The
newspaper I read
Which
newspaper do you read? A silly question to ask perhaps. For, in the glitz and dazzle
of TV news anchored by loudmouths, and fakes and deepfakes - generating more
heat and smoke than light and insight - newspapers have no place. To cap it, we
have Netflixes, Zees and Jios et al pandering to our baser instincts: sizzling
hot stuff of guns and gore for the violent beast within us and some
mirch-masala of flesh- and skin-baring to keep our wane loins tickling. (I am
no holy cow though, I confess!) Then the
younger lot have hell-raising games to tingle their neurons with and myriad
dating apps for flings or to hunt for soul mates. And of late, to beat them
all, an AI-birthed sexy avatar custom made to indulge your wild fancies is a
few taps of buttons of your device away to chat or flirt with. Therefore to ask
about newspapers or a word in print is stupid and even rude.
But
being an odd man out in this bewildering chaos - and for sanity’s sake - I read
a newspaper which I am an addict to. It provides me my day’s newsfeed wrapped
in objectivity, fairness and facts- sans bias, sans fear and with dollops of
daring even in these ‘Jai-Shri-Ram’ times. It dares to look the government in
the eye, lauds it when it delivers on good governance but doesn’t shy away from
tweaking its ears when, blinded by power, it forsakes its oaths and vows and
goes berserk.
In
the present locust swarm of digital media eating away the printed word with
ferocious appetite, newspapers, alas, have become mere Lilliputs gasping for
breath. A good many in the vernacular have wilted for obvious reasons: sheer
survival. Some being in the clutches of corporates have caved in owing to their
own greed, opting to “crawl when they were not even asked to bend”, and love
being lapdogs of ‘power.’ In this dismal scenario, only the barest few have
kept their chins up against all odds and refused to buckle and tow the official
line. The count, if you ask me, is abysmally low: The Indian Express, The Hindu,
The Deccan Herald, and of course the intrepid The Telegraph. And out of these it is the last one that
shines the brightest in this small galaxy. A regional daily from our north with
a halo of history and excellence and an eloquent witness to our freedom
struggle and its aftermath, has, I dare say, lost its old sheen and shine,
having turned wan and pale of late.
Out
of these four sparkling gems named above, my favourite – it goes without saying
– is The Telegraph, published from my favourite city, the one and only,
Calcutta. Since its print edition is not available to us - the Les
mise’rables Palampurwallas - the digital edition is our only means to read
it. It comes free, while most other dailies do not, is easily accessible and
very reader-friendly. Be it journalistic excellence, language, quality and
boldness of its editorials and opinion pieces, reflections on art and culture,
book reviews … or even entering the lion’s very den to beard it - it lacks
nothing that one’s heart asks for to begin the day on a stimulating diet. It
has among its illustrious columnists, persons like Gopalkrishna Gandhi, Mukul
Kesavan and Ramachandra Guha … to name some.
Since
I began reading it, I have fallen under its spell. It is now my raison d’etre
that gives a head start to every morn which nudges me to wakefulness.
I salute you The Telegraph, your inspired team, and your good editor R. Rajagopal, above all. Keep it up!
*
Very true reflection of the flipside of today's electronic media & how everything is, primarily & only for Commercial & political gains . For the folks born in 1950's , newspaper is their daily fix. It stimulates one's brain, just like reading a book is better than watching a movie based on the book. Well written & hard hitting. Keep going strong Lab Mate Sur 🫡
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