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Arnab wins Bharat as 'nation wants to know'

Bang Galore

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An interesting article considering that Arnab Goswami has been part of a couple of threads created. Something I read that I think that might interest some here & can certainly be up for discussion.

By Swapan Dasgupta

It may sound flippant but if I was to name the Indian of the Year for 2012, my choice would be Arnab Goswami of Times Now. The reason has nothing to do with the fact I am an occasional participant on his Newshour debates. Nor is it connected with his hectoring style which I find enthralling at times and quite exasperating on other occasions. Arnab’s foremost contribution to the public discourse (at least the English language discourse which still sets the tone for others) is his unending search for what “the nation” wants to know.

The definition of his imagined community is important. Hitherto, the media was reasonably modest in its inquisitiveness. Its rationale for demanding answers was invariably couched in terms of either ‘viewer interest’ or, at best, ‘the public interest’. In projection the ‘nation’ as the inquisitor—and I notice that even in rival channels ‘nation’ is fast becoming a substitute to the more passive use of the ‘country’—Arnab has succeeded in doing something quite remarkable: he has successfully made ‘nationalism’ the core attribute for assessing public life.

This is a remarkable feat. For long, the English language media was in real danger of being overwhelmed by a spurious liberalism, borrowed from the ethos of the New York Times, Guardian and BBC, and complemented by the insidious political correctness of the American campus. Those who subscribed to this ‘idea of India’ became members of a privileged club; those who persisted with alternative approaches were relegated to the fringes and barely tolerated. The defining feature of this ultra-liberalism was its profound intellectual arrogance and its characterisation of other perspectives as base ‘prejudice’.

In positing the ‘nation’ as the ultimate arbiter of the larger ‘national good’ and doing so with passion, verve and eloquence, Arnab managed to create a constituency of people who refused to be patronised by the superior assumptions of a handful of the ‘enlightened’. On issues relating to Pakistan, he refused to be cowed down by the mushy sentimentalism of the Aman ki asha pseuds and on China he ruthlessly questioned the ‘nuanced’ sophistry of the professional prevaricators in South Block. On corruption, he was single-minded in his determination to cut through the obfuscation and piffle. And on mundane political fights, he was both sceptical and irreverent.

It is not that on every issue he got the tone right. He didn’t. To me what was important was the yardstick of national interest he set for judging issues. In an environment where others were highlighting the values of cosmopolitanism, internationalism, liberalisation and oozing concern for the human rights of every extremist who sought the vivisection of India, Arnab re-popularised the validity of proud nationalism.

For helping India recover this eroding inheritance, ‘the nation’ must be thankful to him. He has been the best corrective to the babalog media.

There was an additional feature to Arnab’s discourses each week night that I find both amusing and encouraging: his polite insolence. India may well have a long tradition of being argumentative but in recent times this free spirit has suffered on account of an educational system that discouraged scepticism and promoted the inculcation of every form of received wisdom.

In the mid-1970s, just prior to the Emergency, there used to be huge hoarding on the inner circle of Connaught Place which proclaimed “The leader is right, the future is bright”. It had been put there by one of those disagreeable publications that existed on the patronage of the first families of India, Iran, Libya and, of course, the great ‘progressive’ bloc around the Soviet Union. The message was crass but it was an accurate description of what the rulers expected from the ruled: unquestioning docility.

That is the way Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde, for example, sees the world. Why, he asked a TV channel, were the protesters still persisting with their gatherings on India Gate? After all, some of them had a midnight meeting with Sonia Gandhi.

Actually, he wasn’t being disingenuous. To a very large section of India’s establishment, politics is all about, first, bringing an issue or a grievance (preferably through an intermediary) to the proverbial attention of those entrusted with the responsibility of governance and plead for a solution. Then there is the process of waiting patiently and often indefinitely for the system to creak into action. The voting classes are not expected to be either insistent with their demands or insolent in their engagements with professional politicians. In particular, netas don’t believe in being buttonholed by a TV anchor and informed that the “nation demands to know”.

At best, politicians don’t mind the occasional convivial chats with ‘reasonable’ people—just recall the you-gush-and-I-gush interviews that the Delhi Chief Minister gave to two channels last week after Sonia’s darshan left the nation underwhelmed. Arnab, unfortunately, is ‘reasonable’ only off camera. On air he becomes a voice of indignation, anger and even insolence. These are qualities which the little man doesn’t possess in abundance. He wants to kick the errant netas. Since he can’t, he is happy for Arnab do it for him.

Arnab didn’t create the hatred for the political order. He just helped the little man feel that a larger community of Indians shared his frustrations and his unwillingness to settle for the second-best. Full marks to him for helping India lower the bar of forbearance.

Usual Suspects: Arnab wins Bharat as 'nation wants to know'

How Arnab Goswami wins Bharat through his unending search for what â??nation wants to knowâ?? - Economic Times
 
Forget Modi, I support Arnab from PM :enjoy:

He will not let even American President Obama speak during Indo-US talks :lol:

This makes Musharraf's victory over him even sweeter. Koi ayray ghairay ki bolti bandh nahi ki, award winner ki bolti bandh ki.

Sir u are entitled to your opinion but I OBJECT, I OBJECT, I OBJECT :D
 
Arnab compared to other TV anchors is not sell out.

I once say a show on CNN IBN where Sagarika Ghose wife Rajdeep Sardesai said minorities in Pakistan enjoy the same kind of living condition just as minorties in India do. This show came just after news of kidnapping of Hindu girls in Pakistan. Tarun vijay was also on the panel and he did not interject. Can you Fuc@king belive it.
 
Sir u are entitled to your opinion but I OBJECT, I OBJECT, I OBJECT :D

Rondu rondu rondu :P


oye Bharat is an offending word the bharatis mind it so Swapan Dasgupta
should clarify how dare he used it in the first place.

by the way swapan is booked for Arnab's next show
 
This makes Musharraf's victory over him even sweeter. Koi ayray ghairay ki bolti bandh nahi ki, award winner ki bolti bandh ki.

who told you mushy win? :P

Rondu rondu rondu :P


oye Bharat is an offending word the bharatis mind it so Swapan Dasgupta
should clarify how dare he used it in the first place.

by the way swapan is booked for Arnab's next show

DENIAL DENIAL DENIAL DENIAL DENIAL DENIAL

Bharat is used to define india in hindi
 
Arnab compared to other TV anchors is not sell out.

I once say a show on CNN IBN where Sagarika Ghose wife Rajdeep Sardesai said minorities in Pakistan enjoy the same kind of living condition just as minorties in India do. This show came just after news of kidnapping of Hindu girls in Pakistan. Tarun vijay was also on the panel and he did not interject. Can you Fuc@king belive it.



CNN IBN is Kongress Dalal, NDTV Burkha dutta was caught in Neera Radia tape case. They try to soothe all Anti Kongie issues. The subside Son-In-Law case, they tried to end Delhi case, they are pathetic.
 
Indian media has been exposed thoroughly even by Western observers and Brian Cloughly hit the nail on the head regarding the frivolous and slavish nature of the Indian media.
[Indian newspapers and their public believe--or say they believe--that the conflict in Dras-Kargil last year was a military victory for India. In fact, it was a war 'won' by briefings and a slavishly supportive media. The Indian public wanted to be assured of 'victory,' and every effort was made to provide that assurance. Kargil was disastrous for Pakistan in worldwide political terms, and was an important public relations coup for the Indian government, both internally (in the run-up to the election), and internationally. But militarily it was a shambles for India whose brave but ill-prepared soldiers suffered gravely and would have sustained even heavier casualties had the conflict continued.
 
Lol two days back he was an idiot. Today he is a hero.

These drama queens from our eastern side are totally confused. :disagree:
 
Indian media has been exposed thoroughly even by Western observers and Brian Cloughly hit the nail on the head regarding the frivolous and slavish nature of the Indian media.

I have still to learn how it was going to deliver heavier casualties? Still 270 soldiers or more are buried in india which you refused to take back.

and 300+ got killed in strike of mirages and i can go so on ...

in the end,it was pakistan who got heavy casualties and when our AF got involved, every thing got changed :)
 
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