This posterior questioning of the role of media underlies the exploration of this article. And the answers to these questions lie in the partisan role of “godi” media. Rather than calling the powerful to account, what “godi” media has been doing is that they are less interested in reporting and more interested in following the Twitter account of Prime Minister Narendra Modi because “it would be instructive to see what kind of reporting these journalists have done since 2014” (Kumar, 2019, p. 20). Such news, Kumar laments, “began to disappear from India news channels and papers some years ago” (2019, p. 15). The practice of “godi” journalists doing fieldwork these days is rare, since they rely heavily on social media feeds rather than what is beyond these feeds–the real world (Haneef, 2020, para. 17). Just as the tour through England in a Ford car opens Stevens’ horizon of thinking even though he relies on an anachronistic guidebook, same can be said to be the case with journalists who do fieldwork for reporting rather than rely on social media feeds. Stevens’ is not the world of Rolls-Royce England but of Ford, the quintessential symbol of something produced for the masses.