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Overdose

Whose media is this anyway?

At what point will Indian news channels stop doing ‘news’ stories on ghosts and cease playing catch-catch with each other? When will they start reporting on real issues?
Jatin Sharmaby Jatin Sharma

Words evoke emotions. And emotions provoke words. And one such prevalent emotion in my life is evoked by our news channels.

I always wonder about the men and women who come up with such interesting headlines to all the news. I believe that news channels nowadays are the biggest competitors to entertainment channels. And there is a lot of pressure on the news people to come up with interesting stories. The stories with news channels have slowly and steadily shifted from facts to mere fun.

I don’t understand why I (or anyone, for that matter) would be interested in knowing about a ‘swarg ka darwaza‘, a story that is run and re-India TV news of a UFO beaming up a cowrun a million times on a news channel. It’s not like I really have the option or the inclination to check out heaven, like when I’m bored or when I run out of good eating out options, so that I would think, “Hmm, let me see if I have take-away menus for any restaurants in heaven.” To top this heavenly news story, another news channel comes up with a shrill headline: ‘Yeh gaai thi sarpanch ki beti‘ – a story on reincarnation. It’s enough to put one permanently off television altogether.

I understand that this kind of ‘reporting’ is entertaining to a lot of people and it gives news channels a lot of TRPs. But I also think that the media is an essential part of our democracy, not a joker for the country to laugh at. The media is a strong pillar of a nation, a reflection of its strength. But today, the news channels of India are in such a hopeless condition that it sometimes just annoys me.

The media has a big responsibility to play today, especially in a country like ours which has the most brilliant minds of the world, educated and refined like no other. But at the same time, we have a vast number of underpriveleged people who are still miles away from formal education and who have to learn a lot of things before they can fruitfully contribute towards creating a strong nation. In a country like ours, the role of the media, and especially the news channels, has assumed a bigger role and importance today because they are the primary tools to educate the masses.

news channelsBut all that the news channels are interested in today is TRPs. It was shocking to see most news coverage during the ongoing crisis at Uttarakhand – news channels actively competed for the coveted ‘We got here first’ spot, while giving out news about the rescue operations was more of an afterthought. It was questionable, to say the least, to see what kind of news sense (and journalism ethics) were at play with one news channel just focussing on ‘Paani mein hain Shiv ki murti’; at the side, there were a million people crying for help.

News channels are the biggest pressure group on the Government, anywhere in the world where a free media exists. Their role is to bring out news that have some utility for the nation. But all that is happening is one big tamasha where they all seem to just sit in their newsrooms and come out with flippant stories that are entertaining but little else. All that is coming out of most news channels today is a joke, while the real issues are pushed aside.

Earlier, journalists were a part of a respectable and well-educated bunch of people who knew everything about a particular subject and who could make political parties shudder with their presence. They were articulate while presenting the facts. But today, most journalists are participating in a running race, vying to come first. Yes, competition is becoming fiercer by the day and and a delay of a few seconds results in a loss of crores, but who is responsible for fake news that are reported as a part of this race?

Most times, I have no use for the news that reaches my doorstep. It does not add to my knowledge, it only breakin newsgives me something to chuckle at. It is not making me exert my brain to think and ponder. News channels don’t want me to be part of the development of the nation any more – because they are not a part of it any more.

The nation needs the media today. A media that goes beyond making a mockery of itself, and which is mature enough to see the role it plays in the larger scheme of things. The media cannot be a clown and hope to be taken seriously unless it becomes a ring master. I want the media to not talk about ‘Bhoot ki beti ki shaadi’ and ‘aapke doodh se khush honge Shiv’. I demand media that talks about me and us and our nation. A media that talks about and contributes to the to build a powerful country.

Jatin Sharma is a media professional who doesn’t want to grow up, because if he grows up, he will be like everyone else.

(Pictures courtesy strictanddeadly.blogspot.com, www.fakingnews.firstpost.com, kashmir-timemachine.blogspot.com, www.mouthshut.com)

Categories
Enough said

Citizens fight back against injustice

The days of people quietly accepting atrocities by the State are long gone – now they’re combating injustice with information.
Humra Quraishiby Humra Quraishi

Last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin and his wife, Lyudmila, made a rather dignified announcement, which put a formal end to their marriage. It was known before the announcement, that the two were rarely together, and that they had been dragging the marriage along for years.

What impressed me was the manner in which the announcement was made. The couple is middle-aged, yet they didn’t let their age come in the way of their decision. To part at 60 cannot be easy.

Just pause and think of how we, in India, rarely take this step at age 60 and beyond, preferring to keep up the sham. We pretend everything’s fine, we are comfortable portraying a reality that doesn’t exist. We can keep up the pretence for years. That’s just who we are.

And because we are so happy propagating a private lie, we are happy lying in the public sphere as well. Even as parts of North India are being wrecked by the monsoon, with hundreds being killed in flash floods and landslides, our politicians are doing what they do best – nothing. Political leaders from across the board should currently be a part of the relief operations in affected regions, putting to good use the sarkari and non-sarkari brigades they nurture. But what are they really doing? Conducting aerial tours, sitting far away and giving boring speeches.

Some politicians are otherwise engaged in justifying fake encounter killings or arresting innocents. In Lucknow, activists are protesting outside the UP State Assembly, against the khalid mujahidillegal arrest and killing of Khalid Mujahid by the UP cops (see pic on right). But Mulayam and Akhilesh Yadav are choosing to divert attention by distributing computers and laptops!

In Gujarat, where Mumbai-based student Ishrat Jehan who was killed in a fake encounter on the pretext of her part in a terror plot, the case has been reopened and the focus is now on the blatant killings conducted by the State. A few months ago, I had spoken to well-known human rights lawyer Vrinda Grover, who is the counsel for Ishrat’s mother. She said, “It was soon after the Sohrabuddin case was taken up by the Supreme Court and the nexus between the cops and politicians was exposed that I was contacted by Ishrat’s family to take up their case.

“It was the conviction of the mother and family in the innocence of Ishrat and their determination to have her name cleared of the tag of terrorism that persuaded me. They wanted their respect and dignity restored. As a human rights lawyer, I often represent victims of police atrocities and violence. But, after meeting Shamima Kauser (Ishrat’s mother) and her children, seeing the case file and the reading the truth about Sohrabuddin’s murder, it was clear that this ‘encounter’ was not just a crime committed by some trigger-happy cops, but rather part of the State-sanctioned and planned violence against Muslims, which was unleashed in the genocidal pogrom of 2002.

Ishrat_Jahan“The FIR recorded by the Police of these encounters refers to the riots and killings of Muslims in 2002 and claims that the alleged ‘terrorists’ wanted to kill Modi and take revenge for the 2002 attack on Muslims. These encounters, about 22 of them in Gujarat, are part of the politics of hate to polarise and build mistrust and fear between the communities. It is very important to recognise a clear pattern of targeting Muslims and demonising them as the enemy that must be eliminated, by use of State power, whether through engineered riots or staged fake encounters i.e cold blooded murders by those in State power.”

She went on, “It is very important to bring out the truth behind these fake encounters because in Gujarat there is a criminal nexus between the political executive, the police and even persons in critical positions in the IB, both in the Centre and State. This is a very dangerous and lethal combination and before our eyes a fascist State is in the making. To fight for Ishrat’s truth is part of the battle against fascism. The mechanics of electoral democracy may not deliver justice and the legal battle is important so that the killers and their masterminds are unmasked and punished.”

Humra Quraishi is a senior political journalist based in Gurgaon. She is the author of Kashmir: The Untold Story and co-author of Simply Khushwant.

(Pictures courtesy news.in.msn.com, www.rina.in, rihaaimanch.blogspot.com)

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Swaad 'Anu'saar

Eating out, Mumbai ishtyle – Part III

The last of the three-part series on Mumbai’s most preferred food joints, their specialties and the real swaad of Mumbai.
anuritaby Anurita Gupta

In Part I and Part II, I spoke about the city’s heavenly eating out experiences and food joints. Today, I conclude my thoughts on the awesomeness that is eating out in Mumbai.

Bombay Sandwich joints: The hard-working Mumbaikar literally lives ‘between breads’. Mumbai’s favourite quick fix snack is most definitely a sandwich. The Bombay sandwich is usually loaded with fresh beetroot, cucumber and tomato slices with grated cheese and served with green and red chutney. Its many variations are ‘chutney sandwich’, the ‘grilled cheese sandwich’ and ‘chutney cheese toast’. In a fancier avatar, many international and local chains serve the sandwich in the form of oven baked breads packed with cold cuts and Swiss cheese.

Hot tip: For the true blue Mumbai-sandwich experience, try Swastik Sandwizza, Santacruz Market. Their veggie bombay sandwichsandwich has crowds swarming outside this tiny shop to get a bite. Right Place at Warden Road is another hot spot for grilled cheese sandwich with a ‘secret’ recipe sauce. The humble chutney sandwich at Candies, Bandra is quite a hit too.

For an international experience, try the cheesy, corned beef sandwich called ‘Ruben’s’ at Between Breads, opposite Hawaiin Shack, Bandra (West). The ‘Sloppy joe’ at Indigo Deli, Phoenix Mills is a hot number, too. Sante at Pali Mala Road, Bandra serves the yummiest ‘Ham and Brie’ sandwich.sorpotel

Goan food restaurants: Goan cuisine is primarily made with the three tropical ingredients of seafood, coconut milk, and local Goan spices. The flavours are super intense with extensive amount of kokum used to counter the spiciness. Interestingly, this cuisine has many influences of not just the Portuguese era but also has undercurrents of Hindu and international cuisines by virtue of its flourishing tourism.

Goan food that is really popular in Mumbai is Goan fish and prawn curry, Pork Vindaloo, Goan pork sausages, Pork Sorpotel, Prawns balchao and Xacuti (non-veg and veg). Interestingly, the Sorpotel (see pic on left) comprises pig blood as well. Its unique flavour is enhanced when you have it with par-boiled white rice or bread. The most famous is Pork Vindaloo, a combination of spices, red chillies and a huge amount of vinegar.  Non vegetarian aside, the vegetarian Goan food comprises of beans, cashew nuts, potatoes and jaggery.

Hot tip: Enjoy the vegetarian rajma tondak, rich in cashew, Goan pork sausages and Goan Fish curry (mackerel recommended) at Goa Portuguesa at Mahim, near Hinduja Hospital. Jaihind Lunch Home at Bandra and Lower Parel serves a mean Goan Prawns curry. You can also visit the Goa Bhawan canteen, JVPD, Juhu for very reasonably-priced, authentic Goan food.

Mangalorean restaurants: Almost always confused with Malvani cuisine, the one big difference between Mangalorean gassi and a Malvani curry is the ingredient that is responsible crab curry for the khataas factor.  There is tamarind in the gassi and kokum makes the Malvani or Gomantak curry nice and sour. Typically known as the cuisine of ‘Tulu Nadu’ (parts of Kerala and Karnataka that speak Tulu), Mangalorean cuisine is massively influenced by the South Indian cooking style as well. Made with coconut, dried red chillis, ginger and curry leaves, Mangalorean delicacies are usually spicy with fresh seafood being a major component in them.

The most popular dishes in Mumbai are gassi (prawn, fish and vegetable), appam (rice pancakes), Malabari parotta, Mangalorean fish curry, neer dosa (lacy rice crepes), ghee roast chicken, cashew upkari, sannas (Mangalorean version of idlis) and the famous Mangalorean crab curry. Another very popular dish that doesn’t belong to South India or even India, is the ‘butter garlic crab’ (see pic on right) which is on offer at most Mangalorean and Malvani food hubs. It is a such delight to enjoy the soft, sweet crab meat doused in butter garlic sauce!

Hot tip: Enjoy a mean crab curry with hot neer dosa at Mahesh Lunch home, Fort; butter garlic crab and squid gassi can be devoured at Trishna, Kala Ghoda; Jai Prakash, Goregaon (East) has the most amazing prawn and chicken gassi and prawns tawa fry. 

Frankie31-1024x687Mayo rolls and frankie joints: Let’s rock and roll with what can be proudly associated with only Mumbai and no other state – the famous ‘chicken mayonnaise roll’. Diced chicken is sautéed and then mixed with mayonnaise, spiked with a bit of mustard and black pepper and stacked generously between a hotdog roll, minus the sausage. In the same gastronomic scheme is the ‘Bombay frankie’, originally introduced by Tibbs, and which is especially popular with the college crowd. Catering to masala sensibilities are the chicken and egg frankie, chicken curry frankie and the ‘Veg frankie’.  All in all, rolls are indeed a quick pickup food for unstoppable Mumbai.

Hot tip: Try Tibbs chicken frankie at their various outlets. I personally prefer the Shivaji Park one. Hangla’s, Goregoan (East) has the most amazing Calcutta rolls. Try their double chicken double egg roll. The most splendid chicken mayo roll is available at Excelsior, Fort and at Sherry’s in Matunga next to Ruia College. Try the lamb and chicken Shawarma rolls at Maroosh, Phoenix Mills, Lower parel and Inorbit Mall, Malad.

With that I conclude the ‘Eating out – Mumbai Ishtyle’ diaries. If you do take my tips seriously, we are sure to bump into each other some day at one of the food joints where we may happily get our hands dirty enjoying heavenly butter garlic crabs with a shot of toddy!

Anurita Gupta is a media professional who is passionate about two things – food and radio. Her love for all things food makes her a foodie with a cause.

(Pictures courtesy mumbai-magic.blogspot.com, www.pelauts.com, www.paulscooking.com, bengalicuisine.net, ibnlive.in.com)

Categories
Cinema@100

Gemini Ganesan and eternal romance

Most of us identify Gemini Ganesan as film star Rekha’s father. However, there was more to the superstar than cinema.
by Humra Quraishi

I chanced upon a book, Eternal Romantic: My Father, Gemini Ganesan, by journalist and writer Narayani Ganesh, a few years ago. The book is about the halo around the Tamil superstar, the lesser-known things about him, and most importantly, it captures him in the context of the times he lived in, the Tamil Nadu of his birth and work, and everything else in between.

Gemini GanesanAs per the book, Gemini Ganesan spent his formative years in the royal principality of Padukottai in Tamil Nadu, followed by a year in the Ramakrishna Mission Home in Chennai, where he learnt yoga and attended Vedanta classes. This was followed by his years at the Madras Christian College, and much later, with a glorious career in cinema.

Written with a great deal of transparency, the book dispels the mystique around Gemini Ganesan, making him out to be normal family-oriented man who was not at all filmi. From the several pictures of him and his family in the book, he appears to be a traditional family man, surrounded by his large family in an old-world setting.

Frank and devoted

He was known for being far ahead of his times, both in his work and personal life. He was candid about his relationships with his co-stars, and did not ever deny the existence of film stars Pushpavalli and Savithri in his life. He married them, fathered their children. Amazingly, his first wife, TR Alamelu, popularly called Bobjima, appeared to be utterly comfortable with the Gemini-Pushpavalli-Savithri situation, and also their children. Even more surprisingly, all of his children, with all three women, got along well with their half-brothers and sisters. One of these children was Rekha, who would later become a superstar in Hindi films.

The more I read, the more I pondered on Bobjima and the courage with which she faced her husband’s relationships. She seems to have been a woman completely in love with her husband, and she was with him right till the end. If a film was to be made on the life of Gemini Ganesan, Bobjima would definitely play the heroine in an extraordinary relationship that endured till the end.

Narayani was born to Bobjima. She writes, “When I think of appa, the words that spring to mind are charming, handsome, affectionate, witty, responsible and compassionate. He was gemini ganesan and sarojadevian interesting person…because his interests went far beyond cinema. As a dashing romantic actor, appa did have relationships outside his marriage, but his relationship with us remained the same. He was the same caring father, son and nephew, but of course, I would not be able to say what went through my mother’s mind. Because children were not part of their private discussions (if they had any) and my grandmothers were so benign and full of love – for appa and for all of us, so there was no question of ugly fights or hurling of accusations and that sort of thing.

“I would say that we all had a great deal of respect for him and for each other. As an actor, appa’s USP was that he had a way with women; he oozed charm and with his candy-box good looks, wide-eyed innocence and gentle ways, he won over the hearts of more than a generation of fans. For them, he was the eternal romantic hero…”

About Rekha

Narayani writes about Gemini Ganesan with touching honesty, leaving out nothing.  “At Presentation Convent, Madras, where I studied, a girl struck up a conversation with me after school one day. I must have been nine or ten years old.

Rekha‘Why do you and your sister go home in different cars?’ she asked. I was puzzled. My two older sisters had finished school. My younger sister was still a baby. ‘Come, I will take you to her,’ the girl said, taking me by the hand. I met Rekha for the first time. She was pretty and her eyes were lined with mascara. She said her name was Bhanurekha. ‘What is your father’s name?’ I asked.

‘Gemini Ganesan,’ came the reply. My eyes filled with tears. How can that be? He was my father. When Chinamma came to take me home, I blurted out the story. ‘Never mind,’ she said.

“Another day, I pointed out Rekha to Chinamma and she said, ‘She is like your sister. And she’s pretty.’ Then there was Rekha’s younger sister, Radha, who was even prettier, I thought. Her resemblance to appa was startling. When I was a little older, I learnt that they were born to Pushpavalli and appa, and that they lived with their mother and other siblings, too…”

Other interesting details about Gemini Ganesan the father were that he was very particular about his children’s teeth and their upkeep. “One of the earliest memories I have of my father is of him asking me to show him my teeth. He would inspect them regularly, and horrified that my two upper front teeth were parting ways, leading to an A-shaped passage behind, he whisked me off to the dentist!”

Actor Kamal  Haasan, who’d worked with him as a child actor in his movies, mentions in the books’s foreword, “Gemini mama (uncle) was larger than Rekha and her five sisters life; there was so much  more to him than his screen persona. That was what was so exciting – cinema was not his entire life, it was a vocation, a profession he chose over others. ‘To me, life is oxygen, not cinema!’ he would say. If he hadn’t been an actor, he might have retired as an academic, with teaching stints in, who knows, Pudukkottai, Chennai, Delhi, UK, USA. He let his laurels rest lightly on his shoulders – to him, success was neither a crowning glory nor a heavy cross. And at a time when celebrities made it a point to publicise their acts of charity, he did it quietly, without fuss…

‘I touched and felt film ‘stars’ for the first time in my life when I was three-and-a-half years old. The stars were Gemini Ganesan and Savithri, and I was to play their son in the film Kalathur Kannamma. Till then, I had no idea that actors were flesh and blood humans – I cannot forget the experience as they held me close in their arms, their ‘child’. I began addressing them as amma and appa on and off the sets. I’m told I had to be ‘weaned’ away from my screen parents!’

(Pictures courtesy www.veethi.com, ibnlive.in.com, thehindu.com, www.mid-day.com, rediff.com, www.masala.com) 

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Beauty

Preserve your sensitive side

Sensitive skin needs special care at all times, but especially in the monsoon. Read on for some simple DIY tips.
by Beverley Lewis

Sensitive skin needs more TLC than any other skin type. Use one wrong product and you can kiss your flawless complexion goodbye. This is because sensitive skin is generally allergic to most products, especially those that contain harsh ingredients.

But it’s not an impossible task to take care of sensitive skin either, provided you play your cards right. We spoke to holistic practitioner Dorothy Fortner from the Flower Essence, New York, for easy-to-follow tips on sensitive skin maintenance.

Keep it simple: It sounds obvious, but the more products you use, the more likely you are to come across an ingredient that may trigger a reaction. It only takes one ingredient in a new product to cause a flare up.

Patch up: Always conduct a patch test before you buy a new product, by applying a drop of the new product on the inside of your elbow, before buying the product. If there’s no adverse reaction 24 hours later, you can use the product.

Take your make-up off before you go to bed: This is really a no-brainer, and yet, a surprisingly large number of women are guilty of not taking off their make-up when they get home from work or a night out. No matter how late it is, or how tired you are, you should always cleanse your face before falling asleep. Sensitive skin is extremely vulnerable to irritation. So the longer you leave make-up or dirt on your skin, the more likely you are to have a reaction.

Hands off!: Don’t keep touching your face all the time, as you run the risk of transferring dirt and other bacteria onto your skin. If you feel the need to touch your face often, try using a clean tissue or an anti-bacterial cleansing wipe.

Stay hydrated: It is important to drink at least eight to ten glasses of water a day as this hydrates the skin and helps detoxify the stay hydratedbody, which in turn prevents break outs.

Take a chill pill: If you have sensitive skin, try to avoid stress as this can cause flare-ups. If you do find yourself under stress, take up yoga or meditation, as this will benefit your skin and give you a healthy glow.

Dry and sensitive? If you’re wondering why you have dry as well as sensitive skin, this is because your skin barrier is not doing its job properly. For such skin, keeping in moisture is hard, and keeping allergens and other harmful skin chemicals out is even harder. So as your skin becomes drier, the barrier weakens further; it gets more sensitive and more prone to dry skin conditions. The only way to prevent this is to liberally apply an organic natural moisturiser like lavender, which works well for sensitive skin. Again, test the product before buying it.

(Pictures courtesy uk.carita-spa.com, www.missclinic.com, uptenlist.com)

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Event

A very real treat for Mumbai

Do you dig non-fiction? Then you simply must head over to the Nehru Centre tomorrow for Asia’s first Non-Fiction Festival.
by Medha Kulkarni

nehru centreLovers of non-fiction have a reason to celebrate. From June 21 to 23, the Nehru Centre in Worli, Mumbai will host Asia’s first ever festival dedicated entirely to non-fiction work.

The festival describes itself as “India’s first and foremost event platform for everything non-fiction” and centers around the theme “Be Bold. Be real”.

Non-fiction is a genre that acts as a mirror through which one can critically engage with the world around us. It deals with pure fact whether they’re about people, places, events or even ideas. The festival boasts of an impressive lineup of speakers with names such as Devdutt Pattanaik, Bhawana Somaaya, Gregory David Roberts, and Malini Agarwal among several others. The speakers come from diverse backgrounds and careers right from business and management to leadership, health, fitness, media, cinema, cookery, lifestyle, politics, economics, globalisation etc. The festival’s format is relatively simple, with two conference halls that will have parallel sessions consisting of panel discussions, interesting keynotes and even informal conversations with celebrated writers. A separate hall will house a book sale where eminent writers will be present for book signings.

The three days promise to be extremely stimulating and are packed with interesting sessions with some of India’s leading thinkers and writers. And the best part? Registration is absolutely free.

Get more details on the festival on their website or their Facebook page or you can follow them on Twitter

(Pictures courtesy inseansopinion.com, www.indianholiday.com)

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