Original research, explainers and long-form analysis on how Indian media frames the news. We investigate coverage gaps, ownership patterns, narrative shifts and accountability stories that mainstream outlets miss or downplay.
Every piece below is grounded in data from 165+ articles across 50+ Indian news sources, analysed for bias, sentiment and Lens Score. Written for readers who want to understand the press, not just consume it.
Deep dives into media bias, news coverage patterns, and how to become a more informed news consumer. Research-backed analysis from our team.

Tamil Nadu's first-ever hung assembly has produced a coalition puzzle narrated as everything from a masterstroke to a betrayal. The actual arithmetic tells a simpler story: TVK won 108 seats, needs 118, and Congress has 5. The rest is posturing.

Three Indians wounded, seven killed since February, 220,000 repatriated. Iranian strikes on the UAE shattered the ceasefire on May 4. Yet Indian newsrooms treat the Gulf crisis as distant diplomacy rather than the domestic emergency it is for 9 million citizens abroad.

The UDF's 102-seat landslide is being narrated as either an anti-incumbency tsunami or an ideological realignment. The voter data tells a more nuanced story: a narrow vote-share gap produced a seat blowout, and the Left's coalition collapsed from within.

Vijay's TVK won 107 seats in Tamil Nadu, but most media reduced this voter revolt to celebrity appeal. How headlines turned a democratic earthquake into an entertainment story.

A Delhi judge dies by suicide, and media turns grief into spectacle. India has clear reporting guidelines. Almost none are followed. The research says irresponsible coverage kills.

When the Supreme Court says 'order reserved,' media fills the judicial silence with presumptions of guilt. The Pawan Khera bail case shows how headlines, hashtags, and panels deliver verdicts before courts do.
Showing 49-54 of 165 articles