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Ojas Kale
Ojas Kale

Posted on • Originally published at thebalanced.news

How ‘Explainers’ Became the Safest Opinion Format in Indian Newsrooms

Over the past year, a subtle but consequential shift has taken place in Indian political journalism. Stories that would traditionally appear as reported news, opinion columns, or investigative pieces are increasingly being published under a softer, seemingly neutral label: the “Explainer”.

At face value, explainers promise clarity. They claim to break down complex developments, provide background, and help readers understand why something matters. In theory, they are a service to the public.

In practice, however, the explainer format in Indian newsrooms is increasingly functioning as a protective wrapper for framing choices, selective context, and speculative interpretation that would attract greater scrutiny if published as opinion or analysis.

This article examines why Indian media organizations are gravitating toward explainers, how the format is being used to quietly shape political narratives, and what this trend means for readers trying to distinguish reporting from interpretation.

What an explainer is supposed to be

In classical journalism, an explainer serves a specific role. It answers structured questions such as:

  • What happened
  • Why it happened
  • What the law, policy, or process says
  • What comes next

The tone is descriptive rather than argumentative. Claims are attributed. Competing interpretations are acknowledged. Importantly, explainers are not meant to advance a conclusion. They are meant to provide scaffolding so readers can form their own.

Publications like Vox popularized the explainer format globally, while Indian outlets adopted it more widely during events such as the GST rollout, demonetization, and COVID-19 policy shifts. At that time, the need was genuine. The issues were technically complex and required context.

What has changed is not the format itself, but how it is being deployed.

The rise of the politically framed explainer

In 2024 and 2025, a growing number of Indian political controversies have been covered primarily through explainers rather than straight news reports. These include:

  • Constitutional disputes involving the Supreme Court and the Union government
  • Opposition leader investigations by central agencies
  • Electoral bond disclosures and corporate political funding
  • State government policy clashes with the Centre

Instead of headlines like “Government says X, Opposition alleges Y”, readers increasingly encounter titles such as:

  • “Explained: Why the Supreme Court’s observations matter for federalism”
  • “Explainer: What the electoral bond data reveals about political funding”
  • “Explained: The real impact of agency probes on Indian democracy”

These headlines sound neutral. Yet within the body, readers often find a clear narrative arc that points toward a particular interpretation of events.

Why explainers are attractive to newsrooms right now

There are structural reasons Indian newsrooms are leaning on explainers more heavily.

1. Legal and regulatory risk

India’s defamation laws, contempt of court provisions, and increasingly aggressive use of legal notices create strong incentives for caution. Explicit opinion pieces that assign blame or question intent are legally riskier than explanatory formats that present interpretation as contextual background.

By framing judgment as explanation, publications can reduce exposure while still conveying a point of view.

2. Platform incentives and SEO

Search engines and social platforms reward content that promises clarity. “Explained” headlines perform well in Google Discover and social feeds because they signal usefulness rather than confrontation.

An explainer is more likely to be shared across political divides than a headline labelled “Opinion” or “Editorial”, even if the underlying content is similar.

3. Audience polarization

Indian news consumers increasingly self-sort by ideology. Publishing overt opinion risks alienating half the audience. Explain­ers offer a way to retain plausible neutrality while still catering to a core readership that already shares the publication’s assumptions.

4. Shrinking newsroom resources

Explainers can be assembled quickly by synthesizing existing reporting, expert commentary, and public statements. They require fewer original interviews and less on-ground reporting, making them cost-effective in understaffed newsrooms.

How framing enters an explainer

Framing does not require explicit opinion. It operates through subtle editorial choices.

Selection of facts

An explainer may highlight certain data points while omitting others that complicate the narrative. For example, coverage of agency investigations might emphasize conviction rates or international indices on democratic backsliding while downplaying legal process details or counter-arguments from the government.

Ordering and emphasis

What comes first shapes interpretation. Leading with criticism from civil society groups before presenting official responses signals a hierarchy of credibility, even if both are included.

Language choices

Words like “crackdown”, “targeting”, or “pushback” carry emotional weight. In explainers, these terms often appear without attribution, blurring the line between description and interpretation.

Absence of counterfactuals

Explain­ers frequently explain why one outcome is dangerous or unprecedented without exploring alternative explanations or historical parallels that might dilute the sense of alarm.

Case study: Electoral bonds coverage

When the Supreme Court ordered the disclosure of electoral bond data in early 2024, Indian media produced an avalanche of explainers.

Many of these pieces were informative and necessary. They outlined how electoral bonds worked, why anonymity was controversial, and what the data showed.

However, a comparative reading across outlets revealed stark differences:

  • Some explainers foregrounded corporate influence and democratic erosion.
  • Others emphasized legal compliance, donor privacy arguments, and the opposition’s own funding practices.

Both were labelled “Explained”. Few clearly separated established facts from interpretive conclusions.

Readers encountering only one explainer could easily mistake a particular framing for settled consensus.

Case study: Agency probes and opposition leaders

Investigations involving the Enforcement Directorate or CBI against opposition figures are another area where explainers dominate.

Instead of daily reported updates, audiences often see pieces titled “Explained: Why central agencies are under scrutiny again” or “Explained: What the law says about arrest powers”.

Within these, selective statistics about arrest rates, conviction records, or international watchdog rankings are often presented without discussing methodological limits or alternative readings.

This does not make the information false. It makes it framed.

The attribution problem

One of the most concerning trends is the erosion of attribution in explainers.

In traditional reporting, claims are anchored to sources: a court order, a minister’s statement, a party spokesperson, a study.

In many modern explainers, interpretation is voiced by the publication itself, without signaling where analysis begins. Phrases like “critics argue”, “many believe”, or “this raises concerns” appear without specifying who is making the claim.

The explainer becomes an omniscient narrator.

Why readers struggle to detect bias in explainers

Research on media literacy consistently shows that readers are better at identifying bias in overt opinion pieces than in neutral-seeming formats.

A 2023 Reuters Institute Digital News Report noted that audiences globally are more likely to trust explanatory journalism, even when it contains analysis, because it signals effort and expertise.

In India, where political communication is already polarized and noisy, the explainer’s calm tone acts as a credibility amplifier.

This makes explainers powerful, and potentially dangerous, tools for narrative shaping.

When explainers are genuinely valuable

It is important to be clear: explainers are not inherently problematic.

They are essential for:

  • Understanding judicial processes
  • Breaking down budgets and economic data
  • Explaining constitutional provisions
  • Clarifying international agreements

The issue is not the format, but the lack of transparency about where explanation ends and interpretation begins.

How to read explainers more critically

For readers, the solution is not cynicism but method.

Ask who is speaking

When a claim is made, ask whether it is attributed. Who says this is a concern. Who defines it as unprecedented.

Compare multiple explainers

Reading two or three explainers on the same topic often reveals what each outlet emphasizes or ignores. Tools that allow side-by-side source comparison, including platforms like The Balanced News, can make these differences visible without requiring deep media expertise.

Separate facts from inferences

Try to identify which sentences describe verifiable events and which interpret their significance.

Watch for missing voices

Notice which stakeholders are absent. Are government responses summarized or quoted. Are legal arguments presented in full or selectively.

Implications for journalism

The normalization of framed explainers has long-term consequences.

  • It blurs genre boundaries, weakening editorial accountability.
  • It reduces space for clearly labelled opinion, pushing judgment into supposedly neutral formats.
  • It makes trust harder to rebuild, because readers feel misled rather than disagreed with.

For newsrooms, this may be a short-term safety strategy. In the long term, it risks eroding credibility.

Toward more transparent explainers

There are ways to preserve the value of explainers without turning them into stealth opinion pieces:

  • Clear labelling of analysis versus description
  • Explicit attribution of interpretive claims
  • Inclusion of credible counter-views
  • Disclosure of uncertainty and data limits

Some independent media literacy projects and analytics platforms, including The Balanced News, are experimenting with making framing visible through bias indicators and narrative comparisons. These are not replacements for journalism, but they point toward a future where readers are better equipped to navigate complex information environments.

Conclusion

The explainer has become one of the most influential formats in Indian political journalism precisely because it feels safe, neutral, and helpful.

That is also why it deserves closer scrutiny.

As explainers increasingly carry the weight of opinion without the honesty of labels, the responsibility shifts to both journalists and readers. Journalists must be transparent about framing. Readers must learn to read explanation with the same critical eye they reserve for editorials.

Media literacy in India will not be strengthened by abandoning explainers, but by demanding that they live up to what they promise: clarity without concealment.

Originally published on The Balanced News


Originally published on The Balanced News

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