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Elections are the most important thing in a democracy. And if you look at any news channel at the moment, they have become supersonic, and especially loud in their election coverage.
Result predictions are inextricably linked with elections and Indians love their astrologers. More often than not, most households have a family astrologer who carefully looks at every person’s kundali (horoscope) to make predictions that include when they’ll get married, have kids or earn more money.
In keeping with every household tradition, Aaj Tak allotted 100 astrologers to a country of 1.2 billion people to predict the result of the upcoming elections.
The anchor makes it very clear that the channel will be speaking with 100 astrologers all day today, 5 April. So essentially, a mainstream channel has dedicated one full day to just predictions, that too of 100 variety!
One often associates journalism with facts, research – perhaps why it is called the fourth pillar of democracy. Yet, a mainstream channel chooses to spend one full day on predictions that have no way of being verified or fact-checked.
The channel could have actually focused on: unemployment, women’s security, gender-based violence, or just come up with day-long fictional content and called it so.
Sridhar Pandey, an astrologer from Varanasi says:
Shiromani Sachin, another astrologer chimes in to declare PM Modi a winner:
Vedvyas from Ujjain too was in agreement with atleast 60 of them, he too felt that the stars were truly in PM Modi’s court:
A day-long show, based on no facts, masquerading as news, is not something that the country needs at the moment.
We’re sitting at a time where WhatsApp has had to change its functionality to ebb the fake news flow in India. In such a climate, a long feature on predictions that may or may not come true at all, based on stars can hamper the thinking of a nation rather than give it food for thought.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
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