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August
19, 2001
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Straight
Face
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Sambar-rasam
serials
THE
way things are going, Tamil Nadu will soon overtake Indian cricket
as the countrys favourite pastime. Just as all of India had
once sat glued in front of a TV set and watched Tendulkar swing
his bat to extra-cover for a six, it will now watch Jayalalithas
police make mincemeat out of the Karunanidhis men, and Karunanidhis
men make mincemeat out of Jayalalithas police. Indian cricket,
in any case, seems to be presently suffering from a chronic attack
of DOA, which in case you are out of the loop translates
as Dead On Arrival. So dead in fact that it really takes the cake,
or as Navjot Siddhu in one of his more lucid moments may make put
it, a cake with a red cherry on top.
In
contrast, the Sambar-Rasam Serials, beamed live to the nation from
Tamil Nadu, 24-hours a day, is a bit like Tom and Jerry
combined in equal parts with WWF wrestling non-stop action,
nail-biting suspense with the occasional skin show by an excitable
MP thrown in. This is reality TV brought to its ultimate refinement.
To create Survivor USAs favourite reality TV programme
for instance, they had to go through so much trouble by first
shortlisting the main characters, airdropping them on a deserted
Polynesian island and getting them to eat snakes and rats. In the
case of Sambhar-Rasam Serials, all they have to do is to post cameras
at the states well-known hotspots and wait for excitement
to spontaneously erupt.
And
spontaneous eruptions are known to erupt quite spontaneously in
Tamil Nadu. Im told that this has something to do with the
fact that every Tamilian has watched MGRs Rickshakkaran at
least 350 times, which means he/she has spent more time in the innards
of a cinema auditorium than outside it and has almost come to believe
that he/she is actually MGR in disguise.
Theres
another school that believes that it is the copious quantities of
rasam a dish made up of equal parts of tamarind water and
dynamite imbibed by every single resident of the state that
makes for this mass volatility. I have it from impeccable sources
that the average Tamilian, by the time he or she winds his or her
way through life, would on an average have consumed some 2,600 million
gallons of this unstable admixture (which may also, incidentally,
account for the chronic shortage of water in the state.).
Others
insist it is not the rasam by itself that makes Tamilians natural
pyromaniacs but the fact that they have to imbibe the rasam
usually served rather perversely on a banana leaf faster
than it overruns the said banana leaf. This sisyphean task leaves
them not just wet about the elbows and nursing strained muscles
of the upper arm to boot, but imbues them with a profound dissatisfaction
with life in general. As a consequence, some are driven into committing
suicide or burning buses when Jayalalithas Pomeranian falls
ill or Karunanidhi misplaces his glasses.
What
makes life even more uncertain in Tamil Nadu is the fact that truth
generally regarded elsewhere in the country as an absolute
comes in two varieties in Tamil Nadu. You generally believe
the version you vote for and the TV channel you tune in to. For
instance, take the events that transpired on the night of July 29,
when Jayalalithas police paid Karunanidhi a visit at midnight.
It was either a most dastardly, almost murderous violation of human
rights or a courtesy call to honour a revered leader by escorting
him to the nearest police station, depending on whether you watched
Sun TV, which gave you the DMK version of the truth, or Jaya TV,
which gave you the AIADMK version of the truth.
It
was the same, last Sunday. If you saw Sun TVs representation
of the events played out by Marina beach when DMK cadres were locked
in battle with the Chennai police, you would have been treated to
grisly closeups of blood flowing freely from the wounds of DMK bodies
and you would have sworn that this is police brutality on an unprecedented
scale. But Jaya TV would have told you an equally horrendous tale
of DMK excesses, with picturesque visuals of burning police vehicles
and a stomach-curdling shot of a severed finger of a policeman.
So
where will all this leave this state with a glorious history of
Sangam literature and the great Pallava dynasty? Where Tanjore bronzes
gleam in the sun and kanakambaram blossoms set womens heads
alight? Where the bleached sands of the Coromandel coast melt into
an azure-hued Bay? On the brink of a catatonic fit, in fact.
The
only way out for the Tamilian, at least to my mind, is to stop voting
for both Jayalalitha and Karunanidhi and firmly desist the pleasures
of Sun TV and Jaya TV. Or, if that is not possible, give up rasam
altogether.
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