NAT26National/EntertainmentAge of
Bollywood BombastBy Chitra Padmanabhan"
Mumbai kisi ke baap ka nahin hai," growled the city's joint commissioner of
police K.L. Prasad recently. He was briefing the
media on the alphabetic agitation -- M is for
Mumbai is for Maharashtra Manoos is for Marathi -- launched by Maharashtra Navnirman Sena chief Raj Thackeray against
actress-MP Jaya Bachchan's alleged anti-Marathi remarks, made in Hindi. Faithful to the script, Thackeray challenged Prasad to remove his
police uniform and come on to the street whereupon he would know whose ancestors
Mumbai belonged to.It's not just these two; from the look and
sound of it the whole nation seems to be on an intravenous dose of
Bollywood bombast as a catchall
reference for anything and
everything.Want proof
Television news channels break the
news of
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh winning the trust vote by playing the
song 'Singh is Kinng'. Speaker Somnath Chatterjee exclaims "
Chak De
India!" in his heavy bhadralok accent to congratulate the
Indian cricket team for having won the triangular
cricket series against
Australia in their lair.As if
stars endorsing brands was not enough,
ads fall back on popular 'filmy' situations - from the armless thakur of Sholay 'loving' Mcfood to bandit queen Phoolan Devi glowering at the villager
teacher for sporting whites whiter than hers.
Radio jockeys endlessly snarl 'kutte' a la Dharmendra or stutter like King Khan. Would stand-up comedian Raju Shrivastav be able to stand without his Big B act Every award function is modelled on
star award nites, be it for corporate excellence or cricketing achievements, with
film stars often
giving away
awards. The IPL
cricket series wins hands down for serving
entertainment with a big
Bollywood dollop.In
talent contests on
television,
children flaunt a
Bollywood hip grind or falsetto. And in the dubbed version of the enormously popular Japanese
game show, Takeshi's Castle, commentator Javed Jaffri, gives free rein to tapori flow -- singing 'keechad lagaya apne', aping composer-
singer Himesh Reshammiya's 'Ashiq banaya apne' when a
girl failing to cross a hurdle, falls into a slushy puddle. The
Bollywood effect starts early in life: at a two-year-old nephew's
birthday party organised in a
pizza shop, 40
children played musical
chairs to popular
Bollywood numbers like, 'touch me, touch me, touch me, zara zara kiss me, kiss me, kiss me'. It is the latest
nursery rhyme.Not only has
Bollywood become synonymous with
entertainment; it seems to have become the great commons, taking on attributes of wit, riposte, proverb, collective
memory and chatter in almost every sphere of life.Simultaneously,
entertainment is no longer mere content; it has become the
language of our times; the mode of
communication, the code of
communication with big time
currency. There seems to be an unspoken belief that anything that does not come jacketed as
entertainment, shall not be comprehended. Or that anything that comes packaged as
entertainment is sure to succeed.
Bollywood has always had an influence of its own - triggering
fashions and
hair styles; inspiring 'jagratas' of bhajans sung to
film tunes; weaning an entire Hindi-speaking generation on its
music on
All India Radio's Vividh Bharati station. But Hindi
cinema occupied a certain slot in
public consciousness; there were other enclaves of 'higher' brow popular
culture, and high
culture. The past seven or eight years have seen major developments - an explosion of
cinema addressing itself to a growing, English-speaking middle class, with English-speaking
actors working in
Bollywood. Developments that have made
Bollywood hep, aspirational, be it a 'Dil Chahta Hai', a 'Rock On', an A.R. Rahman score or terse dialogues. The impact of these developments has heightened in an age of convergence as
cinema and its spin-offs have snaked across
television,
advertising and live shows to form a giant
entertainment bloc. No more
talk of 'infotainment'; in its place is mass
entertainment, signalling a reach that the
market is so desirous of. No
wonder entertainment has become representative of the mantra of growth across segments as well as the conduit to comprehension.How well this leviathan of a medium knows its power is evident in an ad for a high definition
television HDTV brand. Two Kathakali performers find their vitality draining, escaping as coloured pixels. The chase ends before a HDTV; the artistes admire their vibrant image, seeming more real than them. Bhidu, that's life.The author is a Delhi based
journalist. She can be reached at chitrapadmanabhan@yahoo.co.in--Indo-Asian
News Servicecp-mk/dg802
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