Sunday, April 24, 2011

"अब उन्हें बॉल फुटबॉल की तरह नज़र आने लगी है" - Good Old Radio Commentary



On the eve of the historical cricket world-cup final match between India & Sri Lanka, I was dismayed to learn that the next day, while the crucial latter half of the game would be played out, I was required to be present at a social gathering 2 hours away from my home.
This meant that while millions of cricket fans would be glued to their TV screens, I would be negotiating heavy traffic on the dark hilly terrain from Gurgaon to Faridabad, totally missing out this possible chance to be a part of the history in making.
Wading through these dire straits, where do you think my help came from? From the most unexpected quarters - the AIR radio commentary!
For most of us urban dwellers, radio commentary is a forgotten, poor cousin of the TV telecasts. Radio commentaries it seems can never capture the ball-by-ball excitement and ensure audience's vicarious participation in the game as a TV telecast does.
That evening, when I drove back from Faridabad through a light drizzle and admittedly light traffic, with darkness of the Aravallis punctured by only the headlights of my car, I switched on the 106.4MW FM radio in a desperate move to at least keep abreast of the score.
My hopelessness and prejudices were however instantly washed away by a superb commentary from AIR, which was in a manner as convincing as that of Dhoni & Co. The commentators in both Hindi (Sudip Banerjee and probably Kuldeep Singh Kang) and English (Suresh Saraiya) were simply excellent, bringing to me all the excitement & technical details without once going overboard. As India cruised towards victory, I never once missed the TV, being almost transported to the scene of action, my heartbeats pulsating with millions of others.
A part of me also remembered those forgotten moments of my childhood, when in the sleepy after-school afternoons of my dusty hometown, we used to listen to the transistor, lying down on the cool floors of our home. The technical details were sometimes quite obtuse for us children but the excitement in the commentators' voices rising above the din of the stadium made it all worthwhile.    
When Dhoni struck the final six, I leaped in joy, losing the control of my car for a moment. This shot had brought the cup (and me) home, riding safely on the airwaves.

Saturday, April 09, 2011

Quo Vadis? - The Agitation over Lokpal

Cartoon with thanks from http://rajaputhran.sulekha.com/ 
As I write this, the celebrated Gandhian and social activist Anna Hazare has ended his fast-unto-death, undertaken to push for immediate introduction of a robust Lokpal (Ombudsman) Bill against corruption in civil life.
It is beyond any question that corruption has heavily & rampantly eaten in to the innards of our political and administrative machinery and grossly affected our daily lives. The situation is now so obviously bad that a minimum level of graft & corruption is not only tolerated, it is almost expected.
This desperate situation explains the enormous surge of support this movement has received, aided in no mean measure by the impeccable credentials of Anna. We should be justifiably jubilant about how this movement has brought the issue in to a much needed sharper focus.
But now while we "civil-society" have partaken our share of the elixir of ideological victory, congratulated ourselves by clicking on the Like buttons and celebrated by disparaging the political system thoroughly, it would do well for us to remember that oligarchy is no solution to this problem.
It is the robustness of our political system and resilience of our democracy which still remains the best hope in establishing a fair and corruption-free society. We should therefore not get carried away in our protests and be led astray by the self-appointed custodians of the civil society who are vociferously denouncing the whole political system and pressing for more autonomy and more teeth to their vigilante justice. Most of these supporters have hitch-hiked themselves on to this bandwagon with an attempt to shine in the reflected glory of Anna and serve their respective ends.  
My thought finds congruence in today's editorial of Indian Express (IE dated 9th April'11), which I reproduce here below for you to read.
 

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