Showing posts with label tv showa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tv showa. Show all posts

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Satyamev Jayate Theme Song

Tera rung aisa chadh gaya
Koi aur rang naa chadh sake
Tera naam seene pe likha
Har koi aake padh sakey

Hai junoon hai junoon hai
Tere ishq ka ye junoon hai
Rag rag mein ishq tera daudta
Yeh bawraa sa khoon hai
Tune hi sikhaya sachchaiyon ka matlab
Tere paas aake jaana maine zindagi ka maqsad
Satyamev... satyamev... satyamev jayate
Sachcha hai pyaar tera, satyamev jayate

Tere noor ke dastoor mein
Na ho salwatein na shikan rahe
Meri koshishein toh hai bas yahin
Rahein khushbooein gulshan rahe
Teri zulf suljhane chala
Tere aur paas aane chala
Jahan koi sur na ho be-sura
Woh geet main gaane chala

Tera rang aisa chadh gaya
Tha nasha jo aur bhi badh gaya
Teri barishon ka karam hai ye
Main nikhar Gaya main sanwar gaya
Jaisa bhi hoon apna mujhe
Mujhe ye nahin hai bolna
Qaabil tere main ban sakoo
Mujhe dwaar aisa kholna
Saanson ki iss raftaar ko
Dhadkan ke iss tyohaar ko
Har jeet ko har haar ko
Khud apne iss sansaar ko
Badloonga main tere liye

Mujhe khud ko bhi hai tatolna
Kahin hai kami to hai bolna
Khahin daag hain toh chupayein kyon
Hum sach se nazrein hatayein kyon
Khud ko badalna hai agar
Badloonga main tere liye
Sholon pe chalna hai agar
Chal doonga main tere liye
Mere khoon kee har boond main
Sankalp ho tere pyaar ka
Kato mujhey to too bahe
Ho surkh rang har dhar ka

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Satyamev Jayate, Episode 3 on marriages and dowry harassment

Aamir Khan's much talked about show 'Satyamev Jayate' is into its third episode on Sunday, May 20. A short and crisp promo showed the host talking about the passion of Indians. He revealed on Sunday he will discuss Indian marriages and the evils of dowry harassment, speaking to victims. 


The chat show, whose earlier two episodes dealt with social issues like female infanticide and child abuse, has marked a milestone with 90 million viewer ship, highest ever for any Indian TV Show. 

The reality show is the TV debut for the Bollywood star. In the era of entertainment reality shows, 'Satyamev Jayate' is an example of how TV can be made a medium of change in the society. In its launch episode was viewed by 90 million people and was the highest rated show with 4.1 television rating (TVR), according to Television Audience Measurement (TAM) data. 

The first episode, which talked about female foeticide, reached out to 2.67 crore viewers, reported TAM. This, extrapolated to an all India (including urban and rural viewers) reach with Indian Readership Survey (IRS), means that over 90 million viewers tuned in to watch the episode.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Satyamev Jayate TV Series - Episode 2: Child Sexual Abuse(Break The Silence)

The sexual abuse of children is a horrible reality, and many are unaware of its extent. Research has shown that as many as 53 per cent, or one in every two children, are victims of child sexual abuse. Contrary to belief, the home is not the safest place for a child, as many abusers are trusted by the family. In addition to educating children and encouraging them to be brave enough to say No to abuse, parents themselves need to be sensitive to their children’s signals. Moreover, a robust and specific law against child sexual abuse must be put in place to protect the child and vigorously punish the abuser. 


 Break The Silence
Episode 2: Child Sexual Abuse Click here
 

Satyamev Jayate TV Series - Episode 1: Female Foeticide(Daughters Are Precious)

In this episode Aamir talks about the killing of unborn girls, or female foeticide, an alarming and frightening reality. It involves the collusion of families, doctors and a social structure that encourages the desire for a boy child - at any cost. The result has been the death of over 3 crore unborn girls since independence and a generation of young men, many amongst whom will find it very tough to get a life partner. 

Daughters Are Precious
Episode 1: Female Foeticide Click here

Sridevi on 'Satyamev Jayate': Top 10 funny tweets

Bollywood actress Sridevi made a special appearance on the second episode of Aamir Khan's chat show 'Satyamev Jayate'. The show focused on child sexual abuse.
Mumbai based Harish Iyer, one of the victims who appeared on the show said that Sridevi's films gave him inspiration during the troubles times. Harish was stunned to see his favorite actress in front of him. She would have never imagined that her small appearance on the show will spark innumerable twitter jokes.
From her weight loss to her nose, Sridevi has become the latest twitter sensation. Here are some of the hilarious tweets. 

Sridevi on 'Satyamev Jayate': Top 10 funny tweets

@GrumpyGoan: Finally figured out who played Voldemort in the Harry Potter films. Sridevi.

@ofnosurnamefame: Considering Sridevi is so concerned about children, she must donate her nose to make plastic toys for kids.

@14_yr_old_Etard: Sridevi chose to come to the show because no breakfast cereal or soap brand signed her up for endorsements.

@lindsaypereira: Soon, all government policy will be based on the opinions of our intelligent Bollywood stars. Many thanks, Aamir and Sridevi.

@FRIEDFOODBRAIN: Sridevi's old new nose looks pretty sharp. I bet when she goes to an opening ceremony all she do is bend down to cut the ribbon.

@PM0India: Sridevi is trending. Has she been nominated to Rajya Sabha? Sonia ji didn't even tell me this time.

@KKRvsDADA: if it wasn't about child abuse sridevi wud certainly have talked about her experience with boney

@utkarsha01: Sridevi was invited in Satyamev Jayate. I can understand what she must have gone through when her husband is Boney Kapoor.

@Greyllusionist: The thing that surprised me the most on yday's #SatyamevJayate is Sridevi's hair!! What does she do to it man?

@shadymumbai: After seeing Sridevi give her Movie Dvd's ...Now soon all Fimmakers will want to distribute their Cd's/ Dvd's to everyone on #satyamevjayate

Source:-  http://ibnlive.in.com/news/sridevi-on-satyamev-jayate-top-10-funny-tweets/257801-44-124.html

‘Satyamev Jayate’: Aamir Khan uses star power to highlight social issues

Satyamev Jayate’ might be just two weeks old, but the noble TV show has taken the whole nation by storm by awakening social consciousness among people.


On the one hand while Aamir has been showered with appreciation for his initiative, he has also been drawing criticism from many on the other.

For the larger section of the society he is the ‘Messiah’, while for his detractors he is someone who is only making most of his superstar-status.

As many people are discussing Aamir’s compensation for hosting the show, veteran filmmaker Shekhar Kapur has come out in full support of the actor.

Kapur took to Twitter and wrote, “Does it matter tht Aamir gets paid for SJ? Surely enuff tht he uses his star power 2 highlight important social issues. No 1 else does(sic).”


Source:-http://zeenews.india.com/entertainment/celebrity/satyamev-jayate-aamir-khan-uses-star-power-to-highlight-social-issues_111384.htm

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Satyamev Jayate: Aamir Khan meets Rajasthan CM; gets promise of action on foeticide!

Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot Wednesday assured actor Aamir Khan, whose TV show "Satyamev Jayate" on female foeticide has created a storm, that he will take up the issue of a fast track court with the state chief justice so that justice was expedited.

 
Addressing the media with Aamir by his side, Gehlot said the widely lauded show had brought reality to the forefront.

"I am moved by Aamir's programme and his gesture. I will definitely take up the issue and speak to the chief justice of Rajasthan to find a way," he said.

In his show, Aamir Khan highlighted the story of a sting operation done seven years back by two Jaipur journalists to expose increasing female foeticide cases in Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh.

The sting by Meena Sharma and Shripal Shaktawat had covered 140 doctors involved in sex determination tests and abortions. None of the doctors has been penalized.

Aamir Khan had said in his show that he would appeal to the Rajasthan chief minister to get the cases against the erring doctors clubbed together and try them in a fast track court.

He also urged the viewers to support his signature campaign.

Gehlot said after the show, he met senior health and medical officials to know more about the extent of the problem. "We are doing a lot of work towards the issue.

"There is a certain judicial process (involved) to club together cases for trial in a fast track court."

Aamir said he had made "a specific request to the chief minister that all cases related to the show" be decided at the earliest.

The star said he was hopeful that his debut TV show, telecast on Doordarshan and Star Plus, would "touch people's hearts".

"I am not an activist. I am an entertainer who tries to touch upon the feelings of people. I will take up 13 more issues in the upcoming episodes," he said.

"Wherever such incidents occur, we will go," he told reporters.

"I was expecting to touch people's heart with the show, and I am glad to see the effect of the show. I am happy about it.

"I am not here to talk about issues seven days a week.. I am an entertainer, and that is what I am passionate about.

"I want to touch people's emotions and know their feelings, whether it is through a film like 'Dhoom 3' or through this show.

"As an entertainer, it is not necessary that I only make people laugh, it means that I should be able to evoke all emotions in them."

According to Census 2011, Rajasthan has 883 girls between the ages of 0-6 for every 1,000 boys. The child sex ratio in 2001 was 909.

Alarmed over the skewed sex ratio, the state government recently announced steps to curb pre-natal sex determination tests at ultra sound clinics.

source:-  http://www.apunkachoice.com/content/article/sid100009356-satyamev_jayate_aamir_khan_meets_rajasthan_cm_gets_promise_of_action_on_foeticide/

Aamir Khan's Satyamev Jayate played it safe

Did you see the first episode of Aamir Khan's Satyameva Jayate on Sunday?

Did you miss anything when the superstar with a conscience launched himself on the small screen with a multi-million publicity blitz?

Aamir Khan's Satyamev Jayate played it safe

Was Aamir's debut performance fiery enough to rekindle the hearts of television viewers thoroughly degenerated by the Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi genre of programming?

The answer is in between 'yes' and 'no.'

Aamir Khan's first television outing was on the problem of female foeticide in India. Those who hardly read newspapers or who are ill-informed about such issues must have cried at the mother narrating her story to Aamir Khan in the television studio.

Amisha Yagnik of Ahmedabad aborted six times in less than 10 years because her husband found out that she was carrying a girl child. She and other women on the show touched one's heart when they narrated how they had to suffer only because they had a girl child.

It is very interesting to see that in a country where the mainstream media is limiting itself more and more in making the choice of subjects and is drifting away from national priorities, Aamir Khan is arriving with a mega show to occupy this vacuum.

Aamir has to be applauded for picking a serious issue that has afflicted and shamed India. One is not trying to denounce him or his efforts. But, at the same time, his programme's format is too predictable and flat. It hardly carried any nuances of the complex subject, it did not even try to show the husband and mother-in-law's devilish minds, it threw no light on the police's inaction for the blatantly illegal act by husbands, it didn't try to explore deeply society's deafening silence on the issue.

The issue of gender bias has a historic context and it shows the ugly side of the human psyche and Indian family traditions. Satyameva Jayate was neither hard-hitting enough nor did it show any new facets of the issue to usher in change, leave alone revolution.

It played safe by making us cry. Only cry.

Sure, Aamir denounced forcefully the monstrous idea of killing the girl foetus but, in some moments, in some frames, he was making an attempt to appear engaged which did not look natural.

One is sure that even superstars have butterflies in their stomach before appearing on television where they face a tough test before the national audience.

One will have to wait for more episodes to see if Aamir Khan will grow beyond his marketed image and create a new Aamir Khan for the real India, for the real issues.

The format of Satyameva Jayate has to be more profound. The present format looks like an assembly-line production. Many such programmes have come and gone. One does not need the great actor Aamir Khan to make people cry. One only needs to bring the 'Indian story' before the television camera and shoot.

The big problem of Satyameva Jayate's format is that it is on predictable lines. Smriti Irani has done such shows; and even yesteryear's Priya Tendulkar -- who passed away in 2002 -- could have done the job.

Also, Aamir should not touch the emotional nerve of his fans too soon and too frequently. 'Drama' or 'melodrama' defuses the focus on stark reality. Tears are an obstacle to touch the core of the issue. To make an impact Aamir should not make us cry, he should make us angry, outraged.

It is up to Aamir to decide if he is out to change India or is he simply trying to just 'inform and educate' his audience. If he wants to educate us on the serious issues afflicting India, which is no less noble an intention, then the current format is fine, but if he wants to give his stamp of leadership, wants to re-establish values, and if he wants to share his idealism with a larger section of Indian society, then Satyameva Jayate is likely to fall short.

No profound change in any Indian issue is likely to come about just because Reliance Foundation contributes some money or Airtel gets smses in millions at the end of a television show.

We are not kidding when we talk about issues like human rights violations, child abuse, corruption, female foeticide, road accidents, child labour, Indians' apathy towards beggars, the digital divide, hunger, poverty, unemployment, disregard for ecology, malnutrition, domestic violence, selling of poor girls in urban India etc.

Surely, Aamir Khan will take up these kinds of issues in coming episodes. But change will not come even after 1,000 episodes of Satymeva Jayate if Aamir Khan sits in the studio and tells us the phone numbers where to send our SMS.

In all the burning issues of India that are likely to be touched upon by Aamir Khan, let us not forget, the story is about us. It is about the viewers, for the viewers and by the viewers.

The 'people' who are portrayed in Aamir Khan's shows as the main actors, actresses, villains, vamps or characters will not be very different from the Indian masses who constitute the 'TV viewing class.'

How will a television viewing society change by sending SMSes or by a donation of a few million rupees by a corporate house?

Impossible!

Aamir Khan is trying to be the male Oprah Winfrey and more. In a nation with one billion-plus people and one billion-plus stories, Aamir Khans are needed, yes, but Aamir can only add value to his image and gift TRPs to Star Plus and Doordarshan if he tries to make an impact on the issue by the 'market' route.

Aamir's marketing department seems to have been in overdrive. Make-up kuch zyaada hai! Fine packaging is not desirable when the stuff inside is about the real India.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Aamir Khan targets women's psyche in Satyamev Jayate's first episode!

While the entire nation is raving about Aamir Khan's TV debut, Satyamev Jayate, one cannot help but wonder whether Aamir and the team had any special thought behind choosing the topic of female infanticide on the very first episode of the show.

                            Aamir Khan

Aamir Khan has got the entire nation speaking in favour of his TV debut, Satyamev Jayate. Aamir seems to have struck the right chord as the show has been able to connect with the audience. While some feel that Aamir Khan was trying to be a 'fake' Indian Oprah, most people think that Aamir's attempt to serve humanity by inspiring millions is praiseworthy.

Only time will reveal the future of Aamir Khan's hyped show Satyamev Jayate. However, it is quite likely that Aamir Khan had won the heart of the female population by choosing to talk about female infanticide, a grave topic effecting the lives of millions of women from across the country.

Majority of population watching TV are women. Besides, women have the ability to pull in their male counterparts in their house to watch the show as well. That could probably be the reason to choose a woman oriented topic to air on the first episode.

Whatever be the planning behind the show, let's hope that Satyamev Jayate helps bring about positive change in our society.

Source :-  http://entertainment.oneindia.in/television/news/2012/satyamev-jayate-aamir-khan-women-095477.html

Has 'Satyamev Jayate' redefined TV shows?


New Delhi: Bollywood superstar Aamir Khan's first television show 'Satyamev Jayate' has proved immensely popular after the very first episode was aired on Sunday. The show carries a strong message of social change and calls for a fight against the evils of society. 'Satyamev Jayate' many say has created television history, others are calling it an exquisite piece of journalism.
The question is whether the show has redefined entertainment and news television shows. The question was taken up by IBN18 Network Deputy Editor Sagarika Ghosh on her show Face the Nation.
Satyamev Jayate' redefined TV shows?

Sagarika Ghose: Hi there, has actor Aamir Khan changed the rules of television? Bollywood superstar Aamir Khan's first television show 'Satyamev Jayate' has proved immensely popular after the very first episode was aired on Sunday. Simulcast on Star Plus and Doorshardhan, the show steers clear of glamour and celebrity and instead focuses on the serious gritty real issues that affect us all. The show carries a strong message of social change and calls for a fight against the evils of society. 'Satyamev Jayate' many say has created television history, others are calling it an exquisite piece of journalism. Has it redefined entertainment TV and perhaps even news TV? Joining us tonight is the director of 'Satyamev Jayate' Satyajit Bhatkal, writer, columnist, TV critic Anil Dharker, TV host, anchor Mini Mathur and Director, Centre For Social Research Ranjana Kumari. Thanks very much indeed for joining us.

Sagarika Ghose: Satyajit, let me just kick it off by asking you a news point question first which is at the very outset that Palash Sen of Euphoria has sent you a legal notice for copying the anthem of 'Satyamev Jayate' from an old track of 2000 title 'Phir Dhoom'; what is your reaction to this? 
 
Satyajit Bhatkal: This is rubbish, there is nothing in common at all. It doesn't even deserve the dignity of a reply, the lawyers are taking care of it.

Sagarika Ghose: You would not like to comment any further on that particular controversy. 
 
Satyajit Bhatkal: Anybody who hears it knows that it's complete rubbish, there is absolutely nothing in common between the two tracks. It doesn't deserve a reply.

Anil Dharker: Actually we should play them together.

Satyajit Bhatkal: No, it actually doesn't even deserve that effort. It's complete rubbish.

Sagarika Ghose: Right, let me then just come to the substance, the focus of this discussion, Satyajit, your programme which I admired greatly, I honestly did and I'm going to lay my cards on the table; many have and one of my colleague who I respect greatly has written on IBNLive.com that this programme is a exquisite piece of journalism, the research that you have done the voices that you have brought; many of us even in mainstream journalism have perhaps lost our way and became prey to glamour and celebrity whereas this really is a refresher cause of what journalism should be. I certainly saw it as that. But at the same Satyajit, to produce this one hour on female foeticide you did need Aamir Khan, you did need a superstar like him. Do you think without him, without the stardom of Aamir Khan this obviously would have not worked in a way it has? 
 
Satyajit Bhatkal: If you have seen the show, what has worked for a lot people and we are getting almost an avalanche of reaction, has been the voices that you hear on the show. So yes Aamir does provide a great platform, he also provides an extremely sympathetic, articulate voice to their stories, but above all it's the voice of the people of India perhaps have not been heard on the mainstream GEC platform in this manner which is what has reached out to a lot of people. So the show belongs to almost every single guest that we had on the show as much as it does to Aamir.

Sagarika Ghose: So it's basically the voice, Anil Dharker someone who follows the television very closely, is this an entirely new format? Because our own network on IBN7, we do a programme called 'Zindagi Live' which is very similar in format, which again is emotional, emotive, passionate, real issues with the real people and real protagonists in the studio, it's a talk show but there of course the difference is Aamir Khan. Do you think the format is extremely original or is it scaled up and given the kind of stardom that Aamir Khan brings to it? 
 
Anil Dharker: Well you know, the stardom is obviously is there, I mean no one can doubt it. Aamir Khan is Aamir Khan. The whole advertising campaign, the full page ads of Aamir Khan's face on the front of every national newspaper, on all the hoardings etc, I mean that is the attraction for people to come and watch the show. But it's like a movie, when you go to see a movie, let's say it's a Shah Rukh Khan movie, a Salman Khan movie or an Aamir Khan movie, that has drawn the audience but once the audience is in the theatre, it is the film which works, it is the content of the movie which makes it work, the star can bring you to the theatre but it can't make the film work. And I think this is something we should not overlook that it is the content of the show, Aamir Khan is the magnet drawing the audience to the show but then it is the content that made it so successful. And I think anyone who watched it first of all was moved so much, then the extensive research which was done, which you referred to in your introduction, the human interest stories that were portrayed, the fact that these women actually came on the screen and talked about their own experiences. I think the cumulative effect of this was so overpowering that it has had an impact which is unprecedented. I don't think in terms of format or shape it is extremely original because when you think about it there is hardly any original programmes, am not I right? How many original ideas can you get whether it's TV or screen etc. But it is the way is picturised, the way you put it together which is what makes it original and successful.

Sagarika Ghose: It is the way it's done. You have a very valid point there. Yes Satyajit come in. 
 
Satyajit Bhatkal: Yeah, if I might add I think one of the attempts we made, I don't know how far we succeeded was that we tried to provide a 360 degree view to the issue. So it was like each segment uncovering a new layer. Although you had three women, each of these women had a particular point which they were bringing out and it was also the analysis. Aamir takes you to through the statistical data. I mean statistics are something we look as extremely boring but here we had a whole segment, you know we went through census data, then we analysed how the child sex ratio has been falling. Now, the moment it was put in the context of the real human stories what we realised was that behind each of this statistics are millions of real people going through extremely agonising experiences and that I think help the analysis to happen in the context of real human drama. So perhaps that is one of the things that helped to connect with the audience.

Sagarika Ghose: That's exactly what it did. In fact the range of voices, the range of experience you got, it really was incredibly impressive and as I said it was an excellent piece of journalism which in mainstream news channels you would not have one hour on female foeticide and we were so riveted by that kind of a programme but Ranjana Kumari is someone who has campaigned long and hard against female foeticide, we all have been campaigning against this kind of infanticide, against this kind of torture that is heaped on women. Do you think that this kind of a programme can bring real change, can it be a real catalyst of change? Or will just stay at just raising awareness? Will people just watch Aamir and go back to their normal life and do what they are doing?
 
Ranjana Kumari: Well Sagarika, I wish as it being called avalanche, I mean I wish it simmers into the society and brings the change that we are looking forward to. You very rightly said that the women groups have been working on this issue for years so it not really being discovered by this one single programme. But I certainly am appreciative of Aamir Khan's courage to come forward, even if it is for a one time episode, tomorrow he'll talk about some other issue, day after some other issue and certainly I wish all those issues that he'll take will hit the society as hard as we think it will and will not remain a tea table talk and will not remain an one time emotional outburst. Female foeticide is such an issue you know now generations of women are now declining, continuously, constantly we have a very weak piece of legislation which is not being implemented effectively. We have these greedy bunch of doctors who are…

Sagarika Ghose: Does it make you little frustrated that you have been campaigning on this for years but now it takes an Aamir Khan to bring to the nation's consciousness, it has actually taken a Bollywood star to actually make it come alive whereas people in this field like you have been campaigning on this? 
 
Ranjana Kumari: Sagarika, I am in fact more than happy that Aamir Khan has brought this and to everyone of you, in fact you've been talking about this and I remember having joined your programme earlier and on many occasions, so at least the whole nation has woken up, a mirror has been shown. If Aamir Khan had to become an anchor I think it is good, I am really really happy about it but at the same time I am worried that is it that the lid is open and the fizz is out and the bottle becomes as stable and as usual. So I think this fizz has to continue it has to boil the society and everybody who is today angry, emotional; so saw that in the programme none of the men were crying, I have seen so many Oprah Winfrey's programmes, the issues she brings, I have seen your 'Zindagi Live', people cry, people feel bad and that is it. But I don't want this issue to die like this, it cannot. And Aamir Khan should remain committed because we need him, we need people like him.

Sagarika Ghose: It remains a reality show, it doesn't go beyond that. Let me get Mini Mathur, Mini Mathur is this a change in entertainment television as a genre because when know seeing the blurring of the line perhaps between news television and entertainment television, we have seen in the Arab spring the way it was covered even on platforms that were not necessarily news television, you know the Anna Hazare movement; this is actually I am reading from a blog written by 'Aam Janta', it has written that in fact people who are consuming entertainment also want something serious from entertainment now, they don't just want empty glamour, empty glitz, they are looking for reality, they are an intelligent audience. Do you see them audiences are kind of maturing of the audiences that are viewing entertainment? 
 
Mini Mathur: Absolutely Sagarika, I think you know what's been happening is so far entertainment has been totally associated with loud laughs, humour and completely you know either it has to be the saas bahu drama or it has to be loud humour but now it takes a Aamir Khan to show you that there is space for socially relevant entertainment as well. I mean entertainment is not just laughs and tears, entertainment is something which engages you frankly. And I think Aamir got the country engaged for an hour and a half without anyone making a move from what they were watching and that's entertainment. While I will not use the term entertainment to belittle the relevant change that he has brought to the business. I think it should open up the lines and definition of what should be termed as entertainment. I think the audience is maturing, they are ready for programming like this but it takes Aamir Khan to tell the channels that I am doing it and I am doing it my way so you better just sit and watch.

Sagarika Ghose: It's infotainment and not entertainment but Satyajit let me quote again from this bloger call Aam Janta who has actually made some every interesting points, he has written it is a proper commercial show on a proper commercial channel backed by corporate sponsors and anchored by a celebrity, can this show take up causes that will conflict against its corporate interest? Coca Cola, the company that Aamir Khan endorses is accused of spoiling waters resources, does this mean that a show like this which has such a commercial cloud and a celebrity like Aamir Khan will not take up causes at the commercial backer or the corporate backers or the corporate backers will not sponsor. 
 
Satyajit Bhatkal: I think we should really look at what the show has already done rather than make any claims. In the last 36 hours we have been extremely humbled and overwhelmed by the kind of response we are getting. Let me just quote two of them, one is a senior IAS officer in a state government which I will not name, who had two girl children and after that he was so desperate to have a male child that he made his wife undergo eight abortions in the quest for a male child and after the eighth abortion the doctors told him that look if your wife conceives even once more there are very less chances of her surviving nonetheless he was determined then they had a male child and the wife died immediately thereafter. Cut to eighteen years later now the show is aired and the man goes public with this information, breaks down and admits what he did was wrong. Now what we are having is mothers-in-law apologising to daughters-in-law, we have these people tweeting and telling us that look we planned to do sex selective determinations and abortions but we won't do that. So the people are changing. Now you asked about corporate interest, what this has to do with corporate interest?

Sagarika Ghose: The fact is as you explore different issues in Indian society, you may come across issues which are very sensitive, I want to ask that to Anil Dharker as well, you know not every issue, or not every social evil is black and white. For example how do you cover issues of the Gujarat riots in a format like this, how do you cover sexuality in a format like this, how do you cover generation gap in a format like? I mean when we found this, when we covered this social issues, in female foeticide the enemy is very clear but in many other issues there are shades of grey. Now can a format like this, can a possibly simplistic format like this explore the issues that are caste in shades of grey? 
 
Anil Dharker: Well you know in any newspaper or a news channel you can take an editorial stance which might be in favour of one side of the argument and I think in many cases, you mentioned the Gujarat riots for example, I think generally you would say alright their might be one side to it and another side to it but overwhelmingly I know where the right side is. Similarly with a lot of issues, you may have grey but there is also black and white and I think as a responsible journalist you can see that and therefore, I see nothing wrong with an editorial stance being taken and it may not be looking at things in black and white. You can look at the greys and you can look at both sides.

Sagarika Ghose: But if you can take an editorial stance you may not be as universally popular because an editorial stance will always be provocative of one or the other side.
 
Anil Dharker: Why do you have to be universally popular? You can provoke thought, you can provoke discussion. You can make people think about issues. You know that is also very important of society.

Satyajit Bhatkal: The show has a clear editorial stance and we will continue having that.

Sagarika Ghose: You will have an editorial stance. Ranjana Kumari, does commercialism bothers you? Does the fact that this is a highly commercialised show, a number of people have tweeted that the show should be free, why does the show take commercial breaks? Does the high level of corporate sponsors in the show, does the fact that there is a celebrity, the fact that the show is driven by commerce as much by the idealism, does that bother you? 
 
Ranjana Kumari: Well Sagarika we all should be very clear in our mind that this corporatisation of a social issue, I am not to quarrel with that, if corporate take such a big challenge and try to do that but only I am hoping and praying that this not one of the acting pieces which we saw in 'Lagaan' like come on the stage create emotions, make people cry and do all kinds of things and then completely forget about it, move on to other issues. And please don't call it entertainment, I have serious objection to it. This is such a serious crime the Indian society is committing on humanity and by no stretch of imagination we can call it entertainment when women who are made to suffer the way they have been made to suffer and they are telling only one, two or three stories, there are millions of women who are suffering in our country every day nobody is listening, nobody is hearing, nobody wants to know them and that's the reality.

Sagarika Ghose: It's just as well that when a Bollywood superstar is not doing game shows, not doing reality shows but in fact turning his stardom into social issues that's the value of this programme and it was a terrific programme that we saw on Sunday. Aamir Khan has made his television debut with immensely popular 'Satyamev Jayate' and we are asking has television news as well entertainment or infotainment been re-defined by this particular show? Satyajit Bhatkal, I am going to read out a viewer's SMS which I have received and which actually ties in with the first question that asked you, he said that the director of 'Satyamev Jayate' have delusions of grandeur, without Aamir Khan this show would have disappeared without a trace. This show is Aamir Khan, Aamir Khan and Aamir Khan. Why does the director of Satyamev Jayate not admit that.
 
Satyajit Bhatkal: Because I don't believe it. Certainly Aamir Khan has added a huge multiplier effect to what the show's audience is but as anybody who has followed television over time will tell that stars do not necessarily manage to carry the television audiences with them. If we have it is finely because of what the show has to say seemed to connect with a lot of people. So this has nothing to do, in fact you know I want to say overall that I think this kind of thought is informed by cynicism. I think it is very important that as a country and people we stop being cynical and have some faith in something which is innocent, a thing which is naive, a naive thought which I am saying but then it is informant by my naivety and my foolishness, not my any grandeur I would like to think. It is basically because I believe that people do really need to get engaged with real issues which we face today, in fact a lot of young people who we have been interacting with and they want things to change and believe that things can change. And above all I think the show is connecting to that idealism and that hope and I would really I think we should engage with we each other in a non-cynical manner.

Sagarika Ghose: That's a very good point. 
 
Anil Dharker: I would endorse that because I think there is just too much cynicism in this country. Anything that we see is good then we start sating what is behind it? For example what you read out about corporatisation, if you look at it every television show is corporatised, even this show. You have sponsors, you have advertisers but does Sagarika Ghose get influenced by the advertisers? She doesn't. She is an independent person, she has her own editorial insight. And I think this goes for every self respecting journalist or a director. You know we shouldn't forget this point that there are enough people in this country who care about issues and will do something which is right. And I think this show does that, Aamir Khan stardom helps in this.

Sagarika Ghose: But it's the content that the people are engaging with. Mini Mathur does this show shatter many of the marketing wisdom, many of the marketing beliefs that held that sex sells, and celebrity sells, and beautiful women sells and those are the things that sell. This is a show that is getting TRPs without any regression, without dummying down so will it shatter perhaps the number of marketing myths that have become so oppressive? 
 
Mini Mathur: Absolutely, and there is nobody happier than me and having to say that it shatters every marketing myth that there is and before that I just want to add to what Satyajit said, you know there have been enough film stars that have made their debut on television and beyond the two episode nobody really waited and watched the entire show because of the star power they only watch it for the content. So to say that the nation is watching it only because Aamir Khan is hosting is absolute rubbish. Secondly, this diffing about channels, finding little, little faults and being cynical about oh they are getting SMS money, what's wrong with people, here comes a show which says it like it is in the most bright and the most compelling way and yet engages the nation for an hour and we are finding faults in it, I don't understand it completely. And you know, weren't we just waiting for this?

Sagarika Ghose: That's right, again that's a good point the fact is that it doesn't matter what in fact the funding is the fact is which is a very important message is getting out. Ranjana Kumari being a long activist are you worried that the show might encourage arm-chair activism? That people could just watch it and be comfortable, are you worried that it might just transfer the gratification to just watching the show but not actually acting? 
 
Ranjana Kumari: Well Sagarika I think you just said it, actually I wish that all this euphoria, all this overwhelming response really concern, all that you are hearing, tweeting, you know Facebook and everybody all of a sudden has become very awakened on the female foeticide issue after a week when the next issue comes in and people will continue to do that. And I don't think this is very naïve, this is a very calculated risk just ask the people who have done this programme and with 30 years of my movement if Ranjana Kumari anchors a programme do you think anybody will, you know.

Sagarika Ghose: You never know Ranjana, we'll all watch don't worry. 
 
Ranjana Kumari: Let's not forget that Aamir Khan is Aamir Khan and they have hired him to do it so he is doing it. I am happy that he is doing it, let me not make anybody think that I am not happy about it. It is very good that he is doing it.

Sagarika Ghose: Satyajit Bhatkal, indeed an hour on female foeticide is not something we don't see on channels and even on news channels and as I said it was an exquisite piece of journalism and a reminder of what journalism can be for many of us even in news media who have lost our way. Thanks very much indeed.

Source:- http://ibnlive.in.com/news/has-satyamev-jayate-redefined-tv-shows/255850-44-124.html