Just half a day, right!

My colleague and I were all pumped up when we thought of doing an ‘election special’ coverage. And yes interviewing/ grilling the politicians was amongst the most exciting part of it. We wrapped up most of our other stories and were all geared up to get interview appointments with our MP candidates. Soon we realised it was not as exciting and thrilling as we had imagined as it was hard to get any at the first place.

To start with we somehow managed to get a phone number of a close aide of one of the candidates, and after a few phone calls from me and my editor things looked brighter. We had an early morning interview appointment in hand(this after constant phone calls for 4 days, we were proud of our quick results!). My happiness was though not long lived. A day before the interview I called up to confirm the appointment only to find out that there was no appointment at all. Well, it wasn’t told to me this easily, I got to know this only after some 15 phone calls to the media manager from 10.30 am to 10.30 pm.

As if this was not enough to annoy me, the interview appointment never really took place, even after visiting their office and calling them 20 times more for two weeks. And finally, I got a 10 minutes slot to talk to the man himself when I meet him at a public event. This is still less torturous than waiting for hours in the MP candidate’s vehicle while the candidate was out campaigning and then got some 10 minutes to talk, in which he will continue jumping controversial issues.

The icing on the cake was still visiting a candidate’s office, waiting there for one and half hours only to know that he is unwell and would not meet anyone. The next day you go to his office again, wait there and join him in his campaign, follow in another vehicle for a few hours and then realise the campaign has been called off and there won’t be any interviews because some distant relative of his has died.

The list for these events doesn’t stop here the worse was to have been called for an interview for some three times, not getting to talk in any of the three attempts of long hours of waiting. Then finally we get to talk for six minutes and the person talking is not at all audible(he is so soft spoken, you know!) and eventually the interview ends abruptly due to some ‘unavoidable circumstances’.

Then the fight to get another interiveiw starts all over again. And this fight seems never ending to us. When we have almost given up on our would-be MPs, we come back, somebody asks us: "So, how much time did you waste today?" I say, "I wasted half my day!" "Oh, Just half a day, right," is the reaction.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

Bengaluru’s poor public transport utilisation needs urgent attention: B.PAC survey

Bengaluru took the top spot this year as the world’s most congested city with commuters expecting to spend an average of 71 per cent extra travel time stuck in traffic. According to the survey conducted by B.PAC, 33 % of the survey respondents said that they do not use public transport in Bengaluru becauseof lack of frequency. First and Last Mile Connectivity to Public Transport in Bengaluru

The city with a population of over 12 million has nearly 8 million vehicles on road as of 2020. The draft revised Master Plan for Bengaluru – 2031 states that the modal share of public transport in total overall trips is only 48% as against 82 % for Mumbai.A city such as Bengaluru which has only 42 Kms of Metro serviced  that too for limited locations and a negligible suburban rail service, an efficient bus transport system is the only most significant public transport system available in the short and medium term. Since the arrival of metro services in the…

Similar Story

Workshop on Street Vendors Act

The Alternative Law Forum is organising a half day workshop on December 14 between 2.30 PM and 6.30 PM in Bengaluru, on the Street Vendors (Protection of Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Act, 2014 and the Karnataka Street Vendors (Protection of Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Rules, 2019. Background of the workshop This workshop is being conducted in view of the Town Vending Committees being constituted across the State as per the provisions of the Street Vendors Act, 2014 and the Karnataka Rules 2019, in seven zones of Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (with the exception of Bommanahalli Zone).…