Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Story of India’s Voice from Skies

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It was an August midnight when the people of India collected in large groups to hear Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru’s Tryst With Destiny speech. The atmosphere was electrifying. And the radio was the center of attention.

One of the enduring images of my childhood is of my father and his friends listening to Lal Bahadur Shastri’s speech during the 1965 war. Dad had purchased the Murphy radio-set with its ‘fancy’ piano wave-bands just a few days back to keep track of the Indo-Pak war developments.

I was a teenager in Bangalore when Mrs. Indira Gandhi went on the radio to respond to Pakistan’s aggression with an all-out war.

Those were the days when a radio broadcast could keep its audiences mesmerized despite the absence of melodramatic broadcasting personnel. Not just on momentous occasions, but also during everyday life. Radio pervaded our lives even as we attended to our daily work without let or hindrance.

When one looks at the news media scenario today, one can’t help but parody the famous lines from the classic A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens. For Indian audiences, these are the best of times, these are the worst of times, it is the age of wisdom; it is the age of foolishness, it is the epoch of belief, it is the epoch of incredulity, it is the season of Light, it is the season of Darkness, it is the spring of hope, it is the winter of despair, we have everything before us, we have nothing before us, we are all going direct to Heaven, we are all going direct the other way – in short, the period is so far like the one when some of its noisiest anchors insist on their pearls of wisdom being received to superlative plaudits only.

While our affluent TV anchors strut on the small screen purveying sarkari propaganda, one can only recall the days when news used to be a genuine product of honest journalism. When entertainment was soothing, thought-provoking, and essentially directed towards nation-building. But those days have gone, perhaps forever.

Is there hope for a genuine infotainment media outlet?

Let us have a look at the only electronics infotainment medium which is struggling to make a comeback in popularity stakes, while the glamorous mainstream TV channels happily loll in the laps of their political-corporate masters, yapping as directed. Radio, the old hag – once the empress of airwaves – is straining to climb out of history’s dustbin.

The radio is a child of the historical invention when Guglielmo Marconi got the first patent on radio sets in March 1897. It became a technology that benefited ships in distress on the high-seas. During the first world war, the radio played a crucial role in communicating with the soldiers on the battlefront.

As is their wont, Americans converted this strategic technology into a money-spinner. The KDKA established a commercially licensed radio station and made its first broadcast on November 2, 1920. Two years later, BBC made its first broadcast on November 14, 1922.

The radio arrived in India when the Presidency Club of Madras, now Chennai, established its radio facility in 1924. Some businesspersons in Bombay, now Mumbai, established the Indian Broadcasting Company and established a proper radio broadcasting facility on July 23, 1927, and another in Calcutta, now Kolkata, in August 1926.

In those days, there were only about 3000 licensed radio owners in India, offering little scope for revenue generation. The IBC folded up in 1930. The colonial government took over its broadcasting facilities and launched the Indian State Broadcasting Service.

Lionel Fielden assumed charge of the Indian State Broadcasting Service in August 1935. His tenure laid the foundations for a magnificent and enduring infotainment superstructure. He was whimsical, but had the gift of thinking out of the box. He defied the government to ensure that the radio service represented the voice of India. On 8 June 1936, the ISBS was renamed All India Radio. Today it is known as ‘Akashvani’, the celestial voice. Interestingly, a ‘Congress Radio’ was set up on September 3, 1942, by Usha Mehta, around the time when the Quit India Movement was launched. It claimed to be from “somewhere in India” and played a cat-and-mouse game with the police, as the portable radio station shifted location.

In 1956, nine years after India’s independence, the name Akashvani was adopted for India’s National Broadcaster. Some claim this name was borrowed from a poem by Rabindranath Tagore. However, a radio station called ‘Akashvani’ had already been established in Mysore in September 1935. The name could have come from there, too. One MV Gopalaswamy is another claimant to the authorship of the Akashvani name.

From a mere six at the time of independence, All India Radio now has over 400 radio stations catering to India’s entire population in 23 languages and over 140 dialects. Its External Services Division broadcasts programs reach out to over 100 countries.

It took AIR seven years to launch Vividh Bharti, the entertainment channel to counter Radio Ceylon. But the real challenge came in the shape of television. Revenues from private advertisers fell, as these were now diverted to TV channels. The dawn of private TV channels spelt AIR’s doom as a viable commercial entity.

After flapping in darkness for years, radio made a strong comeback in India in 1995, when AIR’s FM channels began broadcasting. In 1999, the Government announced a liberalized policy to expand FM Radio broadcasting through private sector FM radio stations. These shows, apart from providing entertainment, are also supposed to supplement the AIR’s efforts at spreading socially beneficial information. But their programming is unoriginal and second-rate, to put it mildly. The desire to take on internet-based infotainment platforms is missing. The radio jockeys are happy retailing idiocies and have failed to attract listeners. Quality programs are absent.

AIR’s only source of revenue is government ads, which is not enough to sustain this giant entity. Private sector advertisers seek such programming and promotions that would help build their brands. For this, a high level of innovative skills is required. Although private FM channels have made some interesting innovations in brand promotions, AIR mandarins are still floundering in a quagmire of bureaucratese.

In the United States, radio is holding its own against TV and OTT platforms. The following figures of weekly listeners indicate the popularity of some of the American radio programs:

· The Rush Limbaugh Show: 15.5 million listeners. 

· The Sean Hannity Show: 15 million listeners.

· Marketplace Financial News: 14.8 million listeners.

· All Things Considered: 14.7 million listeners.

· The Dave Ramsey Show: 14 million listeners.

· Morning Edition: 13.9 million listeners.

· The Mark Levin Show: 11 million listeners.

No reliable figures regarding India’s radio listenership are available. But one can gauge the situation from the fact that Prime Minister Modi’s Mann Ki Baat on the radio has to be simultaneously relayed on obliging mainstream TV news channels to stimulate people’s interest.

It is time for AIR to give serious thought to improving the quality of its programs. There was a time when it was overflowing with creativity. Its dramas – based on excellent literature – provided quality entertainment. There is a need to re-establish AIR’s credentials as a formidable infotainment giant of 21st century India. Ad revenue will start flowing in as a natural consequence.

 

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