Made-to-order ‘Exclusive’ Interviews!

The print media in the state is on Cloud Nine – and understandably so. After all, an interview, exclusive or otherwise, with Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik is as rare as lotuses in the Thar desert. For long in the shadow of Big Brother (TV), the print media legitimately felt left out in Naveen’s scheme of […]

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The print media in the state is on Cloud Nine – and understandably so. After all, an interview, exclusive or otherwise, with Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik is as rare as lotuses in the Thar desert. For long in the shadow of Big Brother (TV), the print media legitimately felt left out in Naveen’s scheme of things. That the man who had given not a single proper, full-length interview to anyone from the regional print media in 20 years has now chosen to give over half a dozen in one go certainly calls for rejoicing. That it comes with full-page advertisements for the newspaper worth lakhs of rupees is just the right icing on the cake. Having got their elusive date the big man, the reporters are happy. Having raked in the moolah, the owners are happy too!

But read the interviews that are splashed across the front pages of local newspapers today carefully between the lines and it becomes clear that none of them qualifies to be a proper interview. The vast majority, if not all, questions are designed to sing paeans to Naveen and not to stray into areas that might cause him the slightest degree of discomfort. Not one question has been asked on any of the mega scams under his watch - the mining scam, the chit fund scam and the real estate scam – each of them involving loot of several thousand crore rupees of public money. Nor is there one on his government’s multiple acts of omission and commission that is at the heart of the impasse over the sharing of Mahanadi water with Chhattisgarh today. Not even a perfunctory question on the unceremonious dismissal of Damodar Rout from the cabinet the other day. The questions asked by the reporters give the distinct impression that they were vetted by the Chief Minister’s secretariat before allowing the ‘interview’.