Opinion
#NLrecommends every Sunday morning Dec 17
‘Put the camera down’
Covering protests has become the riskiest job for journalists in the United States. Donald Trump’s constant tirade against the press has normalised abuse against the press by ordinary people. CJR captures this in a gripping report
Cat Person
A short story in The New Yorker that’s about a 20-year-old girl’s short relationship with a 34-year-old man. Cat Person has sparked a thousand theories. Read the story and the response to it.
These are recommendations by Manisha Pande @MnshaP
What on earth?
The Discovery Communications-produced show quotes American archaeologists who say a 30-mile-line between India and Sri Lanka is made up of rocks that are 7,000 years old, older than the sandbar supporting them, which is 4,000 years old.
This is a recommendation by Atul Chaurasia @beechbazar
Cahier Africain: Documenting War Crimes in CAR
A two-part documentary on war crimes in the Central African Republic. I recommend this because I was touched by how the victims/survivors, who refused to remain silent, turned to each other and put together the evidence of all the brutalities they suffered in a tattered notebook. The notebook was found by the documentary maker in a dusty backyard of the country.
This is a recommendation by Sahla Nechiyil @sahlanechiyil
From North Korea with dread
A documentation of North Korea, which is threatening the world with nuclear war. Two New York Times journalists enter a hostile country, where they are constantly under surveillance, accompanied by government officials, restricted from travelling outside the capital and told who to talk to – in short, every journalist’s worst nightmare. Despite this, the two journalists do a fantastic job of recording their days. By acknowledging what their being American is doing to the process of filming and they don’t merely record the aggression as bystanders, but also note the fact that it is being directed towards them in some way. By doing all of this, they immediately become immune to the idea of journalists dispassionately assessing a situation to tell some all prevailing truth. Instead, they humanise not just the subjects in the film but also the entire process in which the film was made. To me, this is the most credible way of accounting any situation, especially a conflict.
This is a recommendation by Nidhi Suresh @NidhiSuresh02
The case against reading everything
The sage advice from a writer to everyone who picks up a pen is ‘read widely, read wisely and read everything’ type sap. Here’s an honest and humble takedown.
The forgotten man
This is a Baffler piece on Murray N. Rothbard, the harbinger of Trump and the alt-right, who advocated getting over media elites to reach the masses. Sad, the American media didn’t see this coming much as we lament the Indian media’s blindness to Modi until the 2014 “wave”.
These are recommendations by Vikram Kilpady @kilpady
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God on their side, the bill on ours: Counting the real cost of the war in West Asia for India
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The sacred geography they bulldozed: How Modi’s vision erased Kashi
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Your Instagram reel is now ‘news’ — and the Govt wants to censor it
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One-sided and conspiratorial: How Indian media keeps getting Myanmar wrong
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Locked doors, dry taps, bidis and bottles: The ‘World City’ facade of Delhi’s toilets