Oman Daily Observer

Will social media replace traditiona­l media?

- SAKET SUMAN

The increasing polarisati­on among media in India — and perhaps across the world — has led to an unpreceden­ted trust deficit in everyday news. What was once regarded as the fourth pillar of democracy today finds itself under the scrutiny of citizens as tainted news published with self-securing motives are an everyday occurrence in our times. The times we live in are extremely challengin­g for the media. How media outlets have been hand-inglove with political leaders and parties is no secret today. A journalist now commands far less respect in society than was the case even a decade ago. All of this, along with a host of other compelling factors, have together led to a massive downslide in the media’s place in a liberal democracy. There is the suspicious eye of the audience, who, even while reading or watching what the media reports, refuses to believe. Media is no longer, for most audiences, the honest purveyor of news — difficult to digest but apparently true.

The very purpose of media’s existence is in a crisis — a crisis that could well result in social media taking on the “fourth pillar of democracy” tag. And this could happen far earlier than projected.

This may happen because of a variety of reasons, primarily because the attraction that the social media has for those who were earlier fed by the mainstream media and the increasing affordabil­ity of the Internet for the less privileged.

From television channels to most leading dailies in India, the reportage on non-sensationa­l news — whether it is cultural or social and clubbed as “soft” news — is fast diminishin­g. Pages that were earlier dedicated to theatre, music and books are being replaced with “hard” politics — or simply negative and conflict-bearing news — that point to the grim picture of the times we are living in. There is no space to breathe for a particular section of readers that is intellectu­ally inclined. Social media, thus, comes as a natural relief to such audience as just a couple of clicks in the keyboard will lead a visitor to the content that he wants.

Added to this is the challenge posed by the affordabil­ity of the Internet in India. Telecom operators have already rolled out unlimited monthly Internet plans that are, quite shockingly, even cheaper than a monthly subscripti­on of most newspapers. At the same time, there is a significan­t rise of “social media influencer­s” across platforms on the Internet. Celebritie­s of the Internet in their own right, many social media influencer­s target niche audiences based on language, geographic­al location and even religion and caste, in many cases.

But the most significan­t factor leading to a slide in the traditiona­l media’s position is a result of its own doing. In the race to make the utmost use (and monetary profit) of the Internet, media outlets of our times have given it their entire content. The excitement to read the newspaper early in the morning, therefore, is gradually dying, because almost everything that appears in the newspaper is already trending on the social media in advance.

The circulatio­n mafias and selective advertisem­ents have made matters worse for the traditiona­l media.

But the rapidly rising popularity of social media and its increasing user-base cannot alone replace media as the fourth pillar of democracy. After all, media is the trusted voice of the people and, as African-american human rights activist Malcolm X said, media is “the most powerful entity on earth. They have the power to make the innocent guilty and to make the guilty innocent, and that’s power. Because they control the minds of the masses”.

Hasn’t social media too come to command a similar, if not more vicious and quicker, authority today?

Social media and the Internet are still new phenomena in India, something that even today’s college-goers have seen evolving before their eyes. Traditiona­l media, on the other hand, has been around for hundreds of years. It is high-time that media entreprene­urs and voices from the fraternity re-evaluate traditiona­l media’s interactio­n with social media.

If not, social media may well, if not already, replace the traditiona­l media as the fourth estate — and that is a fear more forbidding.

The increasing polarisati­on among media has led to an unpreceden­ted trust deficit in everyday news

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