Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Open Feedback on SRGMP to ZEE Marathi, Avadhut and Vaishali: Part 5

The saying is "one rotten mango spoils the whole basket". When there is a basket full of rotten TV channels, I wonder what could happen.... On typical Indian streets, every corner becomes a garbage dumping ground, and the by-passers have to smell those when they pass-by each corner. The viewers get the same treatment on the television channels as they switch the remote.

The last fort to fall to these rotten channels was the Marathi SRGMP Li'l Champs. In the 14th episode of finals, the ZEE once again changed the rules to keep the telecom companies happy. They created another drama like their Hindi versions, and retained 5 participants for the mega-final. Nothing wrong in doing so.....but! Then why did not they think of it when other finalists were eliminated? Shamika and Shalmali were better than some contestants left in the show. As usual, they cooked up drama like any other saans-bahu soap.

Initially the ZEE had put a nice PDF of rule for this program, and one-by-one manipulated all of those for their own benefits. They added "+" and "-" to the scoring scale from 1 to 7 (S to N), later used higher octave for marking....while they were supposed to maintain a ratio of % SMS and the marks. You never know if they had scaled the SMS weightage to the highest marks given. In fact, higher octave itself is a manipulation in the competition. They changed the recall rules and now the mega-finals rule. Fortunately I followed this program only on Youtube, but I really pity those who watch it on TV. Lack of transparency, partial judgments, and SMS based discrepancies have marred this show.

However, remember that the garbage is created by the the same people who smell it.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Bangalore, An orphan city on its path towards ruins

Hello and Happy New Year!
Today I was coming back from Majestic to my place (this is my infrequent route these days) and saw yet another horrible site of tree destruction done by this government. Same story on the road near National College, and many other parts (Mecri circle to Hebbal, Old Madras road) of the city. I wonder why no one has spoken against it - expect there was some news on NDTV, there isn't any media craze for this topic. I was especially surprised to see the even the core area of "original" Bangalore population such as Basavangudi was silent on this.

Bangalore was/is a green city; hence it never saw a movement like "Green Pune/Mumbai/other cities". A green city which is full of population, which has hardly any loyalty towards it, is surely going towards a grim disaster. Demographically those who claim on the city are either gone to other countries, or "high and pub goer class" or rowdies, and none of them would be sensitive to this issue (for that matter any socio-cultural issue). High class does not have intellectuals (or they are busy getting academy awards for their novels). And the rest of the population (I call these as educated, but intellectually illiterate class) has a dream that one fine day they would go back to their home-town. This population has enough money that even if you construct the bullet train as a public transportation, they would continue to use their cars. In nutshell, historically a very few state/regions in India have socio-culturally aware and active people, and Bangalore does not find a place in that list - there are no Mohan Dhariyas in Bangalore. Also, while on one hand BJP talks about nature conservation as of on the reasons for preserving Ram-setu, here, like many other original agendas from their manifesto, they have forgotten the nature. Probably cutting tree, widening roads, constructing metro and contracts for each of these are their only earning sources.

Of course the question would come back to me that what I am doing apart from writing this blog and I do not have any answer. I checked with some organizations (Janaagraha, etc.) who are simply not interested because this does not give them enough political mileage. I checked with my employer, which takes up a lot of so called "social causes", and rightly they don't want to risk their relations with the government. I think it was "chipko" movement in which people just embraced each tree to save forests and I am ready for that, I am ready for hunger strikes, rallies, etc., but movement like that need support from "the (ab) originals".

May be after 10 years, someone would start a "Green Bengaluru" movement and get a Magsese award for that - what an idea "Saar"ji....Keep quiet while creating a problem and then solve it, bag an award and publicity!