Mumbai: The Producers Guild of India on Friday called out the media for 'peddling' what it termed clickbait journalism following the death of actor Sushant Singh Rajput and trying to paint Bollywood as a murky den of substance abuse and criminality.
In a statement issued on social media, the Guild, headed by producer Siddharth Roy Kapur, also asked the media to stop fanning the flames and said common human decency is more important than advertising revenues and ratings.
This is the first time that Bollywood's powerful producer's body, which has 136 members including biggies like Aditya Chopra, Aamir Khan, Karan Johar, Shah Rukh Khan and Vishal Bhardwaj, has formally issued a statement on the media coverage of the film industry, the intense trolling that actors are subjected to and the outsider vs insider debate.
In its statement, the Guild defended the industry against criticism that it was a terrible place for outsiders to aspire to, a debate that has not just intensified but also polarised Bollywood since 34-year-old Rajput was found dead in his home on June 14 this year.
This is to let all aspirants to the film industry know that they should not be misled by the clickbait journalism currently being peddled to advance the sensationalized narrative that the film industry is a terrible place to aspire to work in, the representative body of the Hindi film producers said.
These are difficult times for our country and the world, so rather than venting our fears and frustrations on each other with vile and vicious trolling... it is more important than ever to come together instead of tearing each other apart, it said.
The media, it added, must look in the mirror and stop fanning the flames. There are some things more important than advertising revenues and rating things like common human decency. Let's show we still have some, the scathing statement read.
The Guild also criticised the media for trying to paint Bollywood as a murky den of substance abuse and criminality even as actor Kangana Ranaut asked top actors to submit to a blood test to prove they were not on drugs.
The last few months, it said, have seen relentless attacks on the reputation of the Indian film industry across all media.
The tragic death of a promising young star has been used by some as a tool to defame and slander the film industry and its members, Guild said.
A picture has been painted of the industry as a terrible place for outsiders to aspire to; a place that treats those who dare to enter it with contempt and derision... This narrative is salacious enough for the media to exploit to great effect in order to boost its ratings, readership and page views. But it is not the truth, it added.