Scoop: ‘Never Did Crime Enter The Newsroom As It Did in The Jigna Vora Case’

Watching Scoop stream on Netflix brought back memories of those exciting days of the launch of Hindustan Times in Mumbai and the events that unfolded. A good 28 years, but the memories are still fresh, rekindled by Scoop.

Inayat Sood and Karishma Tanna in a still from Scoop.

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‘Underworld Gangs & Their Bloody Fights Were The Staple of Mumbai’s Print Media in Early 2000s’

Hindustan Times has always been a force to reckon with in the newspaper industry, but the one edition that eluded the daily was the highly-competitive Mumbai market. Mumbai and most of Maharashtra has been a Times of India territory. Yes, there were tabloids galore, but none of them could match the might of Times of India. HT was aiming to change that.

The activities of the underworld have always dominated the content of most Mumbai papers, second only to entertainment. So, when HT began planning to enter the Mumbai market in the early 2000s, the focus was on the crime and entertainment beats.

Maharashtra politics then was bland stuff. The Shiv Sena had a large and loyal following, but couldn’t really break through in state politics. And the BJP was nowhere in the scene. Politics then was dominated by the Congress, with little or no challenge.

For a readership that was fed on the ‘spicy’ crime stories and investigative reports of Russi Karanjia (Blitz), Behram Contractor (Afternoon Despatch and Courier) and Mid-Day, underworld gangs and their fights that bloodied the streets was the staple of Mumbai’s print media.

‘On 14 July, 2005, Mumbai Woke Up to One of the Most Stunning Scoops by J Dey’

I was editing the Kolkata edition of HT when the Mumbai edition of the paper was launched on 14 July, 2005. And the crime beat reporters were the envy of all, led by Jyotirmoy Dey, who had been lured away from Mid-Day. As in the Netflix web series played by Prosenjit Chatterjee, he was a middle-aged unassuming character, whom you would easily miss in the newsroom. He sat in one corner and his best friend was a landline.

Prosenjit Chatterjee as Jaideb Sen in Netflix’s Scoop.

But everyone knew that he was a star, carrying his reputation as a hotshot crime reporter with Mid-Day into HT. So, when the launch date of HT was sealed, all editors turned to J Dey, as he liked to be known among his readers, to deliver the opening shot on the inaugural day.

And deliver he did.

The front page of dailies is considered the window to the newspaper, carrying the best stories and dressed up in all its finery. And there had to be at least one ‘scoop’, news that wouldn’t be carried in any of the rival papers.

On the morning of 14 July, 2005, Mumbai woke up to one of the most stunning scoops of the city. Carrying the byline of J Dey, the story was a compilation of audio tapes where one of Bollywood’s upcoming actors was heard talking to don Chhota Rajan about his yet-to-be-released films pleading for support.

Inside there was a full page on the tapes and HT let Mumbaikars know that it had arrived.

Since all editions of HT shared pages and stories, J Dey had found a national platform that he was so eagerly looking for.

Cut to Jigna Vora, easily the most important character in Scoop, called Jagruti Pathak in the series. She, too, was a brilliant crime and investigative journalist having risen to the position of Deputy Bureau Chief of HT’s rival in Mumbai, Asian Age.

Karishma Tanna plays journalist Jigna Vora in Scoop.

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J Dey was just the opposite of Jigna Vora. Dey was shabbily dressed while Ms Vora was all glamorous. Dey was quiet for most of the time, speaking when only spoken to as in the series, while Vora was gregarious. For the little time that we see Dada in the film, Hansal Mehta has done a good job with the characterisation.

Both J Dey and Vora had excellent sources in the underworld and the police that were battling the gangs.

But as J Dey told me during one of his visits to the Kolkata office, he mostly cultivated cops that were low in the hierarchy — beat constables and patrol officers. And most of the stories came from them.

And he was happy that his pieces were being carried in HT editions outside Mumbai.

But the promising career of one of the country’s finest investigative journalists came to an end on June 11, 2011, when J Dey was gunned down outside his home in suburban Powai by sharpshooters of what the cops later claimed were members of the group led by Chhota Rajan, the don of Mumbai’s underworld who then lived abroad. Rajan, the police claimed, was upset over some pieces that Dey had done. The cops later picked up 8 of those who gunned down the journalist.

How Did Jigna Vora Become Involved With The Crime?

But like many Bollywood thrillers, there was a twist in the tale. Jigna Vora was made an accused in the murder, the police claiming that she provided information about Dey’s movements to Chhota Rajan, including details about the number plate of the bike that Dey used to commute. The charge was later thrown out by the courts and Vora was acquitted.

But how exactly did Jigna Vora, portrayed as an ambitious upwardly-mobile workaholic young journalist in the web series, get involved with the crime? The police claimed in its chargesheet that professional rivalry led Vora to seek Rajan’s help to bump off Dey.

As proof, the cops produced a statement of Chhota Rajan, who by then was deported from abroad and was in the custody of Mumbai Police, that said it was Vora who egged him on to order the hit on Dey. The charges were later dismissed by the courts.

J Dey’s murder was received with great shock and anger by Mumbai’s journalist fraternity. In the following days and weeks, journalist associations demonstrated outside the Mumbai police headquarters demanding immediate arrest of those guilty and justice for J Dey. On the other hand, a section of the media didn’t even hesitate to demonise Dey. The Mumbai police was under great pressure to crack the case.

When Jigna Vora was arrested and charged with conspiracy in the murder, journalists cutting across newspapers distanced themselves from Vora. After her bail, Vora gave interviews to the media expressing her sorrow that members of her fraternity did not stand by her.

In fact, when the trial court was hearing the case against Vora, her lawyers sought a restraint against reporting in the media.

Being envious of members of one’s fraternity in rival newspapers has always been there, but never did crime enter the newsroom as it did on the morning of 11 June, 2011.

(Rajiv Bagchi is a journalist with over three decades in the profession. He has edited the Kolkata edition of Hindustan Times for 14 years. He has also been the editor of Mumbai’s Free Press Journal and has spent 5 years with Dubai’s Gulf Today. This is an opinion article and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them.)

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Scoop Review: Karishma Tanna’s Performance Is Without Blemish

Karishma Tanna in Scoop.(courtesy: YouTube)

The story of a tough and tenacious female journalist punished for her ambition and derring-do is deftly dramatized in Scoop, a based-on-true-events series that puts the Indian media and law enforcement agencies under a scanner.

Created by Hansal Mehta and Mrunmayee Lagoo Waikul, the six-part Netflix show centres on a woman wronged. Woven around it is a wide-ranging depiction of how the media, the police, the law and the underworld operate, often in consonance, to corner anybody who dares to go ferreting for inconvenient truths.The daylight murder of a seasoned crime reporter, a malicious media trial of a younger scribe arrested for her alleged involvement in the killing and the machinations of the crime branch are the three principal strands of a story that seeks to expose, without going overboard, the sharp decline of Indian journalism in recent decades.

Director and showrunner Hansal Mehta informs the narrative with an acute sense of reality. The newsrooms that it plays out in, the passages and spaces in the police headquarters and the Mumbai crime branch, the grim innards of a women’s prison where hierarchies are firmly enforced, and the courtroom where the drama culminates are all in the realm of the concrete and matter-of-fact.

As it pieces together a well-researched saga of a woman pushed to the backfoot and pilloried mercilessly, Scoop is at once specific and universal. It presents the struggles of a single mother and fiercely competitive media pro whose meteoric rise discomfits the men around her. It also carves out percipient portraits of two professions – journalism and policing – that are assailed by intense politicisation and vested interests.

Written by Mirat Trivedi and Mrunmayee Lagoo Waikul, Scoop is loosely based on journalist Jigna Vora’s non-fiction book, Behind Bars in Byculla: My Days in Prison, which details the months that she spent in judicial custody as an undertrial. The series goes well beyond the published text. The show unfolds at a deliberate pace as it lays bare the dangers inherent in chasing the truth and taking on the might of the establishment.

The fictional rendition of the murder of veteran Mumbai investigative journalist Jyotirmoy Dey in June 2011 and the subsequent trial of Jigna Vora for alleged links with organised crime – the names of the key people are changed as are those of the dailies that they served – incorporates several other aspects of the story to shed light on the conditions that obtain in newsrooms, in the corridors of the police headquarters, and in jailhouses.

The core of the script centres on the career curve of the protagonist, Jagruti Pathak (Karishma Tanna), her fierce pursuit of stories, her repeated run-ins with rivals, jealous colleagues and contacts in the field and off it, and the shenanigans of the police officers she has to deal with on a daily basis in the line of duty and the wages of the news-gathering cycle that she is a part of.

Also of great importance to the plot are Jagruti Pathak’s many personal and professional relationships. Estranged from an abusive husband and caught in a protracted and messy divorce case, she has to take care of her ten-year-old son Neel while holding on to a high-pressure job and making the most of it. Her grandfather and maternal uncle (Deven Bhojani) stand by her as she falls victim to a wilful collective conspiracy.

Other key characters in her orbit are Imran Siddiqui (Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub), her mentor and the editor-in-chief of the broadsheet where Jagruti is the deputy bureau chief; a senior rival Jaydeb Sen (Prosenjit Chatterjee in a special appearance); her primary source in the Mumbai police crime branch JCP Harshvardhan Shroff (Harman Baweja); Pushkar Mohan (Tanmay Dhanania), a colleague who is out to cut her down to size; and Leena Pradhan (Tannishtha Chatterjee), editorial chief of a competing Mumbai tabloid.

The script explores not only the systemic distortions that destroy Jagruti’s successful career but also the gender dynamics that are at play as she navigates a world in which a strong, opinionated woman is instantly perceived as a threat that is to be scythed down at the first opportunity.

Pushkar Mohan, who believes that Jagruti’s rapid ascent has been due to her proximity to her boss Imran, is dismissive of her work even as the doughty crime reporter yields no ground to him. But the same man does a volte-face and exhorts his wife (Ira Dubey) to “give them hell” when the latter faces discrimination at her workplace following a promotion she has earned at the expense of a male claimant to the post.

In what has become the hallmark of Hansal Mehta’s directorial approach to stories derived from newspaper headlines, be it in films (Shahid, Omerta, Faraaz) or in web shows (Scam 1992), documented fact is mined for its multiple skeins without any of the detours undermining the crux of the tale.

Wending its way through its many sub-plots, Scoop stays focussed on the plight of a woman subjected to mud-slinging by her own fraternity and a police force under pressure to crack a particularly vexed case and find a scapegoat.

The performance on which Scoop rests – Karishma Tanna’s – is without blemish. The arc that the lead actress traces serves to lend intensity to the emotional trajectory of the story to perfection.

Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, restraint personified, is brilliant as the man who serves as a sounding board for the heroine, a fact that is underlined most sharply in the course of televised verbal duel the character has with a rival editor on the current state of the business of news.

Among the supporting cast, Tannishtha Chatterjee, Tanmay Dhanania, Deven Bhojani and Harman Baweja all cash in on the even-toned quality of the narrative and deliver performances that enhance overall impact of the series.

Prosenjit Chatterjee, in a special appearance as the crime reporter who sparks the protagonist’s troubles, makes his role count for much more than its length would suggest.

Incisive and insightful, Scoop is, in journalistic parlance, a fully cooked story – another triumph for a director at the top of his game.

Cast:

Karishma Tanna, Harman Baweja, Prosenjit Chatterjee, Tannishtha Chatterjee, Zeeshan Ayyub, Deven Bhojani

Director:

Hansal Mehta

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