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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, August 17, 2001 |
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What makes soaps tick?
If in the West viewers plump for legal drama, here it is family
tear-jerkers that sell. Producers of daily soaps on television
milk the genres for all they are worth, says SEVANTI NINAN.
WAFER THIN, angst- ridden Ally McBeal, and devoted homemaker and
adoring wife Tulsi, are pregnant again. What do these two women
personify? The TV obsessions of two very different societies.
While Americans are obsessed with legal drama, Indian TV
audiences are suckers for family sagas with enough twists and
turns to make the producers of ``The Bold and The Beautiful''
envious. Study popular culture, and it tells you something about
the people who consume it.
In an online forum on legal TV the question is asked by an
American, of another American - ``What does so much law on TV say
about the country's culture?'' And a criminal defence attorney
responds by saying that the American public is drawn to conflict,
and that law, which is a form of shared civil religion in the
U.S., pervades more aspects of America's social, political, and
moral life than it would in most other countries.
In a country where legal recourse is commonly resorted to in most
walks of life, people like to watch court cases as drama, and
they like to watch fiction where you can relate to lawyers as
idealised professionals as well as sometimes flawed, vulnerable
human beings. Like Ally and her colleagues. Even a channel like
Animal Planet has a court series relating to cases filed about
pets, Judge Wapner's Court.
Last month, Court TV in the U.S. completed 10 years. It is a TV
channel which runs nothing but trials, and during an anniversary
discussion the host was harking back to the first case televised,
Florida vs. Hill.
The real life case had a story line as dramatic as anything a
script writer might have thought up: a man accused of a murder
decades ago, is finally brought to the bar of justice by his son,
who had become a cop and solved the case. In other countries, in
less litigation-obsessed societies, would a channel like this
find enough takers to be a viable proposition? Probably not.
Now, 730 televised trials later, Americans are drawn to Court TV,
primarily because of the real life legal drama it offers. Anybody
can suggest a trial to the channel, and they can be in any town
in the U.S., except that not all courts allow cameras. Says the
channel's head, ``We look at all the trials that are open to us,
and show the ones we think you'll want to see.''
In other words, the ones that have gossip value. He added,
``Towards the end of the summer, look for a trial from New Jersey
involving a rabbi accused of plotting to have his wife killed.''
Court TV is reality TV but the genre of legal drama that
fictionalises the profession is the popular prime time staple on
network TV.
They usually present heroic TV lawyers, risking all to save their
clients or clever ones thinking up original lines of defence.
A Butte College document ``Exploring Contemporary TV'' lists the
number of shows there have been. ``Civil Wars'', ``Reasonable
Doubts'', ``L.A. Law'', ``The Client'' and ``The Practice'' are
the most recent programmes presenting TV lawyers. Lawyers have
been detectives (``Perry Mason'', ``Matlock'' and ``The
Client''). They have fought for constitutional rights (``The
Defenders'', ``The Practice''). And they have just been sexy
(``Judd for the Defense'' and ``L.A. Law''). And the legal
profession in the U.S. takes this legal drama industry seriously.
The American Bar Association has in the past presented its Gavel
Award to ``The Practice''.
Sometimes they have also been packaged as lighter entertainment -
witness the musical, ``Ally McBeal'', shown recently on STAR
World or the romantic comedy, ``Ed'', on NBC, which was described
as ``lawyer lite'', by a critic.
And of course, the whole legal fiction industry has strong
competition from medical shows starring doctors and nurses as
heroes and heroines.
In India on the other hand, while there have been serials on
cases and on the profession (``Bhanwar'' on Sony and ``Your
Honour'' currently on Sony) legal fiction can never compete with
family melodrama.
Why is that? Because women watch more TV than men, and what is of
primary fascination to them, is the politics within families. Zee
TV's big success ``Amanat'', took inspiration from ``Fiddler on
the Roof'', and presented a family drama where the protagonist
was hanging on to traditional Indian values in attempting to rear
his seven daughters.
In a son-obsessed country the audience's empathy with him for
having had seven daughters, ensured that ``Amanat'' stayed at the
top of the viewing charts for a long time. It was in its own way,
a trend setter for the tear-jerkers to follow.
Today all the leading Hindi entertainment concepts milk this
genre for all it is worth. Sony's programming chief Rekha Nigam
once explained why these soaps have such irresistible appeal.
``Even when working women meet in the evening as friends what do
they talk about? One of them would say, do you know what my
mother-in-law did today?'' And ``Amanat'''s producer Sapna
Bhattacharya has said in an interview that ``Amanat'' succeeds
because ``it has the right blend of drama, conflict, emotions and
easily identifiable characters.
In every household, the parents follow the happiness and
heartaches of their daughters with fond indulgence and concern.''
In a child-centred, family-centred society, family drama succeeds
on television. UTV's Zarina Mehta provides another logical
explanation for why this genre is now expanding on all the
entertainment channels, and why weekly evening soaps are rapidly
become dailies.
With the expanding reach of satellite and cable TV to smaller
towns, a huge lower- middle class and middle class audience which
was earlier being catered to by Hindi films has entered the
satellite TV catchment, she says, and their tastes in viewing are
influencing channel programming.
Entertainment options for the women in these families are
limited, and the gaps between episodes in a weekly serial are too
long. Give them the same story with a shorter gap of 24 hours
between episodes, and you will have them hooked.
Sony's ``Ek Mahal Ho Sapno Ka'' completed 700 episodes in June,
making it the longest running daily soap. And again it has no
pretensions to being anything other than a family saga.
Even as it continues to be watched, Sony has launched ``Kkusum'',
and ``Diya Jale Kahin Jiya''. How regressive is such melodrama?
Pretty regressive. Women are shown doing precious little outside
the house, and for that matter precious little inside it, other
than sitting around beautifully dressed, waiting for the husband
to come home, or bickering with the bahu or saas, or conniving
against a fellow sister-in-law.
Or getting pregnant. A recent episode of ``Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi
Bahu Thi'' had Mandira, who had seduced Mihir during his memory
loss period, and Tulsi his wife, both throwing up in mid-
conversation.
Indian notions of depicting pregnancy have not changed over the
years. Evidently the chocolate box hero whose television demise
had the Indian middle class in Western India so worked up that he
had to be resurrected, is now making up for lost time.
Men are shown two-timing in ``Kkusum'', ``Kahin Diya Jale Kahin
Jiya'' and in ``Kabhi Sautan Kabhi Saheli'', and women are shown
taking it. Kusum simply emotes with her large eyes, from episode
to episode, looking distressed. Payal in ``Kahin Diya...'' does
likewise.
Morality in the Great Indian Family is a pretty flexible
commodity but nobody is complaining. So between litigious
Americans and conniving or philandering Indians, take your pick.
(The theme for this article came from a question asked by
Saraswathi, a reader from Mysore.)
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