your HOME

    Don’t worry about the Global and who is going to be the Governer and what President said today.

    There 999 steps to fix until you reach step 999 and it will be fixed automatically.

  3. Viol-8-r says:

    It is the bare & hard TRUTH. This is what you are going to reap now when you keep on sowing for the past 55+ years.

    Now Blame the Press, Media and every body else except yourself.

    Who is media ? it is you and me

    Now you feel it hurts, it is going to hurt even more, even going to hit where it hurts a lot.

    Everybody including you and me are all involved. It is me and you who let this culture get developed and until today when mirror on the wall shows the outcome, it is disgrace, how come?

    Feel it, absorb it and change it; not by writing few lines on internet, and hope that you did what you could do. Change yourself first, then around you then come out CLEAN and ask the community to change.

  4. Ismat says:

    @Hermoon Gill
    So, you are saying it is the nurses fault!
    I am sorry that is not acceptable and as sexist as the reporter. Other reports of the event clearly stated that the nurses were protesting the non-payment and reduction in salary. Why shouldn’t they! The question is why is this reporting reporting the “nazarey” rather than the issue. Just because they are young women and nurses and he has his own frustrated stereotypes of deal with!

  5. Sana Saleem says:

    Media interprets things in its own way. I have been noticing that it tries to produce thrill in nothing. Many times they don’t know or cover the real scenario !

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