Take the current aviation tragedy. Here’s how we have gone about it.
First to arrive on the scene, metaphorically speaking, were Twitter aviation experts. It’s a great medium where everyone seems to be brimming with knowledge about everything, from agriculture to nuclear strategy to, in this case, an aviation tragedy.
It is of course a minor irritant that most of these aviation experts are as knowledgeable about flying as Huckleberry Finn would be about particle physics. But since life is all about being spirited and character is not the same thing as 140 characters, most would not put up to be put down even if someone could, in theory, encapsulate the entire cumulative knowledge of aviation and shove it down their throats.
In this, dear reader, and if you were to bear with me, they remind me of Shadwell, the subject of Dryden’s Mac Flecknoe and one who is ready to “wage immortal war with wit”!
Says Flecknoe, King of Nonsense: Shadwell alone, of all my sons, is he/Who stands confirm'd in full stupidity. /The rest to some faint meaning make pretence,/But Shadwell never deviates into sense./Some beams of wit on other souls may fall,/Strike through and make a lucid interval;/But Shadwell's genuine night admits no ray,/His rising fogs prevail upon the day...
Allah be praised!
Next to come were TV reporters. As I wrote many years ago, “TV is the new god in Pakistan, the camera its thunderbolt”. But this god doesn’t sit atop Mount Olympus, it resides in Hades and reminds me of what disgraced US president Richard Nixon once said about the media. “People in the media say they must look at the president with a microscope. Now, I don’t mind a microscope, but boy, when they use a proctoscope, that’s going too far.”
Nothing and no one is spared. Forget the living, not even burning corpses are spared. Add to this the very impressive IQ of these monkeys and you would have Comedy Central at its best if the situation in which they appear, jumping up and down, were not so tragic and grotesque.
Take this question. X is lying in hospital, injured, having just survived a bomb blast: “What did you feel when it happened?” Here’s another: X’s loved one has just died in a crash. The genius reporter asks: “How do you feel?”
I am still waiting for someone to kick one of them in the short and curly and then ask how he felt. To be honest I have some other suggestions too but they fall in the category of the unmentionable and I don’t want my editor, a rather mild gentleman, to fall off his chair.
Meanwhile, we have a problem. One newspaper congratulated its TV channel for being the first to break the story of the crash. How long before such morbid sense of competition will get someone to actually arrange a tragedy to be the first to report it?
To be fair this morbidity is not confined to the Pakistani media, more appropriately TV channels. Most are familiar with Evelyn Waugh’s great work, Scoop, which criticised and satirised Fleet Street. One of the themes of Waugh’s satire was — and remains true to wit — that when not much is happening, the media would try to make something happen to get a sizzling copy across. Lords Copper and Zinc of Daily Beast and Daily Brute become, in this scenario, archetypes of what we have in today’s world, the owners and publishers of media houses. By the same token we have spineless editors like Daily Beast’s Mr Salter who can never say yes or no but will use phrases like “Definitely, Lord Copper” and “Up to a point, Lord Copper”.
The tail, going by the film Wag the Dog, begins to wag the dog when it gets smarter than the dog.
Finally, we have the government. The best depiction of its efficiency and priorities is the story about the chairman of Islamabad’s Capital Development Authority, who took the blackbox and cockpit voice recorder home so he could present the two things, reports suggest, at a press conference. And pray, what the hell has the CDA chairman got to do with an air crash investigation? Why was the site not immediately cordoned off? Why were media people and others not kept off the site, which should only be accessed by authorised personnel? Footage shows people going to the site and walking in the debris as if it’s a theme park. And as one friend, an exceptional reporter, said to me: “I can bet you a month's salary whatever could be carried away easily has ended up with Raja Bazaar's kabariyas.”
One moronic reporter was reporting the “fact” that the debris hadn’t been cleaned and there was the danger of an epidemic breaking out. His sources: his own genius and a few SOTs of illiterate dwellers. He didn’t realise that until all evidence is collected from the site, there can be no cleaning up. Of course what is required but hasn’t been done by the authorities is to cordon off the area and not allow anyone to get in. Instead, we have unauthorised people loitering about and reporters going around with cameras and demanding of the rescue teams why this or that was not being done.
Much else can be said and should be about how easy it is in fact to be efficient but that requires a separate treatment. For now, between the twitting twitterati, illiterate people, a cannibalistic media and an utterly inefficient government, we have just enacted another comedy of the grotesque.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 25th, 2012.
COMMENTS (21)
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I felt physically sick watching stupid journalist and other members of the media trying to show where the plane had landed in the most obtrusive way possible. I have never been so disgusted before, please can you send this article to the likes of ARY etc, or better still let us make them sit and watch, and ask them 'could you have done this better.?'
Great piece. This also needs comparison with the rescue operation in Siachen. It is interesting that see the stark difference in media coverage of a civilian and a military effort. While the media praises efforts being made by military authorities, despite low on success, efforts on the civilian sides, would receive extremely negative coverage, even if these were better than the current state of affairs at Gayari.
And no one is really asking what are our soldiers doing there from the military authorities (notably ISPR) the way our civilian government is pusshed and dragged through mud.
Excellent piece
Dear Ejaz,
As usual, a well-written objective-oriented article carrying a strong message from; who else but, Ejaz Haider! However, the question is "would this make any impact on the Morons?" I doubt it! While one may optimistically expected that with passage of time, the morons will attain some sensibility and force themselves to be a responsible sensible and caring journalists brimming with maturity, one may not expect this to happen in near or foreseeable future. However, with catalytic journalists like yourself one may expect the natural process to speed up a bit. We can only hope that in near future there are more catalysts added in the system so that we may also reap the benefits of positive journalism.
Every news is breaking news on our channels. Pakistan is trapped in vicious cycle of crisis, that we have forgotten not only media ethics, but everything that should be done according to the situation. Not only the area should have been cordoning off, but the expert aviation analyst should also have reached to the spot for investigations, when every evidence will be swiped off, them a foreign team will be invited to prepare a report with “No Finding” except telling you the number of causalities. Are we really living in times, when highly qualified journalist are in dire need to be given training on reports, or they have been prone to add spices on news, being raised in conventional families. Or they really want others to feel bad portraying emotions of bereaved, without realizing the intensity how hard it could be on them, on their most fragile moments. Pakistan, is few steps ahead of turning into a revolutionized nation, if bloggers and analyst will be given chance to rule over nation. It’s really important to ponder attention of media personnel to worn on their reporting ethics being staying at humanized context.
The worst (and the most disgusting) part was watching one of these idiotic reporters asking a crying child of maybe 7 who's father just perished in the bhoja tragedy "beta, abbu yaad aa rahen hain"? - It was downright disgusting to see these reporters with absolutely no idea of journalism ethics using the victim's traumatized responses and grievance to get some emotional mileage in their report. Pushing the camera on the face of the victim's families is not journalism, it is called being mentally deprived of all ethics. Have some respect for the victim's families.
As for media ethics,this article should first and foremost be read by "Express News" itself !
This is really pathetic to ask the families of the victims, how do you feel now.
http://fazoolstuff.blogspot.com/2012/04/pakistani-media-going-to-irresponsible.html
I am happy that no one is ranting the old song of " CIA/RAW conspiracy " for the cause of the crash. Though there were lapses, not attributing 'foreign hand' in the crash is a good start. Praise the lord !!
Excellent analysis. Well written. I live in US and compare this event to similar situation here. First I see cordoning off of the crash site and NTSB ( Nation Transport and Safety Board) flying to the site within hours notice and start investigation. System put in place to handle such emergencies kicks-in without anybody 'taking notice', 'president/PM instructing to speed-up recovery', talk of judicial commission, putting people on ECL and all the chaotic nonsense.
Question is do we learn/will we learn?
Why are we afraid of the mirrors?
TV cameras show us our faces and when get horrified by looking at ourselves we blame the mirrors. We can not, and will never be able to get rid of the mirrors - they are here and will be there for all times to come, and in fact will appear at all places that we have been trying to hide and will show all the happenings and the behaviors.
So let us learn to live them and if we really do not like what we see then let us reform ourselves and remove those blisters and filth from ourselves, our body-politic and society and miraculously the mirrors will not show them.
yes sir i totally agreed with you,we are still from away from professionalism in almost all the fields from media reporting to the aviation all are run by non professionals.
An excellent article. Now if you have some infatuation of Sadism then you dont need to go anywhere. Just visit Pakistani news channels and you will see corpses, severed heads, crying victims, people dying, puerile questions and all in all it will be Live and you can be captivated by these scenes for eons and your children will have an enduring effect and even in real life when they will see some people dying then it will be fun for them as they will be used to it.
Also a new phenomena have gripped our News channels and that is crime stories where Poor are exploited and now these stories are run in prime time so that while we were eating at our cozy place we could enjoy the misery of the poor around us and we can fulfill our thirst for inflicted pain and enjoy the food at the same time and all in all a lovely prime time entertainment.
Media has actually made every thing a comedy, even a tragedy. Shame on media and its so-called freedom.
Such reporters should be beaten up in front of their families and then their families should be asked how they feel. Can the channels not find civilized people to work for them? This bunch of ignorant fools parading as reporters sink to the lowest to report on every tragedy and feel proud of it, robbing the media of the positive impact created by responsible journalists.
Thank God I can't see our media in action.
what else/worse can we expect from our MASALA NEWS CHANNELS?
“He didn’t realise that until all evidence is collected from the site, there can be no cleaning up. Of course what is required but hasn’t been done by the authorities is to cordon off the area and not allow anyone to get in. Instead, we have unauthorised people loitering about and reporters going around with cameras and demanding of the rescue teams why this or that was not being done.”
Isn’t exactly this happened to BB murder scene and it shows nothing was learned. It has to do with the lack of professional training of the emergency personnel like police, firefighter, Crime Scene Investigators etc. Incidentally this is one of the reasons for low conviction rate in Pakistani courts. Also what author wants to say is that Pakistani society is learning to cope with new media and realizing that everything gets exposed and government can not hide anything including incompetence.
Fully agreed, i dont know the psyche of such reporters who give off a show that seems almost fake and confabulated. I was seething in anger and pain to see some TV reporters going to people and enusring camera angles whilst asking them pathetically how they felt ove rthe loss of the dear ones. One can only take pity on such channels and especially such reporters. Try BBC for a change and learn professionalism!