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The
programme will air every day from August 10 to mark the occasion
of Independence Day, but has really started from 1 January, when
the series started off, and is about to reach its flashiest best,
in content and presentation.
The
key question is about showcasing Indianness, which Ashutosh said
should be the modern India of software engineers and scientists
- not the jholawallahs treated as cabbies in the West - and the
rural India."
Ashutosh
laughs nervously at the question that has baffled almost everyone,
and says: "India is changing so fast it is really difficult
to put it one word, so Rising India" series is about the
present India as it has evolved, and is nicely poised for the
next big leap forward."
Sardesai
added that it is about the "fantastic diversity and enormous
freedom that we as Indians enjoy. This is not there in any other
country, and we are living it
we did not have proper TV
when India turned 50 and we do not know if we will be there when
it turns 75, surely not when she turns 100, so this was the best
timing possible."
Sardesai
says: "The story, as Nandan Nilekani (Infosys head) said
once to me, is about the glass being half full, rather than half
empty
there is so much we can actually show that is so typically
Indian and innovative, it is about survival, the quintessential
Indian-ness,
"When
India was born, everyone said it would break up, and here we are,
a bustling and vibrant democracy and a fast developing economy
and they had said Pakistan would be a much more unified force,
but Pakistan is just falling apart. That is how we conceived Rising
India."
Sardesai's
allusion to being innovative survivalists may find some endearing
examples in the episode "Only in India", which about
Indians having a knack of doing a lot of things in our own quirky
"ishtyle" that makes us who we are and differentiates
us from the rest of the world.
This
half-hour light-hearted show (14 August at 8:30 pm) takes a look
at things like galli Cricket, lassi preparations using a washing
machine, among other innovative Indian take-offs from what was
originally a Western concept.
But
it is not just about frivolity, there's tonnes of stuff between
tomorrow and 15 August.
Here
is a stunning episode of the Ten Defining Moments of Indian history,
moments that have changed the course of the country, and presenting
this with Sardesai would be historian Ram Chandra Guha who, Sardesai
says is the best intellectual who can carry the most serious message
across to the least discerning.
"He
would perhaps be talking Sunil Gavsakar till you realise he is
teaching you serious history," Sardesi said.
Due
to various factors, this particular episode has been cut short
drastically, especially due to shortage of archival material,
but the channel had given viewers 100 such moments to choose from
and taken a poll, then cut it down to 60 and finally to 10 of
the most defining moments, Sardesai said.
Both
the editors are especially excited about the series featuring
India's real heroes, in the programme of the same name.
The
preparation for the massive programming had started almost the
same month a year ago, and it was the idea of Ritu Kapoor and
her Features team to showcase the real heroes.
As
a statement from the channels says: "CNN-IBN identifies 24
unsung heroes from four zones - East, West, South, North - (six
from each zone) across the country. Capsules through the day will
be aired daily to celebrate their achievements along with regular
stories on the news wheel and weekend specials.
Every
week, six heroes from a particular zone will be profiled and a
dedicated half an hour will be aired every Saturday at 1:30 pm
summarising the entire zone. The series will be aired as follows:
South
Zone (11 August)
North zone (18 August)
East Zone (25 August)
West Zone (1 September)
"After we decided on this, our bureaus across the country
identified the real grassroots level heroes and were selected
and filmed. This is about the real India," Ashutosh said.
Taking
a look at the gamut of the programmes, it encompasses what CNN
IBN and IBN & is trying to do as a group: the programme genres
cover everything from popular programmes (60 years of Indian cinema,
Cricket 360 Special - India's dream team, or Only In India); history
(Defining Moments), entertainment like Best of India Rocks).
Besides,
it has contemporary programming and then looking at the future,
like a discussion to be hosted on Indian economy and other issues
by TV 18 patriarch Raghav Bahl.
"It
is not just about what the people want to see but what they ought
to know, and the point is about how to tell them, which is our
forte. Why should Rehman or Indian Ocean, or Euphoria or Silk
Route not sing patriotic songs and make it relevant to the present
generation?" Sardesai asks.
The
programmes would be aired on both the Hindi and English channels,
which brought about the question of will Hindi audiences take
it, given the statements of another news channel that Hindi viewers
want just gore and violence?
Ashutosh
does not at an eyelid: "Why not? Journalism is about making
things available and accessible to the people, so if we understand
the medium, it does not matter what language you speak in or your
viewers hear in".
For
instance, who would not listen to the first ever opinion poll
across India and Pakistan on issue of common interest, whatever
be the language of discussion? This is a unique programme, in
which Indians and Pakistanis would be asked serious questions
such as Kashmir issue, as also emotional subject who Pakistanis
think is an Indian Idol and vice versa.
There
will be two important fallout of the programming, and one of them
is also perhaps the first of its kind for a TV channel to undertake.
The corporate sector has agreed to sponsors each of the 24 Real
Heroes for their future, Sardesai revealed.
"We
do not believe in just showcasing such heroes for eyeballs, we
feel it is for us to bring them up and approach the corporates
to empower them," he said.
Te
other fallout would be in the field of education, for the 10 Defining
Moments programming would be put on CDs and given to schools free
of cost as their educational tools.
Both
are some serious, sustainable corporate social responsibility
through programming!
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