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On any evening, those watching prime time television news debates in India may get the impression that women rarely have opinions worth airing on any subject – politics, economy, stock market or geopolitics.
For five days starting 5 February, 2018, IndiaSpend counted the number of men and women who appeared as panelists (commentators/spokespersons/newsmakers) on debates on 10 English news channels, between 8 pm and 10 pm.
Over four times more men than women – a total of 264 men as opposed to 54 women – appeared as panelists during the sample period, indicating the under-representation of women’s views in the broadcast media.
The gender count was restricted to invitees (not anchors) and debates (not interviews). The numbers were based on screenshots of groups of panelists who appeared in the first half of the shows (There may be minor discrepancies in total figures, as some panelists are brought in after the debate begins). The number of panelists on these shows ranges from three to 10 and some panelists appear on multiple channels the same evening.
The results highlight the need for further studies and empirical data to better understand why India’s professional women are largely unseen and unheard on primetime TV news in a nation with 780 million television viewers, more than the population of Europe. There are roughly 220 million viewers of English content and over 400 news channels in India.
Female panelists outnumbered their male counterparts on only one of the 10 shows in the five-day sample – Epicentre on CNN-News18 (which was moved from 7 pm to 10 pm from 6 February 2018).
The under-representation of expert women in the media is a global trend. In 2015, women comprised only 24 percent of the people “heard, read about or seen in newspaper, television and radio news, the same level found in 2010”, according to the five-yearly Global Media Monitoring Project (GMMP).
In Europe, women are “much less likely to contribute to stories as experts, as professionals, as politicians or as business people”, the 114-nation GMMP reported in 2015. “The news is still dominated by men’s voices talking about things in which they have the starring role, voices of authority.”
This could easily be a description of the scene in India, where women comprise nearly half the population.
More than half the respondents in the study led by Population First and KC College were of the opinion that gender is not a decisive factor in the selection of panelists. But 15.78 percent of the respondents said that the “appearance” of panelists played a role.
In 2015, an International Federation of Journalists survey on media and gender in India showed that only 6.34 percent of respondents felt that women were depicted as experts/leaders in news programmes; 21.73 percent said they were depicted as victims.
Why is it important to ensure that more women professionals are seen on TV news shows? The depiction of gender stereotypes in the media could influence how communities perceive women and their place in society, say experts.
“The media as a whole plays an important role in perpetuating or challenging cultural and societal norms so it is important that this industry is more representative of today’s society,” the British government stated in 2015, responding to a House of Lords inquiry into women in news and current affairs broadcasting.
Men comprise half the viewership of Indian television and they watch news either at the start of or at the end of the day, India’s Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) estimated.
From 7 pm to 10 pm, considered prime time, the share of women’s viewership of news “across urban, rural and mega cities drops visibly” in India. This maybe a factor that influences media decisions on who features in news debates.
“Male TV anchors form a boys’ club with male commentators and (they) naturally gravitate towards them on most issues,’’ journalist Sagarika Ghose told the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism (RISJ) in Oxford, the UK, in an interview for a three-month fellowship paper on which this report is based.
There’s a belief among TV news managers in India that news audiences are “mostly male who prefer to get opinions from men rather than from women”, she added. There is also “discrimination against younger men, as TV and media platforms prefer elderly established male commentators”, she said.
Women speakers are generally called upon to speak more on gender than politics, geopolitics, defence, finance or the economy.
For example, all-male commentators discussed India’s Pakistan policy problems on three of the 10 shows sampled on 5 February 2018 – Left, Right & Centre (NDTV 24×7), Face-off (CNN-News18) and The Debate (Republic TV).
An all-female panel appeared only twice during the sample period. On 9 February, 2018, four women commentators appeared on Epicentre (CNN-News18) and on 8 February, 2018, on People’s Court (India Today) to discuss gender politics around Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s recent remarks on Congress MP Renuka Chowdhury’s laughter in Parliament.
On The Urban Debate on Mirror Now, for example, there were no female panelists for a debate on the long-term capital gains tax, but an equal representation of three men and three women the next day discussed the goods and service tax (GST) on sanitary napkins.
“A handful of strong women columnists and authors in India are called on panels,” said Ghose. But they are mostly slotted as liberal feminists to speak on social and gender justice issues, she pointed out.
The highest number of women panelists were invited to discuss sexual violence: 39 percent , followed by 26 percent on panels on crime and social issues. Women’s views were least heard on technology (14 percent ) and industry (12 percent ).
Television journalists argue that women commentators are available in fewer numbers than men across specialisations.
This general observation can be backed by data. India ranked 108 among 144 nations in the World Economic Forum’s ranking of gender-equal nations in 2017–down from 98 in 2006. The low ranking was partly due to a “gender gap in women’s share among legislators, senior officials and managers, as well as professional and technical workers”.
“Most commentators and thought influencers are men,” said Ghose, “and mostly on issues of politics or governance, it’s elderly men who are called to panels.”
The World Bank, in 2017, recorded a decline in the female labour force participation by 19.16 million women and girls in India’s workforce from 2004-05 to 2011-12. Girls comprised 48 percent of India’s student population in 2015-16, but as the Times of India reported on 24 September 2017, women’s participation in work is 27 percent, representation in Parliament and state legislatures is 11 percent and 8.8 percent respectively. Also, only 17 of the CEOs of India’s 500 largest listed companies are women.
But there are also more varied and nuanced reasons why women anchors pose questions on breaking news mainly to male experts/commentators who provide the answers on the state of the nation and world. Here are some explanations.
Television anchors who were interviewed said they look for the ‘best’ speakers, irrespective of gender, and added that it is difficult to get women experts on business, finance and economic issues.
“I look for expertise, different points of view, also people who are articulate and comfortable on TV, which not everyone is,’’ said executive editor Nidhi Razdan, anchor of Left, Right & Centre on NDTV 24×7, in an interview for the RISJ paper. Women anchor five of the channel’s six prime-time shows.
“To be honest, I’ve never thought of panels from a gender perspective,’’ Razdan said, adding that she has hosted all-women panels too and frequently invites women to speak on politics and foreign policy. “I don’t consciously look for gender balance, but maybe I should!”
On the economy, Razdan noted that “it’s easier to find a male guest”, with exceptions for frequently seen panelists such as leading industrialist Kiran Mazumdar Shaw, banker Naina Lal Kidwai and economist Ila Patnaik.
Karan Thapar, former host of To The Point on India Today TV, said that the disparity in the number of men and women on news debates is “not deliberate… for example, some of the best and most knowledgeable speakers on foreign affairs are women”.
“I have to tell you, my priority is not to create balance,’’ Thapar said. “Gender representation is important but not the priority. Getting good people who speak well and are articulate is important.”
Political editor Marya Shakil at CNN-News18, one of the channel’s two primetime female news anchors, linked the shortage of women commentators to the shortage of women in charge of newsrooms. “Newsrooms are very, very male-centric,’’ said Shakil, “so they may overlook the contributions of women.”
Nearly every political party in India has female spokespersons but they are still a minority of one or two on panels. During the sample period, a 22 of 50 shows had all-male commentators, on issues ranging from Pakistan to Modi’s speech in Parliament, and the Ayodhya dispute to the Maldives crisis.
Journalist Kalpana Sharma noted that only “a very small number” of women are invited to political discussions. “It’s easier to get the ‘usual suspects’, almost always male, to come on panels rather than make effort at balance and diversity,’’ Sharma said.
“Even if they get a token woman, they want her to be a film star, or a prominent socialite rather than someone with scholarship who will address the subject seriously. They need individuals who can perform, take up extreme positions, be rude, interrupt others, and basically be deaf to what anyone else is saying. Even men with sensible views are excluded because they will not perform. Of course, there are women who do; and predictably, they are the only ones called repeatedly.”
Ghose observed that “women speakers tend to shy away from overly confrontational debates and contentious subjects”, except in the case of the female spokespersons of the Bharatiya Janata Party.
The broadcast news industry in the UK has experimented with several ways to end the under-representation of women’s views on television and radio.
This 30 percent improvement is attributed to a slew of initiatives including the publicity around City University’s data on the under-representation of women experts in news programmes and its surveys on the attitudes of the media and professional women that may hinder their participation on television.
The data stirred the House of Lords into asking for an investigation into the issue and in 2015, this report on the representation of female experts was released.
In 2013, the BBC Academy in London launched its first training day for expert women interested in becoming media commentators. There were 24 seats. Two thousand women applied.
In 2013 alone, at the end of four training days in London, Salford, Glasgow and Cardiff, the BBC Academy trained 164 women. Imagine the potential for such an initiative in a nation the size of India. The BBC continues to expand its Expert Women Database.
At the City University, Lis Howell, the director of broadcasting, leads a team of student researchers who regularly monitor flagship shows to record the gender balance of panels. Howell was of the opinion that journalism institutes in India could conduct similar projects to compel the media to explore ways to narrow the gender gap.
The challenge would be finding the funds to pay student monitors to collect daily data. Television journalists would also question the methodology, Howell predicted, and “always be defensive”. Some broadcast journalists, for instance, responded to her department’s research surveys to say that it was more time-consuming to convince expert women to appear on screen, compared to men.
In 2013, when the City University published data on the lack of women experts in the media, the BBC considered it “a big strategic issue”, said Gurdip Bhangoo, head of Future Skills and Events at the BBC Academy, in London. In 2017, they had identified 48 new women experts.
“We aim to find 100 new expert women to appear in factual news programmes every year,’’ said Bhangoo. “Anecdotally, we found that more than half of the women we trained have been heard. We’ve got a format that works.’’ Bhangoo said that their initiative is replicable anywhere, but its success would depend on the “top editorial leadership” driving it.
(The article has been published in an arrangement with IndiaSpend. This article is based on, and partly reproduced from research and interviews for a December 2017 fellowship paper, Breaking News; Missing Views, for the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism in Oxford, UK, by Reshma Patil.)
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