EFFECTS OF TV IN Pakistan- The News
COMMENTS
This is for Action Research Forum of public wisdom;
This forum can’t disagree with authors point of view, he is 100 % right. Our media visionary is limited to specific points, some of which fetching mob and advertisement of no logical sense, many people ignoring them by switching between channels but recaps are there than switch off. The media performers’ capabilities are not exemplary like; David Frost, Larry King Live, Sebastian and many Indian top guys. Some of them cannot face foreigners especially American or British English murmuring like Abbas who are sitting on heights of media bosses. As such there is no effective academy for their training, since lot unemployment is there, so young boys and girls are cheap labor with cheap mind.
Some are proud of being broker (Mir once proclaimed in his broadcast) between top notches, or street shows of assembling masses for high end critical point of view. The research databases and knowledge basis are limited. Sometimes good articles you find with facts and figures in very selective opinions. Many of them have projected tales of facts especially for Karachi; they talk about any serious topic of Karachi with no presence of Karachi participant. Media performers mostly gathered in Islamabad and so sponsoring NGOS, but they love to pass time on channel talking about fake perception about Karachi.
BOTH ARE EDUCATING EACH OTHER; MEDIA PERSONNEL AND MASSES, LIKE PHONY DEMOCRACY BUT ON LONG COURSE.
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Effects of TV
Mushfiq Ahmad
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
From Print Edition
The rise of television in Pakistan during the last 10 years has taken journalism to a new low. Journalism in Pakistan had never been great, but it was not as bad as it has become now. Television claims to perform mainly two duties: providing information and educating the masses, so that people can make informed decisions. Television in Pakistan has failed on both counts…
The writer is a staffer at The News. Email: mushfiqahmad1000 @gmail.com
Mushfiq Ahmad
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
From Print Edition
From Print Edition
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