Right to Know — Episode 3 — The unheard will not remain unseen

Andrew Garton
2 min readSep 29, 2019
Listen to Episode 3

In this episode we visit the ancient city of Chanderi home to four and a half-thousand weavers, we are inundated with terrifically bad smells and we find a pirate radio broadcaster living a few hours drive from where the Buddha had first meditated.

Chanderi ‘rooftop’ weaver (Photo: Jary Nemo from Ocean in a Drop)
Kiran (L) and Raghav (R) the ‘barefoot’ radio engineer (Photo: Mubeen Siddiqui)

Right to Know is an ethnographic (and anecdotal) podcast series about people coming to terms with the internet in some of India’s poorest rural and tribal districts, where many have not seen a television, or as in the ancient city of Chanderi, in early 2015 locals were still coming to terms with cars and scooters.

Research for this series was conducted on the ground from January to May 2015. Production was completed in 2018.

Presented and produced by Andrew Garton Right to Know was commissioned by the Association for Progressive Communications with support from the Digital Empowerment Foundation.

Adapted from the book Right to Know: India’s Internet Avant-garde (Garton, A 2017) and the film Ocean in a Drop (2017).

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Andrew Garton

Filmmaker, musician. Lecturer and Adjunct Industry Fellow, Media & Communications, Swinburne University.