P A R T   -   2

C H A P T E R   -   2 1

M A S S   M E D I A

The Commission proposes to briefly deal with five agencies of mass media in chronological order on the basis of their period of introduction into society:

  1. Books, magazines, periodicals and journals;

  2. Newspapers;

  3. Cinema;

  4. Radio;

  5. Television.

Mankind has another fundamental need beyond the physical requirement of food and shelter —the  need  to  communicate  with  fellow  human  beings. The  urge  for  communication  is  a primal one and in our  contemporary civilization, a necessity for survival.

Nature has endowed man with the capacity of benefiting from the experience and  knowledge gathered  by  others .  Beginning  from  the  primitive  man’s  discovery  of  fire  to  the  latest  scientific  inventions  based  upon  years of research  ,  the  direct  experience  of  the  people  that  pioneered  the  events  are  being  made  available  through  books  and  other  literature in writings of others. Starting with  palm leaves to write upon with the help of iron nails, man has reached refinements of  great degrees.

Writings cover a wide range — prose, poetry, essays and the like — and are the carrier of human thought. Government of the day would find it difficult to control and regulate literary activities though it can certainly motivate the authors, poets and literary critics to ordinarily follow the approved track adopting the national code of conduct of decency and ethics which of course eulogise patriotism, shun violence, condemn terrorism and the like. They should accept the obligation of not disturbing the national ethos while giving expression to their thoughts. A good and well written book generates the true spirit when properly read and assimilated. Some good books leave indelible impression that last for life. Such books should be put into large circulation and some of them have to be made a must in every curriculum and later picked up as life’s constant companions. These books when read and re-read bring in new openings of human thought and help revelation of the real truth. Every author while enjoying full liberty to express his genuine thoughts, should have the obligation to keep up to the approved standards of decency and not to affect the social ethos of the nation.

Newspapers are a very powerful media for formulation of opinion and in the matter of educating the people. By circulating information about the incidents taking place all over the world they help the reader in keeping himself informed. They also help the reader to have a formulated opinion about problems he faces or is likely to face. The spying eyes of the newspapers very often help the truth about many public issues being discovered. Except for booming or under-rating, newspapers do perform a great social service. In a free country with independence of Press, this media plays a great role in formation of public opinion so much necessary for the proper functioning of the democracy. Newspapers with all their freedom otherwise must also remain bound by the code of national conduct and decency. While observing these, they must publicly support them and create the taste for their universal acceptance. Everyone in the country — be it Government or the opposition, employer or employee, teacher or student, business man or cultivator — must accept the code of conduct and look for enforcement of  his rights only after he has performed his duties. India, the great country of ours, belongs to all of us and every citizen is entitled to live here assured of all the rights.

The Press must take upon itself the task of creating the true national spirit. When it comes to the question of national interest, everyone, including political parties, must keep the issues above personal, parochial, sectional or party interest. In India, unlike some other countries, the Press is not State owned though some news agencies are. The national cod of conduct and decency should be accepted by the Press and enforced through the Press Council wherever necessary. The Press should not even grudge a suitable legislation, if thought proper. It may be reiterated that the national code should be above party considerations and every-one, irrespective of political affiliations, position held and other considerations, should be bound to adopt and follow the same. A powerful moral force should be built up which no one — low or high — would dare ignore and exhibit contrary conduct.

The  cinema  initially  introduced  in  the thirties of this century as silent motion pictures , has expanded into  big business  throughout  the  country.  Once  confined  to  cities  like  Bombay , Calcutta  and  Madras  for  the  purposes  of  production  of  cinematograph films , scores  of  new centres  have  now  developed  and  today  the  annual  outturn  of  production  in  every  language  runs  into  dozens  of  films .  Advancement  of  science  has  brought  several  new  techniques  into  the  industry .  In  view  of  the  large  profits  this  business  started  returning ,  it attracted  many  talented  people  in  every  direction  of  it  and  exhibition  halls  spread  into  every  nook  and  corner  of  the  country .  The  cinema  soon  pushed  out  the  theater  and  the  stage  is  finding  it  difficult  to  maintain  itself  today.

The  film  industry  all  over  the  world  is  a  very  powerful one —more so  in  the  field  of  influencing  the  masses .  Perhaps  till  now  in  India  films  continue  to  be  the  largest  entertainer .  The  impact  of  the  cinema  is  both  quick  and  deep  on  the  viewer .  Matinee  idols  grow  in  the  film  world  and  they  introduce  new  fashions  in  looks ,  in  make  up ,  in  dress ,  in  walking  style  and  the  like .  Overnight  hundreds  of  thousands  of  people  adopt  these  innovations  and  new  fashions  become  current  and  spread .  The  Hindi  film  Sholay  introduced  a  new  style  of  assault .  In  several  parts  of  India  soon  after   the  exhibition  of  this  film  the  manner  of  assault  also  changed and  adopted  the  film  style.

The  impact  of  the  cinema  on  the  mass  mind  is  indisputable .  though  films  many  good  things  can  be  brought  home  to  millions  of  cinema-goers  and  without  any  additional   labour , expense  and  involvement  of  time  the  desired  switch  over  can  be  achieved .  Instead  of  any  useful  contribution  from  the  films ,  society  suffers  today  from  the  adverse  effects .  Most  of  the  films  exhibit  pictures  of  chaotic  living , feuds  and  challenge  to  social  order . Action  stories  narrating  disorderly  lives ,  criminal activity ,  killing  and  rank  terrorism  become  box  office  hits . Film Censoring  has  been  debated  over  four  decades . Government  have  appointed  Committees  and  set  up  expert bodies .  Many  have  a  feeling  that censoring  is  not  on  proper  lines .  Appropriate  guidelines  are  to  be  fixed  up  and  the  same  have  to  be  strictly  enforced .  Entertainment  need  not  be  the   sole  consideration  of  the  film  industry . Education  along  with  entertainment  is  a  better  goal .  Lives  of  great  men,  stories  with  a  lesson  to  learn ,  portrayal  of  patriotic  acts  and  heroism ,  exhibition  of  character ,  victory  of  virtue  over  vice  and  the  like  can  very  usefully  form the subject-matter of films for exhibition to the Indian community. Government may sponsor encourage films on these lines. No film without an ultimate moral to tell or exhibiting vandalism and meaningless killings should be allowed to be screened. Writing  about violence in cinema, Philip French wrote in “The Twentieth Century” ( Winter 1964-65):

“One can have lived the quietest test of lives and yet feel that through the cinema one has looked upon the face of war and civil disruption, participated in bank robberies and murder, witnessed a hundred gun-fights and brutal assaults. Of all aspect of the cinema, the treatment of violence is perhaps the most complex, controversial, and in many ways central. It is only equalled as a controversial issue     by the offer closely related question of sex. The extreme views of its effects are on the one hand those of certain social observers who see it as one of the principal causes of crime and delinquency, and on the other of  those psychologists who believe that it plays an almost essential cathartic role in diminishing aggression”.

When society is at a breaking point it should be the obligation of Government to ensure that nothing is done which adds to its woe. There is perhaps a lot of pressure from the industry in support of the demand for more of freedom and less of regulation. To concede freedom and allow the industry to earn profits by producing and exhibiting  box-office hits regardless of social suffering as a direct out-come thereof and invest endless energy and resources to eradicate the effect by stamping out the same are meaningless purposes. The wrong side easily picks up and the filth introduced by the undesirable films will require herculian efforts for countervailing the situation. No community can tolerate such a position. This is an aspect which should engage immediate attention of  Government.

The remaining two mass media agencies — so far as India is concerned, totally controlled  by  the Central Government — are the All India Radio and Doordarshan.

The All India Radio is just completing its 50 years of its existence. Since independence there has been considerable expansion and the Radio has come closer to the common man. Progress of science has helped manufacture of cheap receiving sets. Government have also abolished the licence fee for sets with single or two bands. Such receiving  sets  are  now  found  everywhere. With the increase in  the  broadcasting  stations( while in 1947 there were 6, in June 1986 their number is 91), the entire country has now come within the reach of All India Radio.

The programming pattern must now change. It must take over the responsibility of feeding the proper material to the young minds. In the recent past the commercial service of All India Radio ( Vividh Bharati) has helped spread of cine music and most of the people posses a receiving set to tune in to such music. Some music is perhaps understandable but both the regular as also the commercial service must take upon themselves the responsibility of covering nation building programs. For the last one year or so, there is some move in this regard. There is some emphasis on national integration: some on social welfare and on depiction of sacrifices for good causes.

The Commission was told by the Director-General of All India Radio that All India Radio programming is done to meet the motto of “ inform, educate and entertain”. The commercial service emphasises entertainment. The regular service handles information and education. Education is all important provided it has the proper orientation. Every item should have the aim of igniting in the listener either one or more of the following — a burning sense of patriotism, of holding the nation and the country together, of  building up character and of improving the level of the life of the individual and of the society. All India Radio enjoys the position of monopoly. It does not have to cater to the demands of the listening public; on the other hand it is in a position to mould their taste. This need not be done suddenly and in a perceptible manner. On the other hand, the designing hands of the experts can slowly tune the listeners’ mind to the new pattern  All India Radio develops.

Doordarshan is the latest in the field. The first center opened in Delhi in September 1959. Today there are 16 programming centers and 174 transmitting centers and as the Director-General of Doordarshan claims, coverage of Doordarshan network is of 250 million people living in different parts of the country.

Television has perhaps the greatest of influence on the viewer. While seeing a film at an exhibition hall could be a selective act and children could be left behind if the film to be seen was not suitable for them, that does not apply to the television. Usually the television is placed either in the drawing room or the bed room of the house where conditions permit that type of living. Otherwise the T.V. is found in the one-roomed apartment used by all the members of the family including children. Almost similar is the case even in a  two-roomed apartment. The television are more seen by children than elders. Long before the office-goer father returns home or the mother is released from her household activities or she too returns from her office, the children gather before the T.V. and start witnessing the programs. A well-placed father told the Commission in casual conversation that T.V.has distracted the attention of the children from studies; another, this time a University Professor, remarked that if the children showed half the sense of regularity they exhibit for the T.V.programs in regard to their studies, they would do an excellent job. The Commission does not claim any expertise on the subject now being dealt with but the evil effects of T.V.viewing on a young mind required to be indicated. In the United State of America this aspect has been examined on more than one occasion. T.V. came to the States at least one score of years before it appeared in India.

Some of the major  researchers had  indicated that  there  existed   a  strong  relationship  between  filmed  violence  and  human  behaviour .  Earlier  the  U.S.  Senate  Committee  in  its  interim  report  in  1968  had  come  to  the  same  conclusion :

“A relationship  has  been  conclusively  established  between  televised  crime  and  violence  and  anti-social  attitudes  and behaviour  among  juvenile viewers .  Television  programs  which  feature  excessive  violence  can  and  do  adversely  influence  children .  Further  such  adverse  effects  may  be  experienced  by  normal  as  well  as  by  the  emotionally  disturbed  viewers .”

Dr.  Albert  Bandma  of  Standford  University  and  Dr. Leonard  Berkowitz  of  Wisconsin  University  made  deep  studies  on  this  subject  and  their  report  shows  that  normal  person  who  see  violent  films  exhibit  violent  behaviour  and  that  violent  presentation  can  induce  aggressive  behaviour  on  the  part  of  any one .  Violence  in  films  is  most  dangerous to  young  children.

The  National  Commission  on  the  Causes  and  Prevention  of  Violence  which  conducted  an  indepth  investigation  of  violence  on  TV  concluded   thus :

“The  preponderence  of  the  available  evidence  strongly  suggests,  however , that  violence  in TV  programs  can  and  does  have  adverse  effects  upon  audiences—particularly  child  audiences.  TV  enters  powerfully  into  the learning  process  of  children  and  teaches  them  a  set  of  moral  and  social  values  about  violence  which  are  inconsistent  with  the  standards  of a  civilised  society .”

From  the  U.S.  Congressional  Records  the  following  proceedings  may  be  usefully  extracted :

“ TV’s  ability  to  influence  the  behaviour  of  its  viewers  can  hardly  be  disputed . Advertising  firms  spend    billion  dollars  a  year  on  that  assumption .  The  high  paid  corporate  officers  of  the  network  enthusiastically  agree  with  them :  yet  they  react  with  feigned  surprise  when  any  one  suggests  that  their  programs  on  violence  influence  young  people . .....By   the  time  the  average  American  child  reaches  the  age  of  15,   he  has  witnessed  18,000  individual  murders  on  the  TV set .  This  does  not  include  the  beatings,  stabbings ,  muggings , rapes  and  other  forms  of  mayhem  connected  by  our  image  makers in  the  TV  film  factories .”

Then  came  the  report  of  the  Surgeon  General  Commission  which  attempted  to  minimise  the  baneful  influence  of  TV .  The  conclusions  of  the  report  were  challenged  on  many  scores .  Congress-man  John  M. Murphy  referring  to  that  report  said :

“ They  ( Congressmen )  were  deeply  convinced  that  the  constant  display  of  violence  on  the  news  media  has  serious  effects  on  the  young :  that  children  and teenagers  become  convinced  of  the  proposition  that  might  constitute  right :  that  law  can  but  be  enforced  by a  pointed  gun , a  knife  or  a fist.”

Though  the  Surgeon General  Commission  reported  a  modest  association  between  viewing  of  violence  and  aggression,  the  general  view  in  the  U.S.  is  that  violence  on  TV  has  brought  about  positive  increase  of  violence  in  American  society.  A  major  complaint   in  U.S.  today  is  that  the  mass  media  conditions  children  to  accept  violence  and  proper  solution  to  human  problems.

As already pointed out, TV came to the U.S. about 20 years before it got into India. Economic affluence has helped TV to find  its way into almost 98% homes in that country. Though it will take a good number of years for TV to spread to that extent into Indian homes, the rate of expansion today is quite rapid. With the fall in TV price, abolition of licensing and increase in imagination catching programs, TV would soon become a common man’s possession.

The idea of separating children programs and making them violence free is an impractical one. Children cannot be kept away from the programs and in fact, as already stated, they are more punctual than adults in viewing programs.

Television has, therefore, to shun violence and refrain from abusing the young mind. Today one of our greatest problem is violence in society. Should Government spend money for exposing the young mind to imbibe violence? Not attending to the youngsters in the past has brought the community into the low level of today. Again, taking advantage of the Government monopoly, if TV pollutes the young mind of today, tomorrow will  be darker and terrorism which we dread today will become the order of those times. The Commission had occasion to point out the Director-General of Doordarshan about a commercial serial on the TV entitled ‘ Target’ which was out and out violent. Perhaps, the item was discontinued but the Commission had been told that it was a commercial program. For the viewers commercial or non-commercial classification hardly matters. The Government agency must take great care to abjure violence. The Commission is of the view that in the face of the Article 51A (i) of the Constitution requiring citizens to ‘ abjure violence’, public exchequer cannot be utilised for spread and teaching of it. This must deserve immediate attention. TV provides immense possibilities for training the young mind in the appropriate directions. All attention should be devoted and fixed in that direction right now.

In a world where standards are falling, institutions are collapsing and human qualities are vanishing, everyone in society has to put in great efforts in the right line, first to stop the downward trend and then, raise the same up. Every Indian must feel proud to have been born in India and remember what the great German Scholar Max  Muller said of India:

“ If  I were to look over the whole world to find out the country most richly endowed with all the wealth, power and beauty  that nature can bestow — in some   parts a very  paradise on earth — I should point to India. If  I were asked under what sky the human mind has most fully developed some of its choicest gifts, has most deeply pondered on the greatest problems of life, and has found  solutions of some of  them which well deserve the attention even of  those who have studied Plato and     Kant — I should point to India. And I were to ask myself from what literature we, here in Europe, we who have been nurtured almost exclusively on the thoughts of Greeks and Romans, and of one Semitic race, the Jewish, may draw that corrective which is most wanted in order to make our inner life more perfect, more    comprehensive, more universal, in fact more truly human, a life, not for this life only, but a transfigured and eternal life — again I should point to India”.