Disorientation of the media

Electronic and print media should play a more responsible role in sustaining and promoting democratic societies


M Zeb Khan April 03, 2023
The writer is a PhD in Administrative Sciences and associated with SZABIST, Islamabad. He can be reached at dr.zeb@szabist-isb.edu.pk

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Media has permeated our lives so much that now we cannot live without it. It gives us information, entertainment and views on personal and collective affairs round the clock. Modern media (print, electronic and social media), in its rush for increased market share and political influence, seems to have deviated from its social responsibility as a conduit of truth. Sensationalism, propaganda and biased reporting are gradually taking over sober and serious discussions and analyses even in the mainstream media. As a result, we have a staggering level of social polarisation, disorientation and chaos all around us.

In the past, family and teachers were the dominant, and most often the only influencers, for children growing up in a somewhat closed society. Today, the influence exerted by the broadcast media, Internet, newspapers and theatre is far greater and deeper. Children, who are now exposed to all kinds of media, unconsciously acquire values that are very different from those taught to them at home and in schools. Commercials and some infotainment programmes portray self-gratification as more desirable than self-control, materialism as more meaningful than spirituality and playing as more fulfilling than work. Modern advertisements are designed to appeal to emotions and create artificial needs for products.

Talk shows, which should have been otherwise platforms for gaining deeper understanding of issues and an arena for illuminating ideas, happen to be ruckus with hooting and shouting piercing ears. Many hosts instigate their guests to hit one another below the belt and hurl unfounded allegations as a shortcut to climbing the rating ladder.

Besides this, the hosts demand that their individual guests answer complex questions with simple ‘yes’ or ‘no’. If the guest tries to offer a balanced view on some controversial issue, the host dismisses it and offers his/her own silly explanation. He/she finally ends the programme after thanking the participants for a lively and thought-provoking discussion, and promises the audience a similar show next time. This vicious cycle has made the media industry literally mad in pursuit of material gains at the cost of social divisions and unbridgeable political polarisation.

Social media, in particular, has gone berserk. It was supposed to empower individuals and decentralise the flow of information but, sadly, it churns out fake and fabricated stories about important issues. Opinions are accepted as verified facts and people only look for information — echo chamber — which confirms their cherished beliefs. Contradictory evidence, even if authentic, is either filtered out with disdain or taken as supporting stuff for one’s claims. There are many outlets and fake accounts that keep producing new religions, new sciences and unbelievably new power structures.

In free societies, there is not much space and power available to governments and independent organisations to determine the direction and contents of social media. Even big organisations find it difficult to keep in check the misuse of their outlets. The only viable option is to educate individuals, especially children, about critical thinking. More than before, contemporary education should be grounded in morality and subjects like sociology, ethics and psychology. Logic should be given equal, if not more, importance in the curriculum at each level of education. In the absence of unreflective minds and uncritical attitudes, at a time when social media is turning us into addicts, our coming generations will be exposed to a new kind of intellectual slavery.

Electronic and print media should play a more responsible role in sustaining and promoting democratic societies. On the role of print media, Thomas Jefferson wrote: “The basis of our governments being the opinions of people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.” Asking crucial questions and reporting about policy choices honestly is how the people hold governments accountable. Honesty in analysis and reporting should be the core value of the media. Playing to the gallery and to the powers that be is toxic, both for the media and for a democratic society in the long run.

 

Published in The Express Tribune, April 4th, 2023.

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