A catalogue of all Newslaundry podcasts and shows that hadn't found a home of their own yet. NL vs NL, NL Interviews, NL Reports, and much more.
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Morning Show: Who is BJP’s real star campaigner in Madhya Pradesh?
In this episode, we look at the BJP’s poll campaign in Madhya Pradesh and the factors that may lead to voter fatigue. How is the Ladli Behna scheme faring? Why is the BJP fighting the polls in the name of Modi? Despite chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan being the tallest BJP leader in the state, has he been sidelined in the polls campaign? We also discuss issues of corruption, malnutrition and politics of ‘freebies’ in Madhya Pradesh. Meanwhile, Congress has put up an aggressive campaign under Kamal Nath. Will they finally come to power in the state?Watch. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/15/2023 • 58 minutes, 30 seconds
मॉर्निंग शो: ‘मुफ्त’ की घोषणाओं और ‘कभी न पूरे होने वाले’ चुनावी वादों पर क्या सोचता है मध्य प्रदेश का युवा?
न्यूज़लॉन्ड्री की टीम मध्य प्रदेश में विधानसभा चुनाव की कवरेज के लिए ग्राउंड पर है. हर बार की तरह इस बार भी टीम "मॉर्निंग शो" के जरिए विभिन्न वर्गों के बीच जाकर उनकी राय जान रही है. मॉर्निंग शो के इस एपिसोड में हमारी टीम ने राज्य के ताजा चुनावी मुद्दों को लेकर युवाओं से बातचीत की. इसके लिए हमारी टीम भोपाल में स्थित जागरण लेक सिटी यूनिवर्सिटी परिसर पहुंची. इस दौरान छात्र-छात्राओं से विभिन्ना पार्टियों द्वारा ‘मुफ्त में सुविधाएं और सेवाएं दी जाने की घोषणाओं समेत चुनावी वादों पर खुलकर चर्चा की. कभी ना पूरे हो पाने वाले पार्टियों के चुनावी वादों, लोकतंत्र में बदलाव, बढ़ती बेरोजगारी आदि मुद्दों के के अलावा पिछले पांच वर्षों में शिवराज सिंह की उपलब्धियों पर भी युवाओं की राय जानी. साथ ही आरक्षण और जाति के मुद्दे पर भी उनसे बात की. बातचीत के दौरान महिला सुरक्षा का मुद्दा भी प्रमुख रहा. हमारी टीम ने ये भी जानने की कोशिश की कि आखिर आरक्षण का आज के समय में युवाओं खासकर विद्यार्थियों के जीवन में क्या महत्व है और महिला सशक्तिकरण संबंधी सरकारी योजनाओं को छात्राएं किस नजरिए से देखती हैं. इन सब सवालों के जवाब जानने के लिए देखिए ये पूरी बातचीत. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/11/2023 • 48 minutes, 12 seconds
Morning Show: What Chhattisgarh’s young voters think of education, welfare state, manifestos
In this episode, we try to understand the issues that matter to young voters, and how they view the manifestos of political parties and the concept of a welfare state. We reach the Guru Ghasidas Vishwavidyalaya campus in Chhattisgarh’s Bilaspur, where questions on education, corruption, the Mahadev app scam case, as well as the track record of the Bhupesh Baghel government come up during our conversation with students. Students tell us what they think about the promises made by political parties for farmers. A section of them also raise the issue of safety of women. Watch. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/7/2023 • 51 minutes, 32 seconds
Morning Show: Paddy as poll pivot, Mahadev app, Chhattisgarh pride
In this episode of Morning Show from Chhattisgarh’s Raipur, we talk about the poll issues with some of the credible voices of the state, including senior journalists, social activists and a former bureaucrat. The price of paddy has reportedly emerged as the biggest poll issue in the current elections in Chhattisgarh. In its manifesto, the BJP has promised to purchase paddy at Rs 3,100 per quintal. Meanwhile, the Congress has promised to increase the rate from Rs 2,600 to Rs 3,000 per quintal. The other big poll issues are farmers’ loan waiver, Chhattisgarhi identity, and the alleged Mahadev App scam, which the Enforcement Directorate has reportedly linked to chief minister Bhupesh Baghel. Will these issues influence voters’ decisions? Listen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/6/2023 • 52 minutes, 21 seconds
मनोज झा: इंडिया एलायंस, जी-20, संसद का विशेष सत्र और मोदी के हाथ में भाजपा
एनएल इंटरव्यू में इस बार राष्ट्रीय जनता दल (आरजेडी) के राज्यसभा सांसद मनोज झा से बातचीत हुई. इसमें ‘इंडिया’ और भारत के बीच उठे विवाद, जी 20 के आयोजन, एक देश, एक चुनाव, संसद का विशेष सत्र के अलावा मीडिया द्वारा विपक्ष को निशाना बनाने की प्रवृत्ति पर विस्तार से बातचीत हुई. विपक्षी गठबंधन ‘इंडिया’ के सत्ता में आने के एक सवाल पर मनोज झा कहते हैं, “यदि हमारी पार्टी की सरकार बनती है तो भाजपा को भी आज़ादी मिलेगी. मोदीजी के नेतृत्व में भाजपा की सांस भी फूल रही है. भाजपा को भी आज़ादी की ज़रूरत है.” गठबंधन के नाम को निशाना बनाए जाने और भारत बनाम इंडिया की बहस पर वे कहते हैं, “मीडिया संस्थान कितनी मेहनत करके डॉट लगाकर गठबंधन का नाम लिखते हैं लेकिन पाठक उसे इंडिया ही पढ़ते हैं. हमें ये पता था कि इंडिया नाम रखेंगे तो भाजपा भारत के नाम पर विवाद खड़ा करेगी. इसीलिए हमारी पार्टी ने पहले दिन टैगलाइन निर्धारित की थी- ‘जुड़ेगा भारत, जीतेगा इंडिया.’ भाजपा और कुछ मीडिया संस्थान जिस तरह से हताश हैं, ऐसा न हो कि वो कहने लगें कि सभी नाम खारिज करके देश का नाम जम्बूद्वीप होना चाहिए.”जी ट्वेंटी शिखर सम्मेलन को लेकर झा कहते हैं, “किसी भी देश में ऐसा नहीं हुआ है कि कर्फ्यू और सन्नाटे वाले माहौल में जश्न मनाया गया हो. इसमें लोकतंत्र की खुश्बू नहीं आती है, बल्कि राजतंत्र की बदबू आती है.”इसके अलावा मनोज ने केंद्र सरकार द्वारा 18-23 सितंबर तक बुलाए गए संसद के विशेष सत्र, एक देश, एक चुनाव, पीएम नरेंद्र मोदी के कार्यकाल के दौरान सरकारी संस्थाओं में आए बदलाव और मीडिया के सत्ताधारी पार्टी की तरफ झुकाव आदि विषयों पर बेबाकी से अपनी राय रखी. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
9/14/2023 • 54 minutes, 15 seconds
While We Watched director on what’s it like to be Ravish Kumar, NDTV, news in crisis
While We Watched is a documentary centered on journalist Ravish Kumar, his time at NDTV newsrooms, and his existential dilemmas as a journalist in ‘New India’. The film has won critical acclaim at noted international film festivals. In this conversation with Manisha Pande, the documentary’s director Vinay Shukla talks about following Ravish for two years with his camera, the process of making the film, what it conveys about journalism, and more. On the decision to make a documentary about Ravish Kumar after making a film on Arvind Kejriwal and the rise of the Aam Aadmi Party, the filmmaker said, “Journalism is one of the biggest stories of our times. Journalists need to be the protagonists of those stories. So with Ravish I found an interesting protagonist.”Asked if ever thought of making a film on NDTV founders Prannoy and Radhika Roy, Vinay said, “That story is much more exhaustive with far more characters. So someone else needs to do justice to that by making a film or a series or a book around them.”Watch the trailer here. Subscribe to watch the full interview. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
9/13/2023 • 1 hour, 4 minutes, 6 seconds
NL Interview: Rift in Manipur-Mizoram relations, reweighing NDA alliance: Mizoram’s lone MP C Lalrosanga
Thousands of Kukis have taken shelter in Mizoram amid the continued unrest. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/2/2023 • 30 minutes, 35 seconds
NL Interview: BJP Kuki MLA Paolienlal Haokip on crime against women in Manipur, governments’ action
The BJP MLA from Saikot in Manipur’s Churachandpur district said he believes prime minister Narendra Modi’s priorities are misplaced. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/27/2023 • 51 minutes, 54 seconds
इंटरव्यू: क्या कहते हैं ‘हू किल्ड मूसेवाला’ किताब लिखने वाले जुपिंदरजीत सिंह (टीज़र)
न्यूज़लॉन्ड्री इंटरव्यूज की इस कड़ी में ट्रिब्यून अखबार के वरिष्ठ संवाददाता और लेखक जुपिंदरजीत सिंह से मशहूर पंजाबी गायक सिद्धू मूसेवाला की हत्या पर उनकी नई किताब 'हू किल्ड मूसेवाला: द स्पायरलिंग स्टोरी ऑफ वायलेंस इन पंजाब' को लेकर बातचीत हुई. यह इंटरव्यू एक पॉडकास्ट के रूप में है.अपनी इस किताब में सिंह ने मूसेवाला की हत्या से जुड़े अनेक पहलुओं पर रोशनी डाली है. किताब में वह सिद्दू मूसेवाला और उनके आसपास के लोगों के साथ-साथ, उनकी हत्या से जुड़े किरदारों की पृष्ठभूमि, इस अप्रत्याशित घटना को अंजाम देने वाले आरोपियों और अपराध के ताने-बाने को भी पाठकों के सामने रखते हैं. सिंह ने एक अनुभवी क्राइम रिपोर्टर की नजर से इस पूरे मामले को परखा और पाठकों के सामने एक निष्पक्ष कथानक रखा है.सुनिए पूरी बातचीत. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/7/2023 • 4 minutes, 23 seconds
The abc of Caste Politics in Karnataka — it's not just about Lingayats | Another Election Show
Journalist and author Sugata Srinivasaraju sits down with Manisha Pande and Atul Chaurasia to discuss caste politics in Karnataka. Sugata gives a brief history of two dominant communities Vokkaligas and Lingayats, and how they became important in Karnataka’s electoral politics. Sugata says it is a myth to say that Lingayats and Vokkaligas determine politics in India and it is a myth perpetrated by the Lingayats themselves. He explains why this election is all about subcastes. He says the Panchamsalis Lingayats and the most-oppressed segment of Dalit voters may continue to support the BJP and so this election is not over yet. The three also discuss what role the BJP’s Hindutva politics will play in countering caste dynamics and why getting a Lingayat CM to play the Hindutva card didn't work for the BJP. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/9/2023 • 49 minutes, 43 seconds
Bengaluru is crumbling, voting wisely will help | Another Election Show
Is your MLA responsible for the dug up road outside your house? What is the job of an MLA? Why does Bengalururu — a city famous for its activism — record low voting percentage? Manisha Pande discusses these themes with Srinivas Allavilli, an activist and co-founder of Citizens for Bangalore. The two also discuss some of the pressing issues facing the city, the state of its lakes and how money power is central to electoral politics. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/9/2023 • 33 minutes, 14 seconds
Headline: BJP’s corruption taint & Congress’ Caste Census promise: NL & TNM discuss Karnataka Elections
Big News Coming In: Newslaundry and The NewsMinute are forming an alliance for more public interest journalism. Going forward you will see the two organizations collaborate on reporting projects and growth strategy. In this episode, Dhanya Rajendran and Pooja Prasanna of the NewsMinute and Manisha Pande and Atul Chauraisa of Newslaundry discuss key issues on voters' minds this election season. Will the BJP be able to overcome multiple allegations of corruption? How evocative is the caste census issue? Why is communalism a key ingredient of coastal politics? And how safe is your voter data? This and more! Watch. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/30/2023 • 40 minutes, 2 seconds
क्यों जान दांव पर लगाकर भी अमेरिका जाना चाह रहे हैं लोग, सब्सक्राइबर्स के साथ बसंत कुमार की बातचीत
ऐसा कौन होगा जो अमेरिका जाने का सपना नहीं देखता होगा? गुजरात में भी ज्यादातर लोगों की चाह अमेरिका जाने की है. अहमदाबाद, गांधीनगर और मेहसाणा जिले के कई गांव ऐसे हैं, जहां आधे से ज्यादा लोग अमेरिका में रह रहे हैं. यहां के गांवों में घूमते हुए लोगों के अंदर अमेरिका जाने की बेचैनी का अंदाजा आसानी से लगाया जा सकता है. हमें अपनी पड़ताल के दौरान कुछ लोग तो ऐसे भी मिले हैं जो दर्जनों बार अमेरिका जाने की कोशिश कर चुके हैं. हालांकि, वे असफल रहे और अभी भी उनकी ये कोशिश जारी है. हमने पाया कि कैसे लोगों को देश से बाहर भेजने का एक पूरा तंत्र काम करता है. इस तंत्र में दलाल से लेकर एयरपोर्ट तक की भूमिका होती है. इसके अलावा, देश से बाहर पढ़ने जाने के लिए छात्र इंटरनेशनल इंग्लिश लैंग्वेज टेस्टिंग सिस्टम (आईईएलटीएस) का टेस्ट देते हैं. गुजरात के शहरों में जगह-जगह आपको आईईएलटीएस की तैयारी को लेकर होर्डिंग्स और दफ्तर नजर आ जाएंगे. आईईएलटीएस भी अवैध रूप से अमेरिका जाने का माध्यम बन गया है. यह सिलसिला कब शुरू हुआ? क्या वजह है कि लोग जान दांव पर लगाकर भी अमेरिका जाना चाहते हैं और कौन आदमी इसमें क्या भूमिका निभाता है? इसकी एक-एक कड़ी कैसे जुड़ती है यह जानने के लिए ग्राउंड से लौटे हमारे रिपोर्टर बंसत कुमार से डिस्कॉर्ड के जरिए जानिए. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/25/2023 • 32 minutes, 33 seconds
Pharma woes: Dinesh Thakur and Prashant Reddy on India’s regulatory shortcomings
In their 2022 book The Truth Pill, lawyer Prashant Reddy T and public health activist Dinesh S Thakur explored various aspects of modern pharmacology and pharmaceutical practices in India.Now, in this conversation with Newslaundry’s Abhinandan Sekhri on February 9, they talked about the shortcomings of pharmaceutical regulations in India. Prashant quoted a former drug controller, who said, “If I had to apply American standards of quality to the Indian industry, I’ll have to shut down more than half the plants.”This lack of regulatory accountability and non-compliance with scientific methodology can have serious consequences for consumers. Dinesh and Prashant explained other pressing concerns facing healthcare in India – rising drug failures, a surge in fixed-dose combinations, and the lack of regulatory structures for ayurvedic medicines.Watch.Venue partner: The Quorum, Gurgaon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/19/2023 • 1 hour, 9 minutes, 30 seconds
Listen: Newslaundry editors and reporters analyse Gujarat and Himachal election results
The Bharatiya Janata Party has scripted a spectacular victory in Gujarat, improving even on its 2002 election performance under Narendra Modi, who has since gone on to be the prime minister. The Aam Aadmi Party has made big gains in terms of vote share, seemingly at the expense of the Congress, which has put up its worst performance ever. The grand old party, however, is posies to defeat the incumbent BJP in Himachal Pradesh. Newslaundry editors Atul Chaurasia and Manisha Pande and reporters Ayush Tiwari, Basant Kumar and Shivnarayan Rajpurohit analyse the results.Listen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/8/2022 • 1 hour, 37 minutes, 5 seconds
PM Modi’s unfailing electoral appeal & AAP versus Congress
As Gujarat votes in the second phase of the assembly election, the Newslaundry election team discusses whether the BJP is poised to return to power. They explore why voters want to put their faith back in a party that’s been in power in Gujarat for over 25 years, PM Modi’s connect with the state, and why price rise and inflation don’t affect his appeal to voters.The team also discusses latest entrant AAP and its potential vote bank, how this is an election where the state will choose its main opposition party, and why the Congress’s campaign is so low-key.Listen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/5/2022 • 54 minutes, 59 seconds
How long will Gujarat BJP rely on Modi’s face Morning Show Ep 2 with Gujarat University students
On the #MorningShow, Atul and Manisha catch up with students of Gujarat University. Young people in their 20s have grown up seeing only one party in rule – the #BJP. How do they assess the party’s work? Do they yearn for a change? And what do they think of vikaas in Gujarat? On law and order, students born in 2002 believe that they have seen a peaceful state compared to their parents’ experience, while others feel strict action is needed against illicit liquor and drug trade in the state. The quality of education and lack of adequate skilling at the postgraduate level remain a key concern. Students also say that it’s not enough for the governing party to tom-tom PM Modi’s face and there is a lack of a strong CM candidate in Gujarat. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/30/2022 • 37 minutes, 19 seconds
क्या Gujarati Media 'AAP' से बच- बचाकर चल रहा है Morning Show 01
contribute to our NL Sena fund: https://www.newslaundry.com/nl-sena/g...#gujaratassemblyelection पर यह न्यूज़लॉन्ड्री का पहला #morningshow है. इस एपिसोड में हमारे साथ लेखक-व्यंग्यकार उर्वीश कोठारी और द हिंदू के सीनियर असिस्टेंट एडिटर महेश लांगा शामिल हुए.इस एपिसोड में भारतीय जनता पार्टी के 27 साल के शासनकाल पर चर्चा हुई. आखिर ऐसा क्या है जिसके दम पर गुजरात में भाजपा लगातार चुनाव जीत रही है? साथ में मुख्य विपक्षी दल कांग्रेस का चुनावी मैदान में न दिखना और #aamaadmiparty के प्रचार-प्रसार पर बात हुई. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/30/2022 • 40 minutes, 40 seconds
BJP’s freebies in Himachal and is #ClimateChange an election issue Morning Show Ep 3
Power our election coverage: https://www.newslaundry.com/nl-sena/g...On this #MorningShow, Atul and Manisha are joined by Ashwini Sharma, former bureau chief of Indian Express and currently with Outlook and Rajeev Khanna, associate editor with Citizen. They discuss BJP’s manifesto promises and compare them with what Congress is offering. They talk about factionalism within #BJP and Prime Minister #NarendraModi’s micromanagement. They also discuss Modi’s speech and why it connects with his audience. Is climate change an issue in #HimachalPradeshelection? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/30/2022 • 37 minutes, 15 seconds
What do Himachal University students want this election Morning Show Ep 2
Manisha and Atul catch up with the students of journalism department in #HimachalUniversity. Students talk about issues that are important this election — infrastructure, employment opportunities, healthcare and good roads. They speak about lack of teachers in schools and why English is an aspirational language. Students also speak of major issues in their villages — lack of good infrastructure in hospitals and proper roads. They also discuss the state of current media, their favourite anchors and why they want journalists to be neither too left nor too right. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/30/2022 • 1 hour, 5 minutes, 53 seconds
Morning Show is back! Atul & Manisha discuss elections in Himachal Pradesh Another Election Show 01
Atul Chaurasia and Manisha Pande were in Shimla this morning. They talk about the upcoming #HimachalPradeshElections with two veteran journalists Archana Phul and Adhir Rohal. The Old Pension Scheme comes out as a key issue this election along with unemployment. They discussed factionalism in the BJP, the lack of strong leadership in Congress, and why AAP is not a strong factor in the hill state. Himachalis like to change their government every five years. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/30/2022 • 39 minutes, 36 seconds
मॉर्निंग शो: मोरबी पुल हादसे के बाद क्या चाहते हैं वहां के वोटर्स
गुजरात विधानसभा चुनावों पर हम एक और मॉर्निंग शो लेकर आए हैं. इस एपिसोड में हमारे साथ मोरबी के स्थानीय लोग शामिल हुए. बता दें कि मोरबी पुल हादसे में 135 लोगों की जान चली गई. यह पुल 31 अक्टूबर को गिर गया था. वहां वर्तमान में क्या स्थिति है इसके लिए न्यूज़लॉन्ड्री की टीम ने मोरबी का दौरा किया. जहां हमने वहां के लोगों से बात की और पूछा कि क्या मोरबी हादसे का असर गुजरात चुनाव पर भी पड़ेगा?मोरबी में लोगों के दिलों में क्या है, वह किसे वाट करना चाहते हैं, उनके मुद्दे क्या हैं, क्या मोरबी पुल हादसे के बाद वहां कोई बदलाव आया है. ऐसे सभी सवालों के जवाब जानने के लिए हमारा यह पूरा मॉर्निंग शो देखिए. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/28/2022 • 37 minutes, 39 seconds
Impolite Conversations: Negotiations with security laws
On September 10, Newslaundry and the Internet Freedom Foundation hosted FoE Con 2022, a forum that brought together media personalities and leading voices in the legal sphere to map the media and regulatory framework in contemporary India.The panel discussion titled “Negotiations with Security Laws” was moderated by Vakasha Sachdev, lawyer and editorial lead of Logically. She was joined by Hartosh Singh Bal, journalist and political editor of the Caravan, and Vrinda Grover, human rights lawyer and activist.The panel discussed the sedition law and why it needs a moratorium, how the National Security Act is misused, and why India needs law to protect against communal and targeted violence. “Doing the job of journalism is more difficult today than it has ever been at any point of time in our history,” Hartosh said. “The laws are secondary to the political atmosphere that exists.” Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
10/23/2022 • 1 hour, 33 seconds
Impolite Conversations: Court stories
On September 10, Newslaundry and the Internet Freedom Foundation hosted FoE Con 2022, a forum that brought together media personalities and leading voices in the legal sphere to map the media and regulatory framework in contemporary India.The panel discussion “Court Stories” was moderated by Abhinandan Sekhri, founder of Newslaundry. He was joined by lawyers Rebecca John and Sonam Gupta, and Alt News cofounder Pratik Sinha. The panel discussed how press freedom in India is impacted by the misuse of laws, how journalists are at the receiving end of threats on social media, and the legal strategies available to tackle these issues. Rebecca remembered how when she started out as a lawyer, she was told “lawyers and journalists would never be touched because they have the potential to hit back”. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
10/21/2022 • 1 hour, 2 minutes, 12 seconds
Impolite Conversations: Lessons from the Emergency
On September 10, Newslaundry and the Internet Freedom Foundation hosted FoE Con 2022, a forum that brought together media personalities and leading voices in the legal sphere to map the media and regulatory framework in contemporary India.The panel discussion “Lessons from the Emergency” was moderated by independent journalist Neha Dixit. She was joined by journalist and author Kalpana Sharma and senior advocate Chandra Uday Singh. Kalpana explained how orders at the time “were more or less against publications and not individual journalists”. The discussion spanned how the Emergency played out, its repercussions, and the role of journalism throughout. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
10/20/2022 • 59 minutes, 33 seconds
NL Interview: Roop Rekha Verma on why she stood as journalist Siddique Kappan's surety
Roop Rekha Verma is former acting vice chancellor of Lucknow University, a professor of philosophy and a social activist. She made news earlier this week when she agreed to stand as surety for Siddique Kappan as a condition of his bail.Kappan, a journalist from Kerala, was arrested by the Uttar Pradesh police while he was on his way to report on the brutal gangrape of a teenage Dalit girl by four upper caste men in Hathras nearly two years ago. Kappan was slapped with charges under the sedition law and the anti-terror law UAPA. The journalist was granted bail by the Supreme Court on September 9, but his lawyers couldn’t find residents of Uttar Pradesh who could stand as his surety, as required by the conditions of his bail. Until, that is, Verma came forward. She speaks with Tanishka Sodhi about her decision to help Kappan, the consequences for dissent in this country, and her life’s journey. “In today's dark times, this much help is what every citizen has a claim of. I wouldn't have been able to face myself if I didn’t extend this small help," she says.There’s an climate of fear in the country right now, she says, because of which it is difficult for people to speak up and speak out. Verma, 79, has spent a lifetime fighting caste, gender and religious hatred, and she talks about what keeps her going. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
9/24/2022 • 30 minutes, 53 seconds
NL Interview: Barkha Dutt on NDTV’s takeover by Adani and the state of Indian TV news
Barkha Dutt has had a long journey in journalism. She describes covering the Kargil war in 1999 and the Covid pandemic in 2020-21 as the bookends of her career.A veteran TV journalist, Barkha quit NDTV in 2017 and launched her own independent media organisation, Mojo Story. Her new book, To Hell and Back: Humans of Covid, recounts countless stories of grief, grimness, and goodwill that she encountered over two years of traveling across the country to report on the pandemic.In this interview with Manisha Pande, Barkha speaks about personal experience, from reporting the Covid story to becoming it when she lost her father to the virus in April 2021. She describes harrowing cases where medical workers were attacked, why she refused to report on the 2021 assembly elections, and the divisive role played by Big Media during the pandemic.Given the decline of TV news, she firmly says she would not advise a young journalist to join the broadcast industry today.On billionaire industrialist Gautam Adani’s takeover of NDTV, Barkha says most of the news channel’s senior management didn't know until much later about another billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s loan to NDTV, which would prove crucial to Adani's takeover. This should compel us to talk about the revenue model of TV news, she argues, which is dependent on big businesses and governments, and what that means for the editorial integrity of a news organisation. The conversation also spans the Radia tapes scandal, access journalism, the 2002 Gujarat carnage coverage, work-life balance, and the question of media regulation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
9/24/2022 • 1 hour, 48 minutes, 20 seconds
Session with Sena: Reporting on Ramdev’s rise and Shivraj Chouhan’s Bulldozer Raj
At Newslaundry, we always strive to produce in-depth stories. And thanks to your contributions to our NL Sena projects, we’re able to do just that.Most recently, we published a series of reports as part of two Sena projects – The Yogi Who Has It All and Bulldozing a New Imagine in MP. The first is a look at Ramdev’s journey from a schoolboy in a small Haryana village to a yoga guru helming a Rs 10,000-crore business empire, and the second delves into the demolition of mostly Muslim homes and shops in Madhya Prades by Shivraj Singh Chouhan’s BJP government. In this Session with Sena, Basant and Newslaundry managing editor Raman Kirpal talk about the reporting with those who contributed to these projects. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/29/2022 • 52 minutes, 1 second
NL Interview: Facebook whistleblower on how the company favours those in power
Last November, in an interview with Newslaundry, data scientist and former Facebook employee Sophie Zhang described the social media company’s reluctance to act against fake accounts in India. Now, in this interview with Chitranshu Tewari, Sophie explains how she had offered to testify before India’s parliamentary standing committee on information, and why she shared documentation on her work on India with local journalists and media houses.Sophie says Facebook chose not to take action on “inauthentic networks” linked to Vinod Sonkar, a BJP MP from Uttar Pradesh. “Facebook rules favour whoever is in power,” she says. “IT cells drown out the voice of the common man.”Sophie also describes the inherent “conflict” in the role played by Facebook’s public policy teams. Watch. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/9/2022 • 43 minutes, 49 seconds
No, Vir Sanghvi, the Uniform Civil Code has nothing to do with ‘secular liberals’
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/3/2022 • 10 minutes, 29 seconds
NL Interview: Anupama Chopra on her latest book and growing ‘nationalism’ in Hindi cinema
In this episode of NL Recess, film critic and founder of Film Companion, Anupama Chopra, speaks to Manisha Pande about her journey from the world of print and TV into the digital landscape, consequences of vicious demonisation of Bollywood on mainstream television news and the reflection of jingoistic nationalism in Hindi cinema. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/10/2022 • 52 minutes, 14 seconds
In conversation with subscribers: Reporting on the 2022 assembly elections (Teaser)
What does it take to cover assembly elections on the ground? On March 9, the team that covered the polls – in Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Goa and Punjab – interacted with subscribers on Newslaundry’s Discord server to talk about how they searched for reports and gauged the pulse of the electorate.They took subscribers through their experiences of meeting voters with various political ideologies, the campaigns that stood apart, the issues that mattered, and how parties fared across the spectrum.Listen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
3/17/2022 • 4 minutes, 26 seconds
Morning Show Episode 4: There is more to Goa than partying! | #AnotherElectionShow
On a bright Sunday morning, Atul, Manisha and Meghnad sit with journalist #FrederichNoronah to discuss the newspapers of the day. We look at the issue of unemployment in #Goa. Frederich tells us about the injection of communal politics in Goa, the uniqueness of the #Konkani language, the issue of conversion, concerns of the Goan #Catholic community and why this will be a very confusing election. He also says it’s super irritating when people think all you do in Goa is party and drink. We couldn’t agree more.Atul Chaurasia, Manisha Pande and Meghnad S are on the election trail and will be traveling through Goa, UP, Uttarakhand and Punjab. Power our election coverage by contributing to our #NLSena project: https://newslaundry.com/sena?ref=social--Subscribe to Newslaundry: https://www.newslaundry.com/subscript...Follow and engage with us on social media:Facebook: https://facebook.com/newslaundryTwitter: https://twitter.com/newslaundryInstagram: https://instagram.com/newslaundry Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
1/31/2022 • 34 minutes, 48 seconds
Morning Show Ep 3: High-speed internet as an election issue, Covid deaths in Goa
January 29, 2022.This morning, the headlines bring the grim news that there have been 20 Covid deaths in Goa within a day﹘many of those who succumbed to the virus were unvaccinated. Meanwhile, the Congress has issued an ad that makes lack of high-speed internet in Goa an election issue.We also tell you all about Goa’s couple candidates. If all 10 of them win, 25 percent of the Assembly will be husband-wife duos. Also, a rundown on candidates with the highest number of criminal cases. BJP’s pitch to fight crime in UP has turned queer in Goa.Catch this and more, everyday on Newslaundry. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
1/29/2022 • 27 minutes, 5 seconds
Morning Show Ep 2: ‘Is a political party bribing journalists in Goa?’
January 28, 2022Welcome to the second episode of the Morning Show, where we take you through the major newspaper headlines as Atul, Manisha and Meghnad travel to states set for the 2022 Assembly elections.In this episode, we have Gomantak group editor Raju Naik on board. He tells us about the mediascape in Goa and how a political party may be offering bribes to editors. Naik explains that most Goan newspapers are owned by mining companies and dependent on government advertising.Full disclosure: Gomantak is owned by NCP’s Pawar family.Watch the video hereCatch this and more, everyday on Newslaundry. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
1/29/2022 • 25 minutes, 59 seconds
Morning Show Ep 1: Catch the newspapers in Goa
January 27, 2020We have a new show up! Atul, Manisha and Meghnad are on the election trail and will be traveling through Goa, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Punjab.Today, they are in Panjim and take you through the newspapers in the Morning Show. Which political party has the most ads? What's making headlines in the front pages? Who are political cartoons taking potshots at?Watch the video here.Catch this and more, every morning on Newslaundry. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
1/29/2022 • 20 minutes, 34 seconds
NL Conversation: Lawyer Sandhya Raju George on the dangers of the Franco Mulakkal judgement
Last week, former bishop Franco Mulakkal, accused of raping a nun in Kottayam 13 times, was acquitted by the Kottayam district court. The nun had alleged that despite her repeated complaints, the Catholic Church had ignored her. Five other nuns who spoke out in support of her faced retaliation from the church.Sandhya Raju George is a lawyer who was on the panel of advocates representing the nuns in the case. In this conversation with Newslaundry’s Nidhi Suresh, she talks about the acquittal and judgement, and sexual harassment laws in India.The conversation also spans judicial treatment of sexual assault survivors and the process of judicial trials in India. Tune in. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
1/18/2022 • 28 minutes, 43 seconds
A year in news reports: Nidhi Suresh and Basant Kumar on Newslaundry’s biggest stories of 2021
In a year marked by protests and the pandemic, two Newslaundry correspondents – Nidhi Suresh and Basant Kumar – navigate our biggest stories of 2021, and what they learned in the process. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/31/2021 • 35 minutes, 4 seconds
NL Interview: Amit Varma on being a longform podcaster in an age of five-minute attention spans
In this episode of NL Recess, writer and host of the podcast The Seen and the Unseen Amit Varma joins Chitranshu Tewari to talk about evolving media cultures and patterns in the digital space, the binaries of “bhakts” and “wokes”, and the difficult bracketing of Indian conservatism. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/23/2021 • 1 hour
NL Conversations: Vanita Kohli-Khandekar on business of news media, the need for not-for-profit journalism
Vanita Kohli-Khandekar is a journalist and author, whose book The Indian Media Business: Pandemic and After was released in October this year. In this interview with Chitranshu Tewari, Vanita explains the relationship between how broadcast media makes media and what the audience gets to see, the business economics of ad-funded media, and the lack of government foresight in seeing media as an industry. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/20/2021 • 40 minutes, 1 second
NL Interview: Sophie Zhang on what it took to become a Facebook whistleblower
Sophie Zhang is a former data scientist at Facebook, now Meta, who published a series of articles in the Guardian on the social media platform’s fake engagement accounts. She alleged these often lead to interference in political elections.In this interview with Chitranshu Tewari, Sophie describes the suspicious patterns of behaviour she observed in 2019 with respect to India. On the company’s reluctance to act on matters involving fake accounts in India, she points at “political pressure and the general lack of motivation of the company to police its own system”. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/1/2021 • 49 minutes, 7 seconds
NL Reads: The curious case of G Sreedathan and a source called WhatsApp
1 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/1/2021 • 12 minutes, 54 seconds
NL Reads: UP police thinks links, WhatsApp chats are enough to prove Siddique Kappan was conspiring with PFI
1 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/1/2021 • 10 minutes, 14 seconds
NL Reads: How is ‘Justice for Hathras’ website connected to Siddique Kappan? UP police won’t tell
THE SIDDIQUE KAPPAN CHARGESHEET Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/1/2021 • 11 minutes, 20 seconds
NL Interview: Kabir Bedi on his autobiography, interviewing the Beatles, and cinema culture
In this episode of NL Recess, actor Kabir Bedi joins Abhinandan Sekhri to discuss his autobiography Stories I Must Tell: The Emotional Life of an Actor.Kabir opens up about his unconventional upbringing and his journey of finding true companionship. He talks about his experiences in cinema in different countries, about the time he persuaded the manager of All India Radio to land himself an interview with the Beatles and a lot more.To watch the full unedited interview, subscribe to newslaundry.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/6/2021 • 6 minutes
NL Interview: Natasha Narwal and Devangana Kalita on prison, state repression, and UAPA
In May last year, student activists Natasha Narwal and Devangana Kalita were arrested under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act in connection with the Delhi riots. One year later, on June 15, they were granted bail and released.Natasha and Devangana are both students at Jawaharlal Nehru University and members of Pinjra Tod, a women’s collective. In this interview with Nidhi Suresh, they talk about their experience in prison, state repression, and Pinjra Tod’s participation in the citizenship law protests.“Through this regime over the last four to five years, we have been seeing an increasing repression by this government through the use of various laws, whether it is sedition or UAPA,” Devangana says. “It was quite shocking to be booked under a stringent law like the UAPA which is an attack on the student community and its rising voices, and equally an attack on the Muslim community.”Natasha says, “One of the things we have learnt through our journey at Pinjra Tod is women’s freedom cannot be achieved in isolation. This struggle for freedom is not in isolation from other struggles.” She describes the Citizenship Amendment Act and the National Register of Citizens as an attempt by the government to “change the nature of this country, the nature of this state, the nature of the constitution itself”.They also talk about the sense of community among people in similar circumstances to their own.Listen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/5/2021 • 8 minutes, 32 seconds
NL Interview: AS Bhasin on his latest book and the trials of researching the 1962 Sino-Indian War
Avtar Singh Bhasin is a writer and historian. In this interview with Newslaundry’s Shardool Katyayan, he talks about his latest book Nehru, Tibet and China, which explores the backdrop of the 1962 Sino-Indian War and its aftermath. Bhasin talks about the time and effort he spent researching the book, and how most government documents and records about the 1962 war are classified. “Since independence,” he says, “nothing has been thrown open though it is against the archival rules which suggest that these records should be made available after 25 years.”But in 2014, he says, “a very big collection of Nehru papers, earlier in private hands, became available and was passed on to official hands, and I was able to get permission to check those papers. And it was a treasure trove.”He also talks about the McMahon line, drawn by the British to separate India and China, and says China was not consulted on it and, therefore, never accepted it.Listen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/5/2021 • 7 minutes, 45 seconds
India’s Covid vaccination policy just became political and perverse
Having different procurement channels and varying prices for vaccines threatens to undermine the inoculation programme. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/23/2021 • 11 minutes, 31 seconds
Webinar: Why does Kobad Ghandy keep landing in prison?
Why does Kobad Ghandy, one of India’s most prominent communist activists and ideologues, do what he does? Why does he keep landing in prison, again and again? What’s he fighting for? What keeps him going? To discuss Kobad’s life through the prism of his book Fractured Freedom: A Prison Memoir, three schoolmates whose lives took dramatically varying paths were brought together by Roli Pulse, the digital arm of Roli Books, in partnership with Newslaundry. Kobad, Ishaat Hussain and Gautam Vohra, who were together in Doon School’s class of 1963, talk about their childhood and friendship. They also talk about the evolution of Kobad, who has dedicated his life working for the marginalised and spent a decade in various prisons. The discussion is moderated by Abhinandan Sekhri of Newslaundry.“I have been to six or seven prisons and the way cases were opening up initially, one after the other, I felt I wouldn’t even get out,” says Kobad. “But I was in general writing in prison for the mainstream, for anything that disturbed me.”Ishaat believes that whatever Kobad has done was right and "very few of us can really turn around and say and do that with any great conviction".Narrating the journey of the dramatic years when he was in contact with Kobad, Gautam says, "If I could de-class myself and live with the poor, something I feel I had the guts for, that was something I could sense was not in me but was in Kobad.” Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/20/2021 • 56 minutes, 31 seconds
NL Reads: ‘Can anyone keep a Brahmin’s daughter?’: In UP’s Sitapur, manhunt for a ‘love jihad’ couple
The Hindu Yuva Vahini is involved while a former VHP leader plans to do a ‘purification’ ceremony once the woman is found. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
1/14/2021 • 13 minutes, 48 seconds
NL Reads: How UP police are using the ‘love jihad’ law arbitrarily
In at least two cases they have applied it retrospectively. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
1/14/2021 • 11 minutes, 24 seconds
NL Reads: ‘We saved a girl’s honour’: How Hindu Mahasabha stopped an interfaith marriage in Lucknow
The Hindutva group plans to ‘monitor’ Muslim areas and encourage Hindus to buy guns for their ‘security’. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
1/14/2021 • 8 minutes, 37 seconds
Moradabad ‘love jihad’: What killed Muskan’s child?
Rashid and Muskan are the first interfaith couple to be held under Uttar Pradesh’s ‘love jihad law’. He spent two weeks in jail, she miscarried in a women’s shelter home. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/20/2020 • 21 minutes, 28 seconds
‘Divide and rule won’t work’: Farmers at Tikri border have another reason to be angry
The farmers feel the Modi government is trying to ‘tear them apart’ by sowing discord. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/20/2020 • 9 minutes, 58 seconds
‘We’ll turn Delhi into Punjab’: Meet Singhu’s women protesters
In spite of all odds, they are determined to stay put until their demand to repeal the new farm laws is met. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/20/2020 • 8 minutes, 31 seconds
NL Interviews: Pushyamitr on his book on Bihar, Ruktapor, and what ails the state
बिहार के जाने माने लेखक और कई बड़े अखबारों में रिपोर्टिंग कर चुके पुष्यमित्र जिनकी हाल ही में 'रुकतापुर' बिहार जहां थम जाता है पहिया बदलाव की हर गाड़ी का, किताब राजकाल द् वारा प्रकाशित की गई है. यह किताब बिहार के अलग-अलग चेहरे, किस्सों तथा इसके समकालीन इतिहास से लबरेज़ है. इस किताब में बिहार की समस्याओं का विस्तार से विवरण है. न्यूज़लॉन्ड्री... चित्रांशु तिवारी ने पुष्यमित्र से खास बातचीत की है. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/18/2020 • 53 minutes, 46 seconds
NL Interview: Mihir Srivastava on his ‘love jihad’ book and how media propped up this bogey
Mihir Srivastava is a journalist and writer. Formerly with Open and Tehelka, he currently works with the Patriot as a senior associate editor. In this interview with Chitranshu Tewari of Newslaundry, Mihir talks about his latest book, Love Jihadis, written with photojournalist Raul Irani, which breaks down the “love jihad” bogey in the context of western Uttar Pradesh. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/18/2020 • 47 minutes, 7 seconds
A matter of trust: Why farmers want MSP written into law
The Modi government maintains it has no intention of doing away with MSP for crops. Farmers say the new laws are designed to achieve precisely that. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/10/2020 • 9 minutes, 43 seconds
‘Media has lost our trust’: Why protesting farmers are angry with ‘Godi media’
‘Some powerful media houses have made things worse. It would have been better if they hadn’t bothered covering us.’ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/10/2020 • 8 minutes, 14 seconds
‘I am fighting betrayal’: Meet the farmers marching on Delhi
What’s driving them? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
12/10/2020 • 9 minutes, 43 seconds
वेबिनार: ग्रामीण अर्थव्यवस्था के डाटा का संग्रह है इंडिया डाटा पोर्टल
ग्रामीण अर्थव्यवस्था पर हो रही रिपोर्टिंग में सबसे महत्वपूर्ण हिस्सा है डाटा. यह डाटा, अलग-अलग विषयों पर उपलब्ध है जो रिपोर्ट में सभी तथ्यों को पूरा करता है. इसी विषय पर न्यूज़लॉन्ड्री ने यह वेबिनार आयोजित की, जिसमें विस्तृत रूप से इस मुद्दे पर बात की गई. इस वेबिनार में मेहमान के तौर पर आईआईटी दिल्ली की एसोसिएट प्रोफेसर और लेखक रीतिका खेड़ा, गांव कनेक्शन के एसोसिएट एडिटर अरविन्द शुक्ला, स्वतंत्र पत्रकार पुष्यमित्र, पीपल आर्काइव ऑफ़ रूरल इंडियन से जुड़ीं पत्रकार मेधा काले और भारती इंस्टीट्यूट ऑफ़ पब्लिक पॉलिसी में कम्युनिकेशन प्रमुख दीप्ती सोनी ने हिस्सा लिया. इस वेबिनार का संचालन न्यूज़लॉन्ड्री के कार्यकारी संपादक अतुल चौरसिया ने कियादीप्ति शुरुआत में इंडिया डाटा पोर्टल के बारे में बताते हुए कहती हैं, “यह पोर्टल हर किसी के लिए खुला है, जिसे खासतौर से पत्रकारों की मदद के लिए बनाया गया है. इसके साथ ही शोधकर्ता और छात्र आदि के लिए भी यह पोर्टल बनाया गया है. पोर्टल पर मौजूद जानकारी भारत के 28 राज्यों और आठ केंद्र-शासित प्रदेशों के बारे में है, जो कि छह भाषाओं में उपलब्ध है. वहीं एग्रीकल्चर सेंसेस, सॉइल, रेन फॉल जैसे 40 अलग-अलग डाटा सेट इस वक्त पोर्टल पर मौजूद हैं. इन जानकारी को 45 से भी जायदा ग्राफ़िक्स या चित्र के रूप में उपयोग किया जा सकता है.सत्र में आगे अतुल आकंड़ों की बात करते हुए रीतिका खेड़ा से सवाल करते हुए कहते हैं "क्या सच में इस तरह के आकड़ों से ग्रामीण अर्थव्यवस्था पर हमारी मीडिया को सूचना सम्पन्न और उसकी रिपोर्टिंग को प्रभावशाली बनाने में मदद कर सकती है"?इस पर रीतिका कहती हैं "ये सवाल बहुत अहम है जो मुद्दे की जड़ तक जाता है. अगर देखा जाए तो पत्रकारों की पकड़ मुद्दे पर नहीं है. ऐसे में डाटा को जल्दबाजी में इस्तेमाल किया जाता है. उदाहरण के तौर पर प्रजेंटेशन में बताया गया है कि कैसे मनरेगा में कितनों की मांग थी और कितने लोगों को काम मिला. यह सब सरकारी खेल है जो एमआईएस के डाटा में होता है और यह कब अपलोड किया जाएगा उसका किसी को पता नहीं. इस विषय पर अतुल कहते हैं हम लम्बे समय से देख रहे हैं कि ग्रामीण पत्रकारिता, कभी पत्रकारिता में एक बीट हुआ करता थी और कृषि पत्रकारिता मुख्यधारा की पत्रकारिता से गायब हो गई है. मौजूदा समय में दूसरा पी साईनाथ जैसा नाम खोजना मुश्किल है. इससे दिखता है कि जो पत्रकारिता कभी ग्रामीण अर्थव्यवस्था की हुआ करती थी, वो लगातार खत्म हुई है.मीडिया में कृषि पत्रकारिता की खत्म होती अहमियत पर अतुल, मेधा से पूछते है "ये जो दिक्कत है, कि पत्रकार और मीडिया हाउस कृषि बीट को एहमियत नहीं दे रहे हैं. क्या लगता है हमें इस पर फिर से ध्यान देना चाहिए. जिससे कृषि बीट को फिर से मजबूत किया जा सके?इस पर मेधा कहती हैं 'जब हम डाटा देखते हैं कि मनरेगा में इतने सारे जॉब धारक हैं लेकिन कितनों को जॉब कार्ड मिला है और कितनों को मना कर दिया गया इसका डाटा हमारी रिपोर्ट से गायब है. पहले जब पत्रकार ग्रामीण स्तर पर काम करते थे, तब वह गांव के लोगों की समस्याओं को समझते थे और जानते थे और उनकी वहीं जानकारी उस समय डाटा का स्वरूप ले लेता था, लेकिन आज के समय में यह गायब हैं क्योंकि कोई भी गांव आधारित पत्रकारिता नहीं है.इस वेबिनार में रोजगार और पत्रकरिता को लेकर जो बात निकलकर सामने आई उसमें निश्चित तौर पर इंडिया डाटा पोर्टल या इस तरह के आकड़े उपलब्ध कराने वाले प्लेटफॉर्म पत्रकरिता को बड़ा सपोर्ट कर सकते हैं तथा रिपोटिंग को बहुत मजबूत कर सकते हैं. इससे भी जो ज़रूरी खास बात है वो ये है कि मुख्य धारा की पत्रकारिता को ग्रामीण पत्रकारिता की अर्थव्यवस्था के इलाके पर ध्यान दें, इसमें निवेश करें और इसे मुख्य धारा की पत्रकारिता का हिस्सा समझें. क्योंकि ये भी इसी देश के लोग और देश का हिस्सा हैं. इनसे देश की नीतियां, जीडीपी और भी बहुत कुछ तय होता है. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
11/15/2020 • 1 hour, 19 minutes, 48 seconds
Webinar: How India’s media covers agriculture and how a data-led approach can help
Newslaundry, in collaboration with the India Data Portal project of the Bharti Institute of Public Policy, ISB, is organising a series of monthly webinars on specific datasets created by the platform, which is a one-stop open-access portal for journalists to use, interact with and visualise information, data and knowledge on agriculture and financial inclusion.The second webinar, titled “A data-led approach to India’s agri-economy”, was organised on September 25. Moderated by Newslaundry’s Abhinandan Sekhri, the panelists were Ajay Vir Jakhar, chairman of the Bharat Krishak Samaj; Parth MN, principal correspondent with IndiaSpend; Aparna Karthikeyan, author and independent journalist; and Nidhi Jamwal, environmental editor and head of the English desk of Gaon Connection.Listen! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
10/16/2020 • 55 minutes, 57 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 21: Will AI help or harm humanity?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode of NL vs NL, Newslaundry subscribers Atif Adam and Aprajita Singh debate whether the development of artificial intelligence will end up benefiting or harming humanity?Atif argues it will help, Aprajita disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or reach out to Aprajita on e-mail and Atif on Twitter. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
10/8/2020 • 31 minutes, 55 seconds
NL Interview | Max Abrahms on the US election, Trump’s chances, and the role of the media
Max Abrahms is an author, associate professor of political science and public policy at Northeastern University in the United States, and non-resident scholar at the Quincy Institute. In this interview with Shubh Soni, Max discusses the impending American presidential election, especially in the context of foreign policy, and the influence wielded over it by the news media. Watch the full video on newslaundry.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
10/8/2020 • 14 minutes, 5 seconds
NL Interview | Omar Abdullah on Kashmir, Kashmiriyat, and why Modi is no Vajpayee
Omar Abdullah has served as the chief minister of the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir, as a member of parliament, and as India’s junior foreign minister. He spent months in detention after the Narendra Modi government stripped Jammu and Kashmir of the last vestiges of its autonomy and split it into two territories ruled directly by New Delhi.Over a year on, Abdullah speaks with Abhinandan Sekhri about the situation in Kashmir, and where he and his party, the National Conference, stand in the new scheme of things. Watch the full video on newslaundry.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
9/29/2020 • 11 minutes, 4 seconds
NL Interview | ‘मैं अक्सर देखता हूं Hindustan के न्यूज़ चैनलों को, और फिर सोचता हूं...’
Anwar Maqsood पाकिस्तानी पॉपुलर कल्चर का सबसे अज़ीम और प्रतिष्ठित नाम हैं. टेलीविज़न की दुनिया में उनके शो व्यंग्य और खासकर सियासी व्यंग्य की उत्कृष्टता का पैमाना माने जाते हैं. जब उनके तंजिया शो की बात हो तो उनके बेहद लोकप्रिय शो Loose Talk की बात करना लाजिमी हो जाता है. पाकिस्तान के मशहूर अदाकार Marhum Moin Akhtar के साथ उनका यह शो सैटायर विधा में शायद सबसे लोकप्रिय और सबसे रचनात्मक शो कहा जाएगा. इसके 417 एपिसोड हुए और सारे शो एक से बढ़कर एक.ऐसी शख्सियत के साथ इंटरव्यू एक सपने के सच होने जैसा था. जाहिर है यह इंटरव्यू उनकी टेलीविज़न के सामने वाली शख्सियत के अलावा उसके इतर पहलुओं की भी पड़ताल करता है. मसलन उनकी पत्नी द्वारा उन पर लिखी गई किताब, उनके बेटे बिलाल मकसूद का मशहूर म्यूज़िक बैंड, हिंदुस्तानी संगीत की महान शख्सियतों के साथ उनका रिश्ता आदि.पूरा इंटरव्यू देखने के लिए क्लिक करे: http://bit.ly/NLInterviewAnwarMaqsood Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
9/28/2020 • 13 minutes, 24 seconds
Webinar: What does data tell us about Covid’s impact on India’s economy
Newslaundry, in collaboration with the India Data Portal project of the Bharti Institute of Public Policy, ISB, is organising a series of monthly webinars on specific datasets created by the platform, which is a one-stop open-access portal for journalists to access, interact with and visualise information, data and knowledge on agriculture and financial inclusion.The first webinar, titled “Indian Economy and Covid: Insights from Data” and organised on August 28, was moderated by Meghnad S, associate editor at Newslaundry. The panelists were Paojel Chaoba of the Frontier; Mitali Mukherjee of the Wire; Sukirat, Punjabi writer and columnist; Prerna Mukharya, founder of Outline India; Ashwini Chhatre, executive director of the Bharti Institute of Public Policy.Mukherjee describes the Indian economy as being in a “state of mess” now. Though “economic slowdown” seems to be a vague idea, she says, its impact will be personal for the majority of the people. She points out that the pandemic has caused job losses and salary cuts and limited work opportunities for new entrants into the job market. Further, the service sector, one of the Indian economy’s stronger performers, has been the worst hit. MSMEs have also been disproportionately affected. Talking about the coronavirus situation in Manipur, where he is based, Chaoba points out the people there are living relatively normal lives. This is mainly because they rely on agriculture as the primary source of income. Moreover, since the people of Manipur are used to having limited access to education and healthcare facilities, their daily lives haven’t been affected as much by the pandemic as those in other places. Surkirat says more than the pandemic, the nationwide lockdown imposed in March to contain it did the most damage in his home state of Punjab. There had been only one Covid-19 death in Punjab until then, he adds, but the lockdown led to unnecessary panic, which, among other disastrous consequences, has brought the newspaper industry to the brink of collapse. Mukharya cites an ILO report estimating that the pandemic could push “400 million Indians into object poverty”. A major reason for this is migrants being forced to return to their villages from cities due to the lack of work. There are limited job opportunities for them in rural India and so they face unemployment. She notes that four out of 10 women have become unemployed since March. The virus disproportionately affects women since they work in sectors like education and domestic labour, which are the worst impacted by Covid-19. Lamenting the inaccessibility and unreliability of government data, Chhatre underlines the need for private organisations to enter the data collection space. If data is digitised and made more accessible, he says, it will be harder to manipulate. The India Data Portal is one such endeavour. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
9/14/2020 • 50 minutes, 52 seconds
NL Interview: Tejinder Singh Sodhi on what Republic TV asks of its reporters, and why he left
In this interview, former Republic TV journalist Tejinder Singh Sodhi sits down with Newslaundry’s Manisha Pande to discuss the events surrounding his resignation letter, which has now become viral on social media. Tejinder Sodhi has been a journalist for about 18 years and prior to joining Republic TV he had worked for organisations like PTI, Hindustan Times and The Tribune. He is also the only Indian civilian to have studied at the US Army Command and General Staff College in Fort Leavenworth. On the reasons prompting his resignation from Republic TV on 5th August, Sodhi recounts how the organisation has no concept of exit interviews. The company is least concerned about the reasons surrounding anyone’s resignation from the organisation which is why he made it a point to write a separate note outlining his reasons aside from his resignation letter that he sent almost a month later. He says that while there were several reasons for his leaving, the fact that the staff was treated terribly was one of the most prominent reasons. He also cites instances where for a story he was made to compromise his ethics and resort to tactics like protesting with placards outside party offices. With regards to the Sunanda Pushkar case, he recalls how one of his colleagues was under so much pressure for an exclusive story that he suffered a heart attack while in office. Similar events surrounded another resignation from a reporter who was unable to get Rhea Chakroborty’s interview for the channel. On the subject of his time at Republic TV, Sodhi recalls how the channel while campaigning against nepotism also actively supported it. An interview that had previously been granted to Mr. Sodhi was reassigned to a close crony of Arnab Goswami which is what triggered his resignation. He also recalls how reporters were constantly asked to focus on a particular angle while reporting their stories which was centred around bashing a particular political party. With respect to the reporters mandate at Republic, Sodhi says that while he was never explicitly asked to not do a story on the BJP, the manner in which the stories were given prominence via the Mumbai desk made the bias very obvious. Since he headed the Jammu office for Republic, Sodhi recalls how while reporting about Mufti or Abdullah the channel would always focus on the one comment in their speeches that could be utilised to call them anti national and focussed all their energy on that.Watch. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
9/8/2020 • 42 minutes, 18 seconds
Suraj Yengde on his book ‘Caste Matters’, Dalit representation, and caste deniers | NL Interview
Dr Suraj Yengde is a scholar, writer, and the author of Caste Matters. He’s a Shorenstein Centre inaugural postdoctoral fellow at the Initiative for Institutional Anti-racism and Accountability, Harvard Kennedy School, and the editor of Caste: A Global Journal on Social Exclusion.In this conversation with Newslaundry’s Abhinandan Sekhri, Suraj says the response to his book has been “interesting”. He didn’t expect people to be this interested in caste issues, especially in India, he says, where people tend to consume mostly cheap thrillers and don’t invest too much in such thoughtful subjects.Suraj says he tried to overcome some of his own insecurities in his book by including personal vignettes on growing up in a Dalit community. He also reveals that his hesitance in sharing his personal angst is strongly tied to feeling that he was “exploiting” his own story, because of the way narratives are built around Dalit identities in India.Watch the full interview: http://bit.ly/NLInterviewSurajYengde Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
9/1/2020 • 17 minutes, 53 seconds
NL Interview: Barkha Dutt on covering migrant crisis, the media economy, and falling out with promoters
Barkha Dutt is one of India’s most prominent journalists. Currently, she helms her own news outlet, Mojo Story.She speaks with Abhinandan Sekhri of Newslaundry to talk about her experiences driving across India to cover the coronavirus crisis and the resultant migrant exodus.She also talks about the challenges of donning the hats of journalist and entrepreneur at the same time, her fallouts with promoters and whether small independent news operations can match the impact of the legacy media.Talking about her coverage of the migrant crisis, Barkha recalls that she had not planned to embark on a journey that would eventually take over a hundred days, covering thousands of miles. But the lack of Big Media attention or government intervention made her realise that she needed to give it full attention. “That end of the first week is when I realised that I can't sit inside my office, inside my house and tell the story. I didn't know the scale of what I was going to witness when I set forth, but I gave myself a week in the capital observing this, observing the invisibility of the story," she adds.She recounts some of the stories that impacted and stayed with her, how her team managed to travel and find places to stay in a pandemic while the country was on lockdown, and how it felt being in a PPE for a few hours.Asked why she has changed several organisations over the past few years, Barkha explains that she quit NDTV over the issue of editorial integrity and Tiranga TV because the employees hadn’t been paid their salaries.Barkha and Abhinandan also discuss the future of journalism, the new economic models Indian media are experimenting with, and why she would opt for the "Guardian mode" if she could.Watch the full interview: https://www.newslaundry.com/2020/08/25/nl-interview-barkha-dutt-on-covering-migrant-crisis-the-media-economy-and-falling-out-with-promoters Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/26/2020 • 1 hour, 19 minutes, 14 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 20: Is India a secular country?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode of NL vs NL, Newslaundry’s Basant Kumar and Lipi Vats debate whether India is a secular country or not.Basant thinks it is, Lipi disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or reach out to Basant and Lipi on Twitter. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/25/2020 • 34 minutes, 46 seconds
NL Interview (Teaser): Prof Apoorvanand on dissent, the Delhi carnage, and facing police inquiry
Professor Apoorvanand teaches Hindi at Delhi University, commentates on sociopolitical issues, produces literary and cultural critiques, and frequently lends his voices to progressive causes. For his activism, he has sometimes faced heat from the authorities. Early this month, his phone was seized and he was questioned by the Delhi Police about his role in the protests against the Citizenship law which they have alleged caused the communal violence in the city in February. Apoorvanand speaks with Chahak Gupta about his interrogation, his ideological leanings and his position on violence. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/22/2020 • 7 minutes, 13 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 19: Should workplaces provide sick leave to staff for mental health issues?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode of NL vs NL, Manisha Pande and Newslaundry subscriber Aishwarya Mahesh debate whether workplaces should provide sick leave to their employees who might be battling mental health issues.Manisha thinks they should, Aishwarya disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or reach out to Manisha and Aishwarya. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/18/2020 • 32 minutes
Webinar: Are Indians too easily offended?
Can comedy and satire be tools of social change? How does this ecosystem interact with a large democracy like ours? When the perception of what is offensive changes from person to person, how do we define an “offence”? Are Indians too easily offended?To discuss these themes, Roli Pulse, the digital arm of Roli Books, in association with Newslaundry, brought together comedians Vir Das and Aditi Mittal, and Newslaundry co-founder Abhinandan Sekhri, in the sixth and final episode of this specially curated video series on the media landscape.On whether social media has made acceptable certain things that were once unacceptable, Aditi says, “Social media has enabled people to coagulate around things that are socially unacceptable — things that are bigoted, racist, sexist...And so people know now that if I say something ridiculous, I will get an invitation to Bigg Boss. And for a whole lot of people, that is a valid route to infamy.”As consumers of social media, Aditi adds, “we are the monsters that we are fighting. When we hate-share stuff or cringe-watch stuff, we’re adding to it.”Vir says, “If [something] is offensive, does that mean it should not exist, or does it mean it needs to be modified? Is it the only thing that’s offensive?” He also points out that what is defined as offensive changes “every five years or four years or three years or two years..."Listen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/14/2020 • 46 minutes, 55 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 18: Is safetyism a contradiction of liberal values?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode of NL vs NL, Meghnad S and Newslaundry subscriber Abhishek Bagga debate on whether safetyism contradicts liberal values. Meghnad thinks it does, Abhishek disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or reach out to Meghnad. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/11/2020 • 32 minutes, 52 seconds
NL Interview : N Venugopal Rao on Varavara Rao’s health and bail plea, and the conspiracy surrounding his arrest
N Venugopal Rao is a writer and the nephew of Varavara Rao, the poet who has been arrested in the Bhima Koregaon case. Varavara was arrested two years ago along with 12 other activists. He has been repeatedly denied bail and has been in poor health for the past month, testing positive for Covid on July 16.In this interview with Newslaundry’s Manisha Pande, Venugopal explains how the family was allowed a 20-minute long video call with Varavara by Mumbai’s Nanavati Hospital, where he was shifted for treatment. Varavara appeared both physically and psychologically unwell during the call. Regarding his uncle’s involvement in the Bhima Koregaon case, Venugopal points out how the Elgar Parishad event, which preceded the violence in December 2017, had been organised by retired Justices BG Kolse-Patil and PB Sawant, who have already stated that they were the “main organisers and sole funders”. Varavara had never even visited Pune until the Pune police came to take him to jail in November 2018, Venugopal says.Varavara’s bail plea will be heard by courts today. The family is requesting bail on three major grounds: his age, health, and vulnerability to Covid. The plea was filed before he tested positive for the virus. Watch. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/7/2020 • 33 minutes, 21 seconds
NL Interview: Vivek Kaul on the NPA mess, the poor state of public sector banks, and his latest book
Vivek Kaul is an author, columnist and commentator, known for his Easy Money trilogy on the history of money and banking and the fundamental issue behind the global financial crisis. His latest book, Bad Money: Inside the NPA Mess and How It Threatens the Indian Banking System, focuses on the layers within layers of India’s non-performing assets problem.In this interview with Newslaundry’s Abhinandan Sekhri, Vivek kicks off by explaining how Vijay Mallya, Mehul Choksi and Nirav Modi have become the “poster boys” of the NPA mess in India, even though there’s an entire list of defaulters in the Parliament which hasn’t been spotlighted.To watch the full unedited interview, subscribe to Newslaundry.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/7/2020 • 14 minutes, 32 seconds
NL Conversation: Ziya Us Salam on the vilification of the Tablighi Jamaat, its apolitical stance, and his latest book
Ziya Us Salam is a journalist and author. Presently the associate editor of Frontline, he has been associated with the Hindu for over two decades. His latest book, Inside the Tablighi Jamaat, delves into the religious organisation accused by the governing establishment and the mainstream media of spreading “corona jihad” in India.In this conversation with Newslaundry’s Mehraj D Lone, Ziya begins by explaining the roots of the Jamaat, which is arguably India’s largest Muslim organisation. Its members were not intellectuals, he says, but poor, illiterate peasants who were barely able to recite a few verses from the Quran.Describing the Jamaat’s spiritual and ritualistic aspects, he says, “They never encourage youngsters, or senior members who come to them, to under the Quran.” In the context of his own experience with the organisation, Ziya says it rejected his proposal to distribute the meaning of the Quran in English, Hindi and Urdu, since the Jamaat focuses on reading the Quran to learn about the afterlife, he says, not to understand it.Will the recent backlash and allegations of “spreading Covid” change the Jamaat’s refusal to take a political stand? They live in a “social, political vacuum,” Ziya replies. “I don’t think they will change with Covid. They did not speak in 1992, they did not speak in 2002, they didn’t speak up in 2013. There is no likelihood that the Tablighi Jamaat will undergo any major change post Covid in 2020.”Watch. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/5/2020 • 53 minutes, 39 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 17: Should traditional currency be replaced by cryptocurrency?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode of NL vs NL, Newslaundry subscribers Dhruv Thakkar and Yash debate on whether traditional currency should be replaced by cryptocurrency. Yash thinks it should be, Dhruv disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or reach out to Dhruv and Yash Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
8/4/2020 • 24 minutes, 57 seconds
NL Conversation: Nitin Pai on liberal nationalism and how India became a society without compassion
Nitin Pai is the director of the Takshashila Institution, an independent centre for research and education in public policy. In the episode of NL Conversations, he speaks with Meghnad S about policy, ideology and technology.Talking about “liberal nationalism”, he believes it can only exist in India, for elsewhere people will argue that it’s not possible to be “liberal” and “nationalist” at the same time. “Indian nationalism can work on a global scale because it does not insist on a single language, race and religion.”Nitin also discusses various ideologies and whether they make sense in today’s world. He complains that “we have become a society with no compassion” but maintains that the society is still “capable of looking after its weak”.Talking about India’s education system, he argued that it is important to think critically in today’s age of technology and complains that “the test system has killed education in this country.”Tune in! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/28/2020 • 17 minutes, 51 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 16: Is reservation desirable?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode of NL vs NL, Chahak Gupta and Newslaundry subscriber Agastya Sreenivasan debate the uncomfortable question: is reservation desirable?Chahak says they are, Agastya disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or reach out to Agastya and Chahak. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/21/2020 • 33 minutes, 28 seconds
NL Conversation: Gautam Mishra on creating the Spotify for news, regulating big tech, and paywalls
Check out Stop Press and susbcribe at https://stoppress.substack.com/In the latest episode of NL Conversations, Newslaundry’s Chitranshu Tewari speaks to Gautam Mishra, joining in from Melbourne. Gautam is the founder and chief executive officer of Inkl, a bundle news subscription platform that unlocks coverage from premium publishers like the New York Times and the Economist with a monthly subscription of just Rs 250. Talking about the upsurge in demand for bundle news subscriptions, Gautam speaks at length about the longevity and breadth of news in 2020. “Twenty years ago if you were from Delhi, it was fine for you to mostly concentrate on news from Delhi, but today you cannot do that,” he points out.He adds: “If you want to know what’s happening with Brexit, you would want to know it from the Brits. If you want to understand what’s happening in Hong Kong, you actually need to get it from the South China Morning Post.”Defending Facebook and Twitter on being unable to police “fake news”, Gautam says, “Facebook and Twitter are open networks and anytime you have an open network, that, by definition...means anybody can publish anything.” He says the Australian Competition Commission’s decision to make big tech pay directly to the publishers is “completely ridiculous and nonsense”. “When somebody has cancer, you can’t just cure it by giving a band-aid,” he says.Tune in! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/18/2020 • 54 minutes, 10 seconds
Webinar: Do digital media platforms still want viral news?
In this age of the internet, there’s little that doesn’t go viral. Including the news. But there’s some confusion as to what is meant by “viral news” and what constitutes “viral content”. More to the point, is there a difference between “news” and “content”? Or are they synonymous?To discuss the finer points of this question, Roli Pulse, the digital arm of Roli Books, in association with Newslaundry, brought together Sattvik Mishra, CEO of ScoopWhoop; Pragya Tiwari, journalist and policy consultant; Andre Borges, content creator at Pocket Aces; and Abhinandan Sekhri, co-founder of Newslaundry. “I think news has largely been dictated by a bunch of editors who sit in a room and decide what news should look like,” Sattvik says, and emphasises the importance of presentation and diversity in making something go viral. Pragya says, “There is a massive disconnect between the people who are thinking about marketing and people who are thinking about editorial.”Andre chips in, “Content creation and journalism, for me, don’t have to be two different things.”Abhinandan responds, “I don’t see how a commercial proposition can be made on that because then there is no incentive to spend on ground reportage where traffic is your only metric.”Listen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/17/2020 • 46 minutes, 28 seconds
Sanjay Jha on what ails the Congress and why he was sacked as party spokesman | NL Interview
Sanjay Jha is a politician, writer, and columnist. He was sacked as a spokesman of the Congress, apparently over a pair of articles in the Times of India where he criticised the party’s “leadership vacuum”, the lack of “internal democratic process that listens to individual voices” and inability to get “up and running with any sense of urgency” in the wake of electoral defeats.Jha sits down with Abhinandan Sekhri to talk about his politics, what is ailing the Congress, and, of course, his sacking. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/17/2020 • 11 minutes, 21 seconds
NL Interview: Swara Bhasker on nepotism in Bollywood and being an ‘armchair activist’
Swara Bhasker is one of India’s most outspoken celebrities, regularly lending her voice to progressive causes and public protests. This has made the actor known for her performances in Tanu Weds Manu, Anaarkali of Aarah, and Rasbhari one of the big bugbears of Hindu nationalist TV news anchors and social media trolls.Swara speaks with Meghnad S about nepotism in Bollywood, the audience’s role in creating and sustaining the film industry’s star system, and the rise of streaming platforms. She also speaks about her “activism” while describing herself as “an armchair activist”.To watch the full unedited interview, subscribe to Newslaundry.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/16/2020 • 10 minutes, 31 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 15: Should countries be allowed to claim territory in space?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode of NL vs NL, Shubh Soni and Newslaundry subscriber Dhiraj Bhandari debate whether countries should be allowed to claim territory in space.Dhiraj thinks they should, Shubh disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or reach out to Dhiraj and Shubh. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/14/2020 • 29 minutes, 21 seconds
Session with Sena: Reporting on the Central Vista project during a pandemic
In May, we released an NL Sena, “The New New Delhi”, a deep dive into the Narendra Modi government’s much-touted project to redesign Central Vista, the heart of the national capital. Reporter Hameeda Syed also analysed just why the government was pushing forward with the project even as the Covid-19 pandemic was ravaging the poor.In this edition of Session with Sena, Hameeda, along with Newslaundry’s Chitranshu Tewari, talks about the story with the subscribers who made it possible with their contributions. This Sena story was supported by over 50 of our readers, including Sangeeta Thotakura, Shreekant Gupta, Zameer Ansari, Sree Harsha R, Vidhu Saxena, Dhiraj Kumar, and other NL Sena members.Hameeda says the Centre went ahead with the project “without talking about it to experts”, and that the project “came as a shock” to them. A subscriber, Dhiraj, asks about reporting during the midst of a pandemic, and whether it made being on the ground more difficult. Hameeda says it was a problem, since it was visually important to “map all the developments” happening with the project.Subscriber Rupa Banerjee asks about the aftermath of the project. “The aftermath has already happened,” Hameeda says, adding that the Supreme Court had refused to stay the redevelopment plan. “Even though there is a lockdown, I feel there should be some resistance towards the project.”Tune in. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/8/2020 • 36 minutes, 14 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 14: Should public health be prioritised over personal privacy?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode of NL vs NL, Newslaundry subscribers Aditya Relangi and Aishwarya Mahesh debate whether public health should be prioritised over personal privacy.Aditya thinks it should be, Aishwarya disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or reach out to Aditya and Aishwarya. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/7/2020 • 30 minutes, 20 seconds
NL Conversation: Kritika Pandey on inspiration and winning the 2020 Commonwealth Short Story Prize
Kritika Pandey is a writer and poet. Her short story The Great Indian Tee and Snakes recently won the 2020 Commonwealth Short Story Prize. She has also won the 2020 James W Foley Memorial Award and the 2018 Harvey Swados Fiction Prize. Pandey sat down with Abhinandan Sekhri to talk about her life, work and literary journey.“I was responding to the contemporary sociopolitical upheavals in India,” Kritika says when asked about the inspiration for The Great Indian Tee and Snakes, while pointing out the varied receptions it got from her peers in the United States and back home in Jharkhand. She talks about the trade-off involved in keeping the local flavour in a story while ensuring that it has a global appeal. She stresses the importance of engaging with people holding different points of view while commenting on the “overwoke” people in the US in the context of the current political situation. She narrates her experience attending the Black Lives Matter protests against the murder of George Flyod, and discusses how the protest cultures in India and the US differ. Kritika also talks about experiencing gender discrimination, desi families and validation, what’s next for her, and much more. Tune in! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/6/2020 • 36 minutes, 37 seconds
Podcast: Is the press free in India?
On the Global Press Freedom Index, India ranks 142 out of 180 countries. To make sense of why a country that prides itself on being the world’s largest democracy fares so abysmally on press freedom, it’s imperative to locate and speak about the different pressures that journalists are under.To this end, Roli Pulse, the digital arm of Roli Books, in association with Newslaundry, organised a webinar with Siddharth Varadarajan, editor of the Wire; Naresh Fernandes, editor of Scroll; Dhanya Rajendran, chief editor of the News Minute; and Abhinandan Sekhri, co-founder of Newslaundry.They discuss the pressures the Indian media faced in the past and how they are different from what it must deal with today. Intimidation, they agree, has become “more systematic” now, and this can only be countered by institutionally empowering journalists.They also talk about how institutions such as the judiciary have responded to the intimation of the media, recognise the urgent need to have a united press, and acknowledge that press associations currently are inaccessible to most journalists.Varadarajan shares his experiences dealing with the pressure put by former Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa on the Hindu when he was the daily’s editor. Fernandes examines what it means to be a journalist today when even a Facebook post critical of the establishment attracts heat and even institutional interference. Rajendran expresses her concern about the sphere of hate that has been created in the society and that, in turn, has led to public mistrust of journalists who are critical of majoritarianism.They also discuss the line that we need to draw under "hate speech", and whether criminalisation is the answer to the problems we face because of it.Listen! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
7/3/2020 • 45 minutes, 19 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 13: Should marijuana be legalised in India?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode of NL vs NL, Shardool Katyayan and Parikshit Sanyal of Newslaundry battle it out over the highly contentious question of whether marijuana should be legalised in India?Shardool thinks it should be, Parikshit disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or reach out to Shardool and Parikshit. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/30/2020 • 27 minutes, 5 seconds
NL Conversation: Lakshmi Chaudhry on news fatigue, newsletters, and news as an experience
The news media, like most spaces, has a big blindspot when it comes to the representation of women, even as they bear the brunt of the negative impact of the information explosion. How and why is it so? What can be done to rectify the situation. To discuss these questions, Chitranshu Tewari spoke with Lakshmi Chaudhry, the founder of Splainer Media and the co-founder of Firstpost. She talks about her journey launching Splainer, how news is an exclusionary space for women on both the publication and the reader side, and why news needs to be conceptualised as an experience to begin with. She also talks about the overabundance of news causing "news fatigue", and how the comeback of newsletters is a response to this phenomenon.Subscribe to Splainer: https://splainer.in/subscribeSign up for Stop Press: https://bit.ly/StopPressNewsletterTune in. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/27/2020 • 41 minutes, 12 seconds
What will it take for news media to survive the coronavirus crisis? | NL Webinar
The news media is in a crisis. Already struggling with falling revenues and eroding credibility, the media has been left to battle for survival by the Covid pandemic and its economic fallout. Is there a way of this crisis? If there’s, where does it lead?To discuss the challenges facing the news media and how they can be dealt with, Newslaundry organised a webinar in partnership with the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. Abhinandan Sekhri of Newslaundry is joined by Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, director of the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism and political communication professor at the University of Oxford; Ritu Kapoor, co-founder of the Quint and a member of the board at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism; Anant Goenka, executive director of the Indian Express; and Avinash Pandey, CEO of the ABP News Network.Listen! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/25/2020 • 1 hour, 29 minutes, 25 seconds
NL Interview: Hasina Kharbhih on combating human trafficking in Northeast India
Hasina Kharbhih is the founder of the Impulse NGO Network, a civil society organisation based in Shillong, Meghalaya, which works to combat human trafficking in Northeast India, Nepal, Bangladesh, and Myanmar. INGON, as it’s popularly known, has helped rescue and rehabilitate thousands of trafficked women and children over the past two decades.In this interview with Snigdha Sharma, Hasina explains the origin of the “impulse model” that uses a multidisciplinary approach to combat human trafficking.To watch the full unedited interview, subscribe to Newslaundry.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/23/2020 • 9 minutes, 43 seconds
Podcast: Is TV news dead?
Indian television news has acquired an unsavoury reputation over the past few years owing to the bombastic anchors and their primetime rants peddling bigotry. Now, in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, as advertising revenues, the chief source of income for mainstream media, dwindle, can TV news survive in its current form?To discuss this and much more, Roli Pulse, the digital arm of Roli Books, organised a webinar with three of India’s most prominent news professionals – Barkha Dutt, Faye D’Souza and Abhinandan Sekhri.D’Souza, the former executive editor of Mirror Now, described the business model of TV news as “point and shoot” journalism where accusations were hurled with little evidence. “A journalist who cares about ethics at this point, facts and fact-checking is an inconvenience.” D’Souza said. “Let’s be honest. Your viewer is no longer your customer. Your advertiser is your customer.”D’Souza, as also Sekhri, praised the quality of Dutt’s journalism during the coronavirus lockdown. The former NDTV star anchor who now runs Mojo Story has travelled thousands of kilometres to tell the stories of migrant workers who have been walking home after being stranded in alien places by the lockdown, without food or a source of income.Dutt complained that journalism had become formulaic, with stale studio panel discussions and the “privileging of anchors over reporters”. She said the initial responses to her new project indicated there was “certainly an audience for raw, authentic, content from the ground”.Listen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/23/2020 • 49 minutes, 25 seconds
Podcast: Is TV news relevant in India today?
Following up on their last webinar, “Is TV news dead”, Roli Books brought together another panel to debate the other aspect of the topic, “Television News: Relevance and Credibility in Today’s India”. Abhinandan Sekhri, co-founder of Newslaundry, was joined by Nidhi Razdan, executive editor of NDTV, and Saahil Menghani, news reporter and anchor.Razdan argued that the continued popularity of television news showed that it was still popular. “It is not dead, simply because viewership has gone up massively since the pandemic began.” She later added, “There are actually more people watching television today after the pandemic started, many more people.”In response, Abhinandan pointed to the absence of “news” in the primetime shows aired by some of India’s most popular TV channels. “Even if they get 100 percent of the viewership, I would still say that TV news is dead,” he added. “Because what they are watching is not news.”Menghani argued that the coverage of the Delhi carnage and the coronavirus pandemic had narrowed the “gap in credibility” between television and digital media. Discussing Barkha Dutt’s coverage of the migrant crisis, Menghani said “one individual singlehandedly changed the narrative, rather set the agenda for most of the news channels. That excludes NDTV because from day one, they have been getting it right.”They also discussed the business model of TV channels, the lack of pushback from advertisers, the entertainment aspect of TV “news”, and layoffs in the media industry during the pandemic.Listen! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/23/2020 • 51 minutes, 39 seconds
NL Conversation: Happymon Jacob on India-China conflict, and why Kashmir is certain to erupt again
For over a month, India and China have been locked in a tense border conflict in eastern Ladakh. The standoff turned violent early this week, leading to the killing of 20 Indian soldiers. Grim as the situation is, it is not quite clear what exactly is happening on the ground, and what it means for relations between the two countries. To demystify the conflict and explain its strategic and political implications, Mehraj D Lone spoke with Happymon Jacob, one of India’s foremost strategic affairs experts. Jacob teaches at Jawaharlal Nehru University’s School of International Studies, and writes extensively on India’s strategic and foreign policies, the Kashmir dispute, and disarmament. He is the author of The Line of Control: Travelling with the Indian and Pakistani Armies and Line on Fire: Ceasefire Violations and India–Pakistan Escalation Dynamics. In this conversation, held before the faceoff turned violent, Jacob argues that the ongoing conflict is not a usual border transgression. It needs to be seen in the larger geopolitical context of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor, potential presence of Chinese soldiers in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir, India’s recent declarations about retaking Aksai Chin. As to how India should respond, he says its policymakers must realise that “China doesn’t believe in a peaceful rise anymore”. From a military perspective, he adds, “it’s not all that easy for India to dislodge Chinese soldiers from Ladakh” but it has the upper hand along other parts of the Line of Actual Control. He also talks about dealing with China economically, diplomatically, and in the maritime space, while looking for avenues of cooperation. Jacob also talks about the BJP government’s foreign policy, the abrogation of Article 370 and the introduction of a new domicile policy in Jammu and Kashmir. Tune in! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/23/2020 • 59 minutes, 39 seconds
Podcast: Is India’s print media ready for the web?
To sink or to float is the question. In India, as elsewhere, the internet revolution has compelled newspapers and magazines to transition to digital. The transition has been slow, however, and most newspapers and magazines are still primarily in the print space. Will the pandemic hasten it?To discuss this, Roli Pulse, the digital arm of Roli Books, in association with Newslaundry, organised a webinar with Anant Goenka, executive director of the daily Indian Express, Anant Nath, editor of the Caravan magazine, and Abhinandan Sekhri, co-founder of Newslaundry.Goenka argued that the “major problem isn’t the lack of money being invested, but some major policy issues, like that of news aggregators in digital media, that we need to delve into and grapple”.Nath said, “Aggregators like Inshorts make revenue from our content but they also give us customers. And it’s also a nuanced question as to what sort of liability they should be taking.”Addressing the question of objectivity in journalism, Nath said, “The demise of the local paper has led to the demise of transparency and accountability in local governments.”Listen. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/23/2020 • 45 minutes, 55 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 12: Capitalism, socialism, communism, or libertarianism. Which system works best?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this special episode of NL vs NL, Newslaundry subscribers Jefferson Simon, Dhruv Pandey, Saloni Dangwal, and Umesh Getta debate which ideological system works the best – capitalism, socialism, communism, or libertarianism? Jefferson bats for libertarianism, Dhruv for capitalism, Saloni for socialism, and Umesh for communism.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or reach out to Dhruv, Jefferson, Saloni, and Umesh. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/23/2020 • 47 minutes, 2 seconds
NL Interview: Digvijaya Singh on Jyotiraditya Scindia joining the BJP, and toeing the ‘soft Hindutva’ line
THIS IS JUST A TEASER.WATCH THE FULL INTERVIEW: https://bit.ly/NLInterviewDigvijayaSinghDigvijaya Singh is a senior Congress leader, Rajya Sabha MP, and the former chief minister of Madhya Pradesh. In this interview, he sits down with Newslaundry’s Abhinandan Sekhri to discuss Jyotiraditya Scindia’s exit from the Congress, recent defections in Madhya Pradesh, his political ambitions, and when he thinks Rahul Gandhi will return as president of the party.On Scindia’s defection to the BJP, a move that toppled the state government in Madhya Pradesh, Digvijaya says, “I am seriously telling you, I never, never expected Jyotiraditya Scindia to defect. In fact, till March 4 or 5, I was in touch with him. But after that, he suddenly switched off his phone.” He reiterates that relations between him, Scindia and Kamal Nath were very cordial.On being asked about toeing the “soft Hindutva” line during his tenure as Madhya Pradesh chief minister, Digvijaya says he belongs to a religious family and has no qualms in owning up to his religion. “At the same time, my religion, or my ‘sanatan dharma’, is equal respect to all religions,” he adds. “This is what I believe in.” He believes there is some sort of understanding between the communal Hindu and the communal Muslim, and they feed off each other.The conversation also spans fake news, the future of Indian politics, and where this might head in a post-Covid world.Watch the full interview on www.newslaundry.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/18/2020 • 15 minutes, 55 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 11: Does religion have a positive impact on society?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode, Meghnad S and Newslaundry subscriber Vaibhav Agarwal debate whether religion is beneficial to society or not.Meghnad thinks it has, Vaibhav disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or tweet to Vaibhav and Meghnad. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/16/2020 • 25 minutes, 52 seconds
NL Interview: Hardik Mehta on making Kaamyaab, co-writing Paatal Lok, chasing the dream in Mumbai
Hardik Mehta is a filmmaker. He’s known for the documentary Amdavad Ma Famous, which won him the National Award, and the recently released Kaamyaab, a cinematic homage to the Hindi film industry’s “side actors”. He also co-wrote the web series Paatal Lok, which is currently playing and earning rave reviews.Hardik sat down with Abhinandan Sekhri to talk about how he came upon the idea of making a film on the supporting actors who had iconic presence in the 1980s and 1990s but then slipped into oblivion. Hardik also talks about the struggle of finally getting a theatrical release for Kaamyaab, just a week before the coronavirus pandemic forced cinemas to shut down.To watch the full unedited interview, subscribe to Newslaundry.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/14/2020 • 9 minutes, 55 seconds
NL Interview: Bharatbala on documenting India under lockdown, patriotism, and Maa Tujhe Salaam
Filmmaker Bharatbala, who produced the iconic video for AR Rahman’s 'Maa Tujhe Salaam', is known for the beauty of his visual frames. His Virtual Bharat initiative aims to document stories from across India through 1,000 films. His most recent initiative was a short film, titled 'Uthenge Hum', capturing visuals of India during the lockdown.In this edition of NL Interviews, Bharatbala joins Abhinandan Sekhri to talk about what motivated him to document India during the nation-wide lockdown to contain the Covid-19 outbreak.To watch the full unedited interview, subscribe to Newslaundry.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/14/2020 • 5 minutes, 49 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 10: Are we living in a simulation?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode, Newslaundry subscribers Sahej Rahal and Parminder Kaur fight it out over that very existential question: are we all living in a simulation?Parminder thinks we are, Sahej disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or tweet to Parminder, Meghnad and Parikshit. Sahej prefers if you contact him on Instagram. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/9/2020 • 30 minutes, 12 seconds
NL Conversation: Anand Patwardhan on the Centre’s apathy towards the poor, and the Ayodhya verdict
In the latest episode of NL Conversations, Newslaundry’s Mehraj D Lone speaks to Anand Patwardhan, one of India’s most prominent filmmakers and the director of documentaries like Ram Ke Naam, War and Peace, and Reason.Discussing the migrant worker crisis following the lockdown, Anand argues that the government is “incapable of feeling anything for the poor, anything for minorities, anything for people other than their own crony capitalist class.” He adds,“This has been their policy from day one, long before the coronavirus.” Anand is particularly impassioned in his criticism of the Babri Masjid judgement, suggesting that the Supreme Court “rewarded the people who demolished the Babri Mosque. When there is still a case going on about the demolition of the mosque, we know who the guilty are because they have said so themselves; they have hardly been reticent about the fact that they demolished the mosque.” He also discusses the historical context of the dispute, referring to a lesser-known pre-independence narrative of the site. Defending his conception of Mahatma Gandhi and Balasahab Ambedkar as “liberation theologists”, Anand suggests that recent criticism of Gandhi is ahistorical, especially with regards to the latter’s views on caste. He points out Gandhi’s campaigns against untouchability and his consistent advocacy of inter-caste marriages. He concludes, “Both Ambedkar and Gandhi were so important because both had to go hand in hand. One changing the law and the other changing hearts.” Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/6/2020 • 48 minutes, 18 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 9: Is Twitter good for journalism?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode, Newslaundry subscribers Mayukh Roy and Khushee Chauhan debate whether Twitter is good for journalism or not. Mayukh thinks it is, Khushee disagrees.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why.Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or tweet to Mayukh and Khushee. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
6/2/2020 • 22 minutes, 33 seconds
NL Conversation: Tongam Rina on racism and Big Media’s ignorance about the Northeast
Tongam Rina, an award-winning journalist, is an editor at the Arunachal Times. A credible and critical voice from India’s Northeast, she has had to deal with state hostility, online outrage, and a near-fatal attack.In this interview with Snigdha Sharma, she discusses how the very landscape of the Northeast has shaped her journey as an environmental journalist, how journalists in the region struggle to obtain information, the environment, and the coronavirus pandemic.“I have seen enough hydropower projects in my life to say rivers die,” Tongam says, discussing the controversy around the Etalin hydel project in the Dibang Valley. She rues how governments see the environment as simply a means of revenue generation.Tongam recently reported how there has been a spike in wildlife hunting during the lockdown. The report stirred online backlash. Her critics felt she was “shaming the state” and encouraging racism against people from the Northeast. “India has always been very racist towards the people of the Northeast. I know that. Many of us have faced it,” says Tongam. “With regards to the report, social media really took it to a very different level.”Talking about the increasing government hostility towards journalists who demand accountability, Tongam says, “It is hugely problematic not only for the media, but for us as a country.” Speaking about the assault on her nine years ago, and the case arising out of it which is ongoing, Tongam says she has lost faith in the police and the judiciary. Tune in.***At Newslaundry, we don’t take ads from governments or corporations. We are an ad-free platform and depend on subscriptions to fund our reports, media critique, interviews, and podcasts. For we believe that when the public pays the public is served, when the advertiser pays the advertiser is served. Join the movement to keep news free and independent by subscribing to Newslaundry today. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/30/2020 • 47 minutes
NL Interview: Sanjaya Baru on Modi’s excessive self-confidence, and why India’s coronavirus response is faltering
As a veteran journalist, editor, author, former secretary general of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, and media advisor to former prime minister Manmohan Singh, Sanjaya Baru has closely followed, and been involved in, India’s economic policymaking for many decades. As India grapples with the coronavirus pandemic and its socioeconomic fallout, Baru sits down with Mehraj D Lone to discuss the crisis and how the country can pull out of it. In a wide-ranging conversation, he also talks about his time in government, the Indian state’s capacity to govern, and why the poor and the marginalised have been abandoned in this time of crisis.Though India’s handling of the pandemic has been “reasonable compared to many other countries”, Baru argues, the “inability of the system as a whole” to address the resultant economic challenges is worrying. India has a “strong leader, weak state” system that is unable to “take care of the health needs of the people, their employment needs, their basic necessities”. He decries the delay in preparing for the outbreak, suggesting that losing the “10-12 weeks” from January until late March was “a major policy failure on the part of the government”. “The problem with the Modi government has been an excessive sense of self-confidence that we can manage everything. That confidence isn’t reflected in the capability,” he adds.Baru criticises the government’s handling of the migrant crisis, describing it as an example of the absence of “dialogue between the Centre and the states” despite the prime minister’s frequent exhortations of “cooperative federalism”. “Each state government is behaving like an island,” he says. “And there is no Centre looking at the migrant issue.” On the recent economic package announced by the government, Baru says an increase in fiscal spending, regardless of magnitude, should be welcomed. “But my basic view as far as the economic solution to the crisis is concerned: how do you restore confidence and credibility of policy?” The problem with this government, in my judgment, is that it has lost credibility,” Baru adds. “When Nirmala Sitharaman is speaking, she no longer carries the weight that a finance minister of the government of India has to carry, for a very good reason.”The conversation also touches upon Indian federalism, the government’s communication strategies, how decision making in the Manmohan Singh government differed from that in the Modi government, class interests of the ruling establishment, and why India isn’t investing in public health and education. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/29/2020 • 8 minutes, 54 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 8: Which is truly cosmopolitan, Mumbai or Delhi?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode, Abhinandan Sekhri and Newslaundry subscriber Shivangi Chaturvedi fight it out over that unanswerable question: which city is truly cosmopolitan, Mumbai or Delhi?While Shivangi bats for Mumbai, Abhinandan defends Delhi. Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or tweet to Abhinandan and Shivangi. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/26/2020 • 29 minutes, 23 seconds
NL Interview: Sudhir Krishnaswamy on joining Facebook’s oversight board, and the ‘cultural difficulties’ of moderation
Over the past few years, Facebook has been embroiled in a number of controversies, especially those pertaining to the tech giant’s moderation policy. To address the latter issue, the company recently appointed a 20-member oversight board which will have the final say over content moderation issues. In this episode of NL Interviews, Newslaundry’s Abhinandan Sekhri talks to Dr Sudhir Krishnaswamy, the only Indian member of the oversight board. Sudhir is the vice-chancellor of the National Law School of India University, Bengaluru, and the co-founder of the Centre for Law and Policy Research.Sudhir explains Facebook’s moderation process and the role of the oversight board. “Facebook and Instagram have already set up two layers of content moderation, of policy review. They have a technological layer and they have a human moderation layer. Those things will not change,” he says. “It is fair to say those layers will handle the vast majority of cases.” He continues: “The range of parties who may be unhappy may be again large, so those users or others who have complaints about Facebook content will have the opportunity to take this up one more level [to the oversight board].”Abhinandan asks about the cultural difficulties of moderation, and how the oversight board will be able to grapple with such diverse contextual issues. Sudhir says that when the oversight board is unsure of a certain meaning, it will “call on people within those communities of users, or cultural, linguistic or ethnic communities, to understand that meaning before decision-making is carried out”. He concedes that this may delay decision-making. Sudhir and Abhinandan also discuss the formation and operation of the oversight board, reconciling local law with Facebook policies, and much more. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/26/2020 • 9 minutes, 20 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 7: Tea or coffee?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything?We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL.Let's make debates great again!In this episode, Newslaundry subscribers Goonj Mohan and Aishwarya Mahesh battle it out over the age-old question: which is better, tea or coffee?Goonj bats for tea, Aishwarya is all for coffee.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why.Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or tweet to Aishwarya and Goonj. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/20/2020 • 28 minutes, 38 seconds
NL Conversation: Are public-private partnerships the solution to India’s healthcare woes?
The coronavirus pandemic has revealed in tragic detail the inadequacies of India’s healthcare system. While public healthcare, especially outside of major cities, is at best rudimentary, the private health sector, which accounts for the bulk of the nation’s healthcare facilities, has come up short in this time of crisis.Why is it so? What are the deficiencies in the health sector the pandemic has revealed? How have they affected the country’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak? What needs to be done now to minimise the damage from the pandemic? How can the health sector be strengthened in the long run? Do public-private partnerships offer a solution?To discuss such questions, Newslaundry organised a webinar, hosted by Abhinandan Sekhri and featuring as panellists Dr Naresh Trehan, chairman and managing director of Medanta; K Sujata Rao, former union health secretary; Oommen C Kurian, head of health initiative at the Observer Research Foundation.Asked whether Indian hospitals have the excess capacity to deal with the outbreak, Trehan points out how hospitals dedicated to treating coronavirus patients have been set up in every district and how private hospitals such as Medanta, Fortis and Artemis have collectively adopted a hospital in Manesar, Haryana, and turned it into a Covid treatment facility.Citing the example of Gurugram, he says there appear to be enough hospital beds to deal with a medium-sized surge. It’ll depend a great deal on how the lockdown is lifted as well, he adds, “As important as the lockdown was, even more important is in what sequence and what manner it is lifted.” (Disclosure: Dr. Trehan is married to Madhu Trehan, the co-founder and former editor-in-chief of Newslaundry.)Asked about the treatment costs in private hospitals, Trehan explains that those with insurance are being charged under it, and those who cannot afford treatment are being treated for free.To understand how the public-private model works, Abhinandan asked Rao to explain its intricacies and its shortcomings. “When it comes to infectious diseases,” she explains, “it’s a public good and it is something that the government is completely responsible for.” The private sector, she adds, cannot work on “charity basis” for long.She mentions how in some states the governments have taken over private hospitals to deal with the coronavirus outbreak, “I don’t necessarily buy that, I really feel that whatever facilities the government has, we should exploit them fully.” Moreover, the numbers right now are manageable and providing for the extreme cases is where the government is coming up short. She doesn’t think it’s a sustainable solution for the government to expect the private sector to provide free care, but “they can come up with a fair rate that will have to be worked out and negotiated”.Kurian argues that the policy debate in India is very polarised. He agrees that there is a problem of resources in the medical sector but adds that “there are ongoing public-private partnerships which can be leveraged to fit our needs for Covid response”.He suggests making the Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojna universal. The insurance scheme covers around 50 percent of India’s population currently, he adds, but the “problem with it’s that most private hospitals get paid pretty late”.Watch.This stakeholder consultation is part of a project supported by the Thakur Family Foundation. The Thakur Family Foundation has not exercised any editorial control over the project. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/13/2020 • 1 hour, 10 minutes, 45 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 6: Should governments spend on welfare?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode, Shardool Katyatan and Newslaundry subscriber Dhiraj Bhandary debate whether governments should spend on welfare. Shardool thinks they should, Dhiraj disagrees. Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/12/2020 • 28 minutes, 27 seconds
Webinar: Is India equipped to deal with the economic fallout of Covid-19?
In the wake of the coronavirus outbreak, the World Bank says, there is a real risk of a global recession. In India, the economic fallout of the pandemic is compounding the problems – rising unemployment, manufacturing slowdown, and consumption stagnation – brought about by falling growth in the last few years.But how exactly will this crisis impact India’s economic fortunes in the short run and in the long term? Is the country, particularly its government, even equipped to deal with what lies ahead?To address these questions and more, Bridge India, a public policy think tank based in London, organised a webinar. The participants were A Didar Singh, former secretary general of FICCI and advisor of Bridge India; Amarendra Khatua, former diplomat; Abhinandan Sekhri, co-founder of Newslaundry; Spriha Srivastava, executive editor of Business Insider; Atul Thakkar, an investment banker at Anand Rathi Securities.The webinar was part of Bridge India’s Covid-19 webinar series.At Newslaundry, we don’t take ads from governments or corporations. We are an ad-free platform and depend on subscriptions to fund our reports, media critique, interviews, podcasts. For we believe that when the public pays the public is served, when the advertiser pays the advertiser is served. Join the movement to keep news free and independent by subscribing to Newslaundry today. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/12/2020 • 1 hour, 6 minutes, 43 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 5: Is veganism a better choice?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode, Snigdha Sharma and Aditya Varier debate whether veganism is a better choice. Aditya thinks it is, Snigdha disagrees. Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or tweet to Snigdha and Aditya.***If you haven't subscribed to Newslaundry yet, you might want to do so now. Why? Because you will get a chance to be part of NL vs NL once you are a subscriber. We are sending out a matchmaking form to our subscribers to pair them up for Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5/5/2020 • 23 minutes, 31 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 4: Should soldiers be allowed to express dissent publicly?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything?We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode, Abhinandan Sekhri and Mehraj D Lone debate whether soldiers should be allowed to express dissent publicly. While Mehraj thinks they should be, Abhinandan doesn’t.Listen and tell us who you agree or disagree with, and why.Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or tweet to Abhinandan and Mehraj.***If you haven't subscribed to Newslaundry yet, you might want to do so now. Why? Because you will get a chance to be part of NL vs NL once you are a subscriber. We are sending out a matchmaking form to our subscribers to pair them up for future episodes. Pay to keep news free by subscribing to Newslaundry today. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/28/2020 • 23 minutes, 46 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 3: Should India's sedition law be scrapped?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything?We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode, Prateek Goyal and Meghnad S debate whether the sedition law in India should be repealed. Meghnad says it should be scrapped, but Prateek says it's still applicable in certain situations. Listen and tell us who you agree with or disagree with, and why.Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or tweet to Prateek and Meghnad.If you haven't subscribed to Newslaundry yet, you might want to do so now. Why? Because you will get a chance to be part of NL vs NL once you are a subscriber. We are sending out a matchmaking form to our subscribers to pair them up for future episodes. Subscribe to Newslaundry today and pay to keep news free. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/21/2020 • 18 minutes, 18 seconds
NL Interviews: Stranded Indian students on expiring visas and an uncertain future
In this episode of NL conversations, part of Newslaundry’s ongoing series on Covid-19,Varun Thomas and James Asirvadam, discuss what it's like being stuck in Europe as a result of the pandemic. They are both Newslaundry subscribers.Varun Thomas has recently completed a dual degree masters in MSC Management in Germany, from the EBS University for Economics and Law. He has a Bachelor’s degree in IT engineering, and an MBA from OP Jindal Global University.James Asirvadam is currently pursuing a Master’s degree in sustainable manufacturing, working with polymer technology and recycling from NTNU, Norway. He has also worked as a Research Assistant with Advanced Sustainable Engineering Materials lab (ASEMlab), following which he took up thesis engagement to work on the lifetime prediction of HDPE (high density polyethylene) use in Norwegian fish farms.With his current student visa about to expire, Thomas talks about graduating in these uncertain times. This uncertainty further exacerbated by his job offer being put on hold, and the indefinite suspension of international flights to India. ‘It’s kind of a huge question mark,’ he says, while talking about others facing a similar predicament. He opens up about living under partial lockdown in Germany, without any close relations. Asirvadam, who is in his final semester, is unable to work on his thesis. Since his thesis requires experimental laboratory work, the current lockdown will inevitably delay his graduation, as well. Since he lives in a sparsely populated county, there has not been a drastic change in everyday life.‘They (Norway) are looking after human welfare over the economy. Like I’ve been laid off and I’ve applied for unemployment benefits,’ he says. For this and a lot more, tune in.Recorded by Snigdha Sharma, edited by Parikshit Sanyal.***You can also listen to all our podcasts on the Newslaundry app and get updates about them via Twitter and Facebook.Follow and engage with us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/16/2020 • 43 minutes, 43 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 2: Is the Aam Aadmi Party dabbling in soft Hindutva?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this episode, Manisha Pande and Ayush Tiwari debate whether the Aam Aadmi Party dabbles in “soft Hindutva”. Ayush thinks it does, but Manisha doesn’t. Listen and tell us who you agree with or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or tweet to Manisha and Ayush. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/14/2020 • 21 minutes, 10 seconds
NL Interview With Rohit Chakravarty: Don’t blame bats for the pandemic
The world’s gotten a little more interested in bats over the past one month or so, since the novel coronavirus hit global headlines. In this podcast, Manisha Pande brings on board Rohit Chakravarty to discuss this much-maligned mammal. Rohit is a PhD student at the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research in Berlin, Germany. He studies bats in the Himalayas of Uttarakhand, investigating how their diversity changes across elevations, what they eat and generally, how they get by in their lives in the mountains. “Bats have been living all around us for centuries…they live close to you but they know how to mind their own business,” Rohit explains. The novel coronavirus outbreak has occurred for reasons that are more manmade than naturally occuring, he says. Which means eating bats, right? Nope. Listen on and find out why. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/11/2020 • 31 minutes, 13 seconds
NL vs NL Ep 1: What’s better, Big Government or Small Government?
Tired of loud frothy-mouth, potty-mouth debates on primetime TV? Tired of sad character-limited fights on Twitter where you don't really learn anything? We have something that might excite you. Newslaundry presents a new podcast: NL vs NL. Let's make debates great again!In this first episode, Abhinadan Sekhri and Meghnad S battle it out over the age-old question, "What is better, Big Government or Small Government?" Meghnad bats in favour of Big and Abhinandan votes for Small. Listen and tell us who you agree with or disagree with, and why. Write to us at contact@newslaundry.com, or tweet to Abhinandan and Meghnad. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/7/2020 • 19 minutes, 42 seconds
NL Interview: Harvard researchers on myths and realities of the coronavirus pandemic
Bhargav Krishna is a doctoral student at Harvard University’s TH Chan School of Public Health in the United States, and serves as adjunct faculty at the Public Health Foundation of India. Atif Adam holds joint faculty positions in the Department of Mental Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Joslin Diabetes Center of Harvard Medical School. They are both Newslaundry subscribers. In this conversation with Abhinandan Sekhri, Bhargav and Atif discuss the coronavirus pandemic and its implications, especially for India.They start with pandemic prediction models, how accurate they are, and how seriously we should take them. Adam explains what various models show, and how a static model differs from a variable one. He emphasises the short-term, mid-term, and long-term actions that the government can take, to flatten the curve of the outbreak. Moving on, Bhargav explains the possible outcomes of the pandemic, including the chances of India developing herd immunity against the novel coronavirus, and how it worked during the SARS epidemic. He emphasises the importance of collecting as much data as possible on infections, deaths. Giving the example of South Korea, he points out how the government there did a stellar job of contact tracing and rapid testing. What we are seeing in India is more “reactive planning”, Adam says, comparing it to fixing a leaky balloon where everyone tries different methods to see what works. Talking about how India can deal with the situation better, he says, “Rather than copy and paste, pick up key things from these countries that have managed to flatten the curve, see what we can learn, what we can’t do. And then create public messaging that is appropriate.”They also discuss what contracting coronavirus entails for people with underlying health conditions such as diabetes, hypertension and respiratory ailments; the possibility of the virus mutating into a deadlier strain; and when a vaccine may be available. And, of course, they talk about the media’s coverage of the pandemic. For this and a lot more, tune in. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/1/2020 • 56 minutes, 25 seconds
Mitigation vs suppression: Tomas Pueyo on fighting coronavirus
In this podcast, we explore various strategies for combating Covid-19.In this interview with Manisha Pande, Tomas Pueyo talks about India’s battle with the novel coronavirus, the fallout of the lockdown, and how the pandemic is reshaping the world.Pueyo is an author and Silicon Valley entrepreneur who shot to fame after writing a viral Medium post containing the gravest warnings about Covid-19.Commenting on the spread of Covid-19 in India, he asks, “Are you testing?” He hypothesizes that the virus “is everywhere already. We just don’t know it.”Talking about the fatality projections, he asks, “How equipped is India to deal with maybe not 65 million patients, but 30 million, 20 million, 10 million, five million? Nearly all countries are similar, none of them can handle capacity like this.” He argues that the curve would have to be flattened multiple times for the country’s healthcare system to be able to cope with the pandemic.Pueyo says governments could use the pretext of containing the spread of the virus to take more control which makes it imperative to hold them accountable. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/1/2020 • 37 minutes, 39 seconds
कोविड-19 से निपटने के लिए सर्जिकल स्ट्राइक वाली रणनीति कारगर होगी
कोविड-19 पॉडकास्ट. इस सिरीज के तहत हम देश और दुनिया के अलहदा मीडिया संस्थानों द्वारा प्रकाशित होने वाली कोरोना से संबंधित लेख और रिपोर्ट्स को हिंदी पॉडकास्ट की शक्ल में आपके सामने रखेंगे. यह मूल लेख का अविकल अनुवाद नहीं बल्कि भावार्थ है.पहले पॉडकास्ट में हम न्यूयॉर्क टाइम्स में छपे डेविड काट्ज़ के लेख को प्रस्तुत कर रहे हैं. इसका हिंदी में अनुवाद बीबीसी डिजिटल के संपादक राजेश प्रियदर्शी ने किया है. इस लेख में येल-ग्रिफिन प्रिवेंशन रीसर्च सेंटर के संस्थापक अध्यक्ष डेविड काट्ज़ कोरोना के संकट से निपटने की सरकारी नीति के बारे में एक समग्र योजना का खाका पेश करते हैं.डेविड कहते हैं, “कोरोना की वजह से बहुत कम बच्चों की मौत हुई है, ऐसी हालत में हम कह सकते हैं कि 60 से ऊपर के लोगों, और जिन्हें कोई बीमारी है उन्हें पूरी तरह आइसोलेशन में रखा जाना चाहिए, उनका ख़ास ख्याल रखके वायरस से होने वाली मौतों को कम किया जा सकता है.मुझे डर है कि हमारी कोशिशों का बहुत सीमित असर होगा, इसकी वजह ये है कि हमारे पास सीमित संसाधन हैं, एक बिखरा हुआ-सा और हमेशा से उपेक्षा का शिकार एक मेडिकल सिस्टम है. इन सीमित साधनों को इतने व्यापक तौर पर फैलाकर, सतही ढंग से कोशिश करना असफल होने की ही रेसिपी है.”पूरा पॉडकास्ट हमें कोरोना से बचने और सरकारों को इससे निपटने का एक नज़रिया देता है. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
3/30/2020 • 12 minutes, 28 seconds
NL Interview: Journalist Govindraj Ethiraj on busting fake news and data literacy
A journalist for over 25 years, Govindraj Ethiraj is the founder of Boomlive, a fake news busting website, Indiaspend, which specialises in data-driven public interest journalism, and Factchecker, which keeps a record of public figures who spread misinformation. Most recently, Ethiraj helmed India Fact Quiz, an initiative supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation that focuses on breaking down myths and biases around healthcare, education, gender. He speaks with Snigdha Sharma about running the quiz, the importance of data literacy in India, and how the quality of public discourse can be greatly improved by making important data more accessible. He also discusses the need for and ways of tackling misinformation and fake news.Tune in! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.