Within a year, online media has moved from a position of huge potential and strength to one of stretched finances. That is not preventing many new outlets from making a debut every week but that is not preventing new outlets from facing huge problems either.
The market is saturated with old and new entrants but the robustness is going dim. It’s not a crisis yet but the surefire success that many foresaw for online media as the emerging alternative to professional media appears overestimated now. What exactly is going on?
The investor angle
Media investment is notoriously high investment and high connection based. Even crores aren’t enough, it’s about several hundred crores which means you have to be part of the internal network. Because you can’t make that kind of disposable money unless one is part of that network. And having made that kind of money you have to know the really big ones and have the trust of the PM no less. Which means ownership of a TV station or a newspaper is very restricted even in these days of network capitalism. Big media is not for everyone but the chosen ones of every regime.
That doesn’t mean that there is o shortage of rich people belonging to the second level. Many are very rich and want to own a media outlet but can’t handle 200 crores of black money. Others want or are capable of investing a few crores and a few are entrepreneurs who are able to bring together several investors with money looking for prestige. And so the rich but not hyper rich or connected that are fuelling the online media boom.
Esta historia es de la edición April 20, 2018 de Dhaka Courier.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición April 20, 2018 de Dhaka Courier.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Rohingya: Walk A Mile In Their Shoes
My reminiscences of Cox’s Bazar are deeply rooted in my childhood during family vacations taken with my parents and three siblings - horse rides on the beach, sunsets against the widest horizon, charcoal barbecues by nightfall, and copious amounts of seafood throughout our stays. My recent trip to Cox’s Bazar, some 20 odd years later, however, was starkly contrasting in that the circumstance was dire, one which continues to sit steep in my mind.
Suu Kyi Risks Losing Ground To Military Over Rakhine Crisis
YANGON • Locals like to joke that Myanmar has two governments. That’s not very far from the truth.
Satellite Images Show Sprawling Rohingya Refugee Camps
Massive, makeshift refugee camps are sprawling over farms and open land in southern Bangladesh as more than 500,000 Rohingya Muslims flee violent attacks in their predominantly Buddhist homeland of Myanmar.
Akhtarun Nahar Ivy's 9
UNB Cultural DeskArt is a unique, powerful tool of connecting people, culture, says Ahn Seong-Doo
Ganasangeet Festival Still Showing Hope For Music
Ganasangeet Festival Still Showing Hope For Music
Trump Hurtles Toward Three Nuclear Crises
Trump Hurtles Toward Three Nuclear Crises
What Bangladesh Stands To Gain From Bangabandhu-1
What Bangladesh Stands To Gain From Bangabandhu-1
Where Good Voices Must Go Bad
Where Good Voices Must Go Bad
The minister's one hundred taka
The minister’s one hundred taka
Dhaka Wants Delhi Pressure For Rohingya Return
Indian foreign secretary visits Bangladesh, no development on Teesta front