MUMBAI: News broadcasting hasn't had a proper makeover in two decades and is paying the price as viewers switch to sexier platforms, claims popular anchor Sudhir Chaudhary. Speaking on a Governance Now podcast with Sri Adhikari Brothers managing director Kailashnath Adhikari, , Chaudhary delivered a blunt diagnosis of the industry's ailments.
"Least innovation has taken place in the news broadcast industry," lamented the veteran journalist. "With nearly 400 news channels today, the big 10-15 follow identical breaking news formats with red alerts, similar headlines, and studios where anchors look remarkably alike—debating the same subjects with familiar panellists."
The industry, he argues, has become obsessed with ratings rather than reinvention. "Experts in newsrooms study TRPs and suggest content creation based on popularity. Ninety-nine per cent of the industry functions in this reactive manner. The industry has lost its way."
Chaudhary, who boasts 7.9 million followers on X (formerly Twitter), noted a telling shift in viewer language: "Earlier people said they watch me on TV, but now they say they follow me."
While traditional news outlets flounder, social media influencers are cultivating massive audiences through innovative formats. Unlike cricket—which reinvented itself from five-day tests to T20 spectacles—television news remains trapped in amber, with the same stale formulas recycled night after night.
"Today the consumer has a plethora of available options," Chaudhary observed. "News is available on WhatsApp, Instagram, Snapchat, television, print and social media. You have to show the same story in different formats, durations and parts on different platforms."
Looking ahead, Chaudhary—rumoured to be joining the National Broadcaster—says he craves "freedom to create content instead of chasing TRPs" and will seek alliances with social media creators. The message is clear: evolve or become yesterday's news.