Learning from Master
I spent only a week in the sports desk, editing copy
relating to the Guindy Races, learning from the expert advice that
Chandrasekhar gave, some football copy with help from Mr Nair who took time off
his reporting duties to guide me. Master encouraged me to go out and report, so
I covered a few football matches, with the cricket season in a mid-season lull
peculiar to Madras. My knowledge of soccer was only marginally better than
horse racing, but I sailed through the MFA league matches thanks to the
generous help I received from S Thyagarajan of The Hindu.
After a week, I went up to Master and asked to be shifted to
the general news desk, as I was bored with my sports routine, and Master readily agreed. The young man who took
my place in the sports section, Partab Ramchand, became a leading sports
journalist who also wrote on films. Unlike the general run of journalists,
Ramchand has always been keen on writing books and has written many.
Master was a cult figure at the Express. He was probably in his late forties when I first met
him, and it was a close fight between him and Tushar Kanti Ghosh of the Amrit Bazaar
Patrika group of Calcutta to decide who was the longest serving newspaper
editor in India, until Seshadri passed away in the late nineties (?), with Ghosh still in
harness. He was always the first to arrive in the office and never went home
until the paper was put to sleep. There was perfect discipline in the office and at the same time a relaxed air, with no worry about the boss looking over your shoulder. Anyone
who has worked in the Express knows that it was a perfect training ground for
rookie newsmen, who were quite early in their careers thrown in at the deep
end. I had been in the paper for less than a month when Master said to me, “Your
title may say sub-editor, but don’t stay cooped up in the office. Go out and do
stories.” Excited and nervous, I stepped out with nothing besides good
journalistic genes (hopefully) and Master’s blessings in my armoury. A series
of fires broke out in a few Madras slums, and I was one of the reporters on the
scene. Interviewing slum dwellers was no easy task, as some of them were as worldly
wise as the London cockney of My Fair Lady fame. The genuinely stricken, mostly
women, were hardly in a state to answer silly questions from English-educated
upstarts like me. I even managed to gain access to Mr Madhavan, a minister in
the DMK government, and he spoke with confidence about the steps the government
was taking to alleviate the sufferings of the residents and to try and prevent
future accidents. Unfortunately, I was no impartial observer; my mind was made up
against the government of the day, and I was convinced that it was doing
nothing to save the day for the fire-ravaged poor of the city. My report was
naturally one-sided and tended to editorialise. Somehow the report went
unnoticed, luckily for me.
I also did a story on IIT Madras, in what context I don’t
remember. I was soon afterwards assigned a politically sensitive story, which took
me to the Government Arts College, then located within a stone’s throw of Club
House Road, where was situated Express Towers. The moment he knew I was from
Express, the principal had me and my photographer colleague thrown out of the
college. He was angry because of a recent report on the college whose details I
cannot recall now.
Work at the Express was a lot of fun. For some strange
reason, my own copy was invariably edited by Master himself, and stranger still
was the fact that it was hardly ever touched. Once he called me to tell me he
was changing a word I had used. “Harangued” is an Americanism, we don’t need
such words, here, he said.
Why was he called Master? He lived on the Express campus,
and tutored Ramnath Goenka’s schoolgoing children, I learnt from my colleagues.
The children called him Master or Masterji, and in time, he became Master to
everyone. When he found some breathing time amidst his hectic daily routine, he
made conversation wth his senior colleagues, with his face often lit up by a
brilliant smile. When he walked home
after the night shift, he was accompanied by a colleague or two, walking
towards the gate to go home. On the occasions I did night duty, meaning I
pottered around doing nothing of importance while others slaved, I usually walked
to a teashop near Odeon cinema, which offered a delicious mango juice, manna from
heaven after night duty tea, and came back to sleep on newspaper stacks. My
companions one night were senior colleague Mathew and Master. Knowing his wife
was in the family way, Master solicitously asked Mathew, “How is your wife? I
hope she is not alone.” Mathew’s reply, made with a solemn face, was, “I hope
she is.” Master’s reaction was endearingly typical of him when amused. He put
his index finger on the tip of his nose, his eyes twinkling in mirth.
Twice during the night shift, I was almost caught on the wrong
foot, with the teleprinter clattering away major headline news: the invasion of
Prague by Soviet troops during the Dubcek regime, and the Robert Kennedy
assassination. On both occasions, I thought I was alone in the newsroom, and
froze in panic, but help arrived in the form of seasoned journalists returning
from cigarette breaks.
Chandrasekhar, Nair, Krishnaswamy, Krishnamurthi, Nagarajan,
Partab and Rishikesh were among the friends I made in the newsroom. I have been
in touch with many of them, while one or two are no more.
Surprise visitors to
the office included Lala Amarnath and Veenai S Balachander, and, graciously
included by my seniors, I had the good fortune to listen in while these
idiosyncratic personalities told some uproarious stories, some of them quite
unprintable. Amarnath said of a notable personality that he murdered his wife,
and described the wife of a famous cricketer as an alcoholic. Nair was generous enough
to let me accompany him while he interviewed Amarnath. The Railways’ cricket
coach then, Lalaji advocated playing on matting wickets to improve your
technique against fast bowling, and he was conducting a camp for the Railway
team at Madras as the city had plenty of matting wickets. I was quite puzzled
by this prescription, as lack of practice on turf pitches was often cited as
the reason for the Madras (now Tamil Nadu) batsmen’s inadequacies when they
travelled outside the state. In recent years, Amarnath’s view has been endorsed
by other experts, who even attribute Rahul Dravid’s excellence abroad to his early
training on matting.
The idyll was too good to last. Two newcomers, let’s call
them Uma and Raja, started throwing their weight around, perhaps emboldened by
their social—not journalistic—pedigree. Neither of them was good at the job,
but they both tried to teach me mine. At the same time my friends urged me to
return to do postgraduate studies and play cricket for the college again. All
of 20, I needed no further inducement to quit. Master was disappointed, but as
I was stubborn in my resolve, he let me go, saying his doors would always be
open for me. Years later, he told my wife Gowri that I had been one of his
favourite trainees, and also that he had learnt his trade from my grandfather V
Narayanan when he was editor of the Express.
No comments:
Post a Comment