Women in the newsroom

Women in the newsroom

Three female journalists share their experiences of working in India’s broadcast news media and the ‘glass ceilings’ they have encountered.

Wherever you are in the world, from New York to New Delhi, typical newsrooms are constantly abuzz. There is chatter, phone calls and people reading hastily-written copy aloud. In the English-language broadcast news space, in Delhi at least, those voices are often female. Studios, meanwhile, are silent except for the anchor's audio (the anchor's ear is frequently buzzing!), and while you'll often see 'single-anchor shows', the universal model for news broadcasts seems to be of the traditional dual-anchor, male-female type. Reassuringly, when it comes to gender equality, balance is built into the system.

Where I work, at CNN-IBN, the odds of being recognised as 'on-air talent' seem tipped in favour of women. (What that has to say about the men hiring I will leave for you to judge.) So much so, that when it comes to daytime news broadcasts, one can frequently see two women anchor together. I can count on the fingers of one hand the times I've seen two men anchor together in the past nine years. Make of that what you will.

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