Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Row fuels right-wing channel’s growth

- Ramesh Babu HT FILE

THIRUVANAN­THAPURAM: The unlikely winner in the standoff between the Kerala government and protestors over Sabarimala is a right-leaning television channel called ‘Janam TV’. Within a month’s time, the channel has climbed the charts to reach the number two slot, behind only Asianet News, owned by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Rajya Sabha member of Parliament Rajeev Chandrasek­har.

According to Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) figures, three-and-a-half-yearold channel has given a dozenodd Malayalam news channels a run for their money with its coverage of Sabarimala issue, coming from nowhere in terms of ratings to occupy number two slot.

According to Week 46 data released by BARC, market leader Asianet News had 53,461 impression­s followed by Janam with 30,950 and Manorama News with 29,805. According to W39 data — before Sabarimala became an issue, Janam TV’S impression­s were as low as 2,950.

Impression­s refer to the number of individual­s in thousands of a target audience who viewed an event, averaged across minutes as per BARC, the country’s TV viewership monitoring agency.

BARC doesn’t share absolute viewership numbers, so these are all averages. So, 53,461 impression­s for Asianet News, 30,950 impression­s for Janam, and 29,805 for Manorama News are the weekly average viewertoed ship numbers for the three channels.

In September, the Supreme Court ruled that women of all ages be allowed to worship at the hilltop shrine, setting aside an ancient tradition that barred women of menstruati­ng age from entering the shrine. Enraged traditiona­lists protested against the ruling, which Kerala’s Left Democratic Front government vowed to uphold. The impasse persists.

“From day one we have been consistent with our position. We coined a slogan, ‘We are with devotees’ and it clicked. We have taken a vow that we will present news as it is without any slant or taking a position,” said Janam TV’S chief editor G K Suresh Babu. Most news channels in Kerala have traditiona­lly leaned towards the Left or a centrist line. Market leader ‘Asianet News’ has maintained an independen­t stance. “In Kerala, there was a situation that if you are not a Leftist you are not fit to be a journalist...”

 ??  ?? Devotees at the Sabarimala temple.
Devotees at the Sabarimala temple.

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