The elusive clout of media barons



I ran into Rajat Sharma, anchor and effective proprietor of India TV, the other night. Rajat is one of the pioneers of Hindi news journalism but when he started his own channel a few years ago, he found that the going was tough. At one stage, he said, the situation was so desperate that the channel had no money to pay salaries and he and his wife had to dispose of personal assets to pay his staff.
Crowded field: The rush to own a news channel is prompted by the wrong reasons. Rajeev Dabral / MintIndia TV is now doing well—it is currently the No. 1 Hindi news channel in the country—and the profits are rolling in. But Rajat says that he is astonished by the enthusiasm of some new entrants in an industry where it is so difficult to make any money at all—and so easy to go bust. He says that he keeps running into people who say they want to enter the media or start a TV news channel because they believe it will give them clout and influence. He has told them that it is a hard, largely unprofitable grind and that all talk of media clout is rubbish. He runs a successful channel but he does not believe that his clout has increased because of India TV. Nor does he believe that anybody who owns a TV channel has gained in influence because of the channel. I thought about what he had said and decided he was probably right. There has never been any shortage of rich people who are dying to enter the media because they believe that ownership of a newspaper or a channel gives them power and influence.Vir’s previous Lounge columns And yet, it is hard to think of anybody who has become powerful on the basis of media ownership. On the other hand, I can think of many rich people who have been burnt by their enthusiasm for the media. In the 1980s, Vijaypat Singhania started The Indian Post, a Bombay newspaper. Not only did it make no difference to the clout of the JK empire, but it actually backfired on Vijaypat. Satish Sharma, who was then a powerful man, blamed him for every negative article that appeared and forced him to sack his editor. Eventually, the newspaper closed down. In the 1990s, the late L.M. Thapar’s passion for newspapers led him to make vast investments in The Pioneer, which launched a much-feted Delhi edition. Not only did the paper fail to make any money but it did nothing for Thapar’s clout. Eventually, the Thapars sold it to Chandan Mitra who is doing a much better job of running it. Most celebrated of all is the case of Dhirubhai Ambani who bought the Sunday Observer from Ashwin Shah of Jaico and launched a daily paper called The Business and Political Observer.The Sunday Observer was successful in its Jaico avatar but it never worked as an Ambani operation. The daily paper was an embarrassment and far from adding to Reliance’s clout, it actually became a liability for the Ambanis. In recent times, the focus has shifted to television. Many industrialists believe that ownership of a TV channel will ensure that ministers and bureaucrats will kowtow to them. In fact, not one businessman has been able to launch a top-class channel no matter how much money has been blown up. In the days when Subroto Roy was flush with funds he imagined that his Sahara TV empire would top the ratings because of the vast amounts he spent on programming. In fact, the channels never did particularly well. And when Sahara’s fortunes changed after the fall of the NDA government, the so-called clout of the TV empire was shown to be illusory as Roy struggled with adversity. My sense is that ownership of a TV channel can actually be a problem, rather than an advantage. For many years, I was associated with the Star TV network. At the time, Star had a terrific news channel and for part of this period, the No. 1 entertainment channel. But I never had the sense that Star had any clout at all. Every minister and bureaucrat would push Star around. One chief executive was threatened with legal action and possible imprisonment. Licences were routinely denied. Uplinking was always a problem. And the government acted as though Star should be grateful for being allowed to exist at all. Nothing has changed since those days. At the fringes of the Hindi news market are many small TV channels, some of them backed by medium-sized businessmen in search of influence. My guess is that most of these channels will not survive the current slowdown. But even while they exist, it is hard to see what they have done for the clout of their owners. You could argue that this is only true of new entrants and that the existing media houses have vast influence. But even this is dubious. Everybody who is anybody in Delhi political circles reads The Indian Express. Nevertheless, the Express’ Delhi offices were sealed by the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) for reasons that most people regarded as flimsy. The clout of the media made no difference. Or take an even better example. The most important media house in the country today is Bennett, Coleman and Co., owner of The Times of India, Economic Times etc. But, in the mid to late 1990s, all of The Times of India’s influence could not prevent the needless harassment of Ashok Jain, head of the family that owned Bennett. We know now that at least one of the officials who persecuted Jain was a crook because he was later arrested on corruption charges. But no matter how much the Times protested, Enforcement Directorate officials hounded Jain almost to his death. If the Times cannot use its own clout to defend its owner, then what sense does it make to talk of the power of media barons? So why do rich people get attracted to the media? It’s the glamour, I think. It’s the same syndrome that causes businessmen to invest in Bollywood films. They think that some of the glamour will rub off on them. In fact, it is their wealth that rubs off on Bollywood’s glamorous people. So it is with the media. Believe the hype about power and clout and you will end up poorer and still entirely without influence.

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Comments

6 Responses to “The elusive clout of media barons”
  1. Ruchi Ahuja says:

    An interesting read.
    But possible to include paragraphs? It would allow for easier read.

    Regards,
    Ruchi

    [Reply]

  2. Anuj Bhasin says:

    Hi ! I read this blog after commenting on your ‘Medium Term’ blog. I am reproducing comment as the same fits this blog as well

    How long TV Media can spread itself too thin ? Who will take lead for course correction – government, private , consumer, print media (old daddy of media) ?

    Media was dominant with one media i.e. Newspapers till early 90s and profit was dirty word. Inspite of adverse government regulations, Zee made bold move and success in Hindi GEC space, which even lured international media baron Rupert Murdoch of Star in India. He earlier believed that Indian middle class will watch only Baywatch in Hindi. He entered into pact with Zee and later realized that market was bigger and his vision was blurred. Everyone included international venture capitalist sensed opportunity and started investing in electronic media (TV) business models.

    India’s traditional business houses including TOI and HT never made any bold investments in TV space and also never questioned unregulated growth in this media and happy with increasing media earnings post liberalization.

    Two Journalists in news production space, Raghav Behl and Pranoy Roy established news media networks with international investors (essentially inorganic growth and borrowed financial support) .Later Peter Mukherjee left Star to start INX and started war in GEC space with Colors and NDTV Imagine. The talks of ‘Satyam Fiasco in Media ‘ are around in media circles and ’spreadsheet capitalism in media’. Below questions come to our mind every time

    1. Why was there no early attempt by government for level playing field like in Telecom Industry ? Government was quick in setting regulation in case of Telecom (which was like Media essentially government monopoly) but not in TV Media.

    2. Why no business or media house raised concerns on uncontrolled growth with government and sighted best examples in West?

    Today, except for Zee and Star every entrepreneur is in deep trouble and spreadsheets of each one are questionable. Sony laying off, INX top management stepping down. Even print media got affected with advertising revenues split

    Democracy to set up business is good but cost of unregulated growth had to paid by entrepreneurs, who are now talking of coming together and regulate business

    The services of delivery DTH, Internet essentially are for above middle class. Essentially, a prosumer generation and not consumer at large.

    With level playing field, many new ventures would have grown in a systematic fashion and many serious business houses would have stepped in . Reliance has been delaying launch for long time. TOI is slow and HT has shelved project.

    Is TV media business as dirty as real estate that no good business house wants to step in and ask government to clean dirty linen (read unregulated practices). In fact new real estate players with new money like Triveni want to enter news TV space

    If we can learn from West on Telecom regulation, why can’t we in the case of media ? Today, India is 2nd largest newspaper market in the World and television in Top 5 market of world.

    Can Indian media sectors continue to be among top world leaders for many decades without any rules of business or continue spreading itself too thin?

    [Reply]

  3. Indscribe says:

    The fake sense of power. They feel that they would be more powerful but the opposite happens.

    Like there are journalists, who decided to get into politics and align themselves openly to political parties. Does it increase their clout? No. In fact they are seen as biased and now carry less weight.

    The party they are associated with also takes them and their publication for granted. Also, once you dabble in more fields just to get clout, it backfires. Many groups start channels and papers as they feel there won’t be IT raids or CBI raids on them.

    But the opposite often happens. In states, the owners will not publish a news of such raid prominently when they get advertisement. from the company. But if the company also starts a newspaper and become a rival, then it gets splashed every where. So the purpose is defeated.

    [Reply]

  4. Amitabh Varma says:

    The only thing that is growing is the hair on Rajat Sharma’s head!

    [Reply]

  5. JaneRadriges says:

    The article is ver good. Write please more

    [Reply]

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