Friday 18 April 2008

Needed: young editors



I was amused to watch one of the nation’s most respected editors, Vinod Mehta, trash the new IPL cricket tamasha as the death of the longer form of the game, and ‘pure’ cricket as we know it. Speaking on a news channel chat show, Mehta pointed out that the BCCI, which is duty bound to maintain and nurture the game, is determined to take it down the tube.

Now, Mehta is a fine editor, but his views on the T20 games (which I am sure will find resonance with all the old-world editors), tells us how out of sync some of these exalted gents are with the young new India. Rather than sounding the death knell of the test matches, these peppy edited versions will not just revive interest in the sport, indeed they will save the game from certain demise.

Cos the truth is the new gen just does not have either the time or the inclination to sit through five bloody days of a single match (note the abysmal attendance in the stadia), and even paying undivided attention to a one-day match has become a tall ask. What T20 has done is to bring the otherwise long and winded sport to be on par with football and other popular games, in terms of the demands of time it makes on you. With each match over in three hours, suddenly, cricket will find a whole new bunch of fans, AND get the defectors back. And perhaps make it palatable even to non-cricketing nations like the US.

I have not yet watched IPL’s matches (they flag off tonight), but am one hundred per cent sure they will be a huge hit, especially with young adults and kids. And the raunchy pom pom girls and the festive atmosphere will add the dose of entertainment the game badly needs... poor Ms Mandira Bedi can only bring that much to the table with her noodle straps.

As for the test matches, they are certain to die in the coming future. So then why not let the sport live on, I ask.

Anyway, the larger point I’m making is that we constantly demand younger leaders in politics and other professions. Perhaps the time has come to expect the same of the media; very clearly, the oldies in the newsrooms are struggling to connect with the new India, its mindset and its attitude. No wonder both news weeklies, Outlook and India Today, have become immensely unreadable of late. Hope the bada money bag media proprietors are reading in!

4 comments:

hiral said...

Hey... you are so correct..!!!

Anonymous said...

Hey anil so glad to read that atleast for some thing in life you can be hopeful ( read not complain )...Cheers for the first time !!!!

Anonymous said...

Na woh galat na tum galat

but youngsters in no time start speaking the same language.

rita maker

There in one thing u owe all your readers. Time to go through their blogs.Mine is ritamakerblogspot.com

Anonymous said...

Dear Anil,

I was expecting u to have this all-popular and safe view towards IPL, knowing u to have been a junta-loving jurno.

Let me tell you however, that though i agree that the IPL circus is a huge entertainer, i doubt if it is 'aiding' a dying sport as u say.

Thankfully, test cricket is alive, kicking and mesmerising as India's four test matches (read 20 playing days) in Australia earlier this year proved. Cricket fans woke up in the wee hours to witness a hardcore tactical battle between Ishant's ball and Ponting's bat.

Also, if i recall correctly, u too had got immersed some time ago in a test series involving captain Rahul Dravid (whom u dubbed a loser, much to the chagrin of Bangalorekars).

Test cricket therefore is the heart and soul of the game. It may be getting unpopular, but only thanks to the wham-bam versions, which completely turn the purpose of the sport on its head.
And IPL is the biggest nail in a quick-emerging coffin.

Tell me, are you okay with a 12-year-old budding cricketer saying "I want to play for Knight Riders" rather than "I want to represent India?"

IPL is unfortunately a product of evolution and that of an increasingly restless mass-mindset. That way it can be compared to the ENGLISH PREMIER LEAGUE - which has done wonders to the popularity of football.

But the EPL still features the classic 90-minute game between teams. There is commercialisation, but there isn't 'adulteration'.

There are more things to say, but I'll leave it there...for it pointless ranting about an imminent, unchangable future.

Cheers!

PS: (FYI, im not a 50-something Vinod Mehta, rather im 22 but a hardcore cricket fan.)