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Posted: 18 years ago

'Sometimes ideals have to take a back seat'

In the fourth part of an exhaustive and exclusive interview with Shah Rukh Khan, Savera R Someshwar and Saisuresh Sivaswamy asked him for advice for today's youngsters. SRK, who thinks he understands their language and emotions, feels very strongly about the youth following their heart. Audio: Listen to SRK's message to the youth
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The actor also spoke about his setbacks like Phir Bhi Dil Hai Hindustani and Swades. If you had an opportunity to speak exclusively to younger people, people who are just setting out to achieve their dreams, what will you tell them? And what will you tell those who are not successful and who are despairing, and what will you tell the successful who for whatever reason had forgotten the difficult days? In some strange way, all that I've done in the last 17-18 years through my work is to speak to the youngsters. I've never spoken to anyone else because I understand their language and emotions. I've been a youngster who's had to grow up too fast because of the (early) death of my parents. I missed out on my youth. At the age of 16, I lost my dad. By 20-21, I had to start getting more responsible than I should have been. By 25, I was completely on my own with a sister to look after. I think I missed on these 10 years where I could have had a chance to be youthfully wild. I wish I can afford my kids to have a wild youth. When I say wild youth I mean flights of fantasy, have fun. Have no worries. Go wrong because there's a long life in front of you to rectify them. Do things your heart tells you to do, otherwise for the rest of your life you will be doing what your boss tells you to do. I could never do it. I had to take up a job as an actor and I'm glad I did. I could give a huge speech to youngsters, because I really feel like that. I am re-living my youth now after having achieved a level of comfort where I think I can be on a flight of fantasy. When I was 34 I said, listen, I am good enough now to go back to being that age between 17 and 27 in my head because I don't have to worry about my future anymore. It doesn't matter if I don't have parents, I have been able to take care of myself. I'd like to tell everyone that this is a little speech I am going to say on KBC for boys and girls. There are only three things to life that you should remember. Honesty, hard work and humour. These are the three things that will take you through the good times and the bad. Ideals are important and you should stick to them but to be in a position of choice sometimes ideals have to take a back seat. The world is a difficult place, make sure you get into the position of choice. Do not sell your soul but keep it locked for a while if need be. Once you are in a position of choice and you are successful, do not ever sell your soul or make the wrong choices. Then god, or your own conscience will never forgive you. If you have failed, there's a huge life to go ahead with. I've read too many good books, and I am sure even the youngsters have, to know all the sayings about failure. But I read a recent one, which was very nice: Try, fail. Try again and fail better! I think that's how life should be. Let me at least try and fail better next time, if I can't succeed. I know reality is much deeper than just words or a successful guy who is a movie star or a rich middle class guy who's made it big who's giving all this spiel. But this is the experience I've learnt in life. That's what I am writing in my book actually. To be able to tell youngsters that there's nothing special about being special. It's very special to be ordinary.

There was a line in Crorepati which I wanted to tell youngsters ke you are not a crorepati because you come and win on KBC, tum crorepati isiliye ho kyunki tum crodon mein ek ho


'I wish to be always remembered'

You come from a middle class background. A lot of your success and attitude is attributed to that grounding. Your children don't come from the same world. Is it a cause of worry how their sanitised upbringing, king size lifestyle will impact them? Yeah, I am very worried. I get quite worked up about two aspects of my children's upbringing. One is that I hope my name as an actor, or as an entertainer, or as a person who has been working in the media, should be as it is now. I wish it to be always remembered. I work to be remembered. I'll never be immortal but I feel that with that bigness, my shadow is not so big that my kids can't come from under it. I hope they are able to live beyond the shadow of their father's name. I am being a little presumptuous here, I am assuming that I will be remembered for a long time but I will not be wrong to start thinking like that. I am 41, I have been working for 20 years, I have done well for myself, I just hope my name is never going to be, the shadow is not so long and dark that my kids can never come out of that, whatever job they decide to go and work in, whether they want to be actors or they want to be computer engineers, whether they want to be in medicine. That is one thing that worries me, and I don't know how to do anything about it. I am just hoping it doesn't happen. The second part is: yes, my wife (Gauri) is very middle class. It's very strange to be sounding on about middle class when you have a BMW outside your house, which is one acre big. But these are the peripherals of the job. You know, people think I bought this big house I wanted to live in a big house. But the idea is I am from Delhi and everybody lives in big bungalows there. For a Delhi-ite it's not a big house even though I am a middle class boy. It is very strange but the thought is that we are very middle class as far as how we deal with things is concerned, how we talk in the house, we don't have a lavish lifestyle beyond the fact that the peripherals that come with my filmmaking or film stardom. The problem is everyone who comes home is on television so earlier my kids would think everyone works in television. Whether it is Karan Johar or Hrithik Roshan or Abhishek Bachchan or Preity Zinta or Rani Mukerji or Kajol or Juhi Chawla. They walk into the house and my kids would say dad, everybody works in television. But they have understood now. I am not strict but I am very clear that one aspect they don't ever forget, that if I can't educate them well being a star means nothing. And I try to do that, I teach them personally, I take a huge interest in what they do, and I am very sporting by nature so I like them to do sports. I do what my father used to do with me. He was an educated and middle class man of good nature and polite. So I try and be all that. The only difference is there are too many hoardings of mine in the city. That's the only difference between my father and me. I worry about it, but I am giving it my best shot. I hope I never have to make a movie for my son, and I hope whatever he decides to do, I hope I never have to make him an actor. I hope he is an actor by choice, I hope he likes what he does, and I hope he never has to compare himself to me however good or bad I might at the end of my career.

I believe youngsters should do their own thing. I don't get disappointed when I see a youngster with his navel pierced; or long hair; or strayed jeans. I think all that is part of fashion. I will not stop my kids from being like that because that would be strange. But I believe you should have good education and values.


'No woman has made a pass at me'

How do you handle female adulation, does your wife get jealous? I find it strange because I have no female adulation. It's been many years and lot of people ask me why I haven't had affairs and why one doesn't hear about me going up to women or whatever. I've never had a woman come up to me and say anything nice to me. But women love you! I am sure they do, and I love them back. I think somewhere there's a line, the way I am, it has never crossed anybody's mind to really propose to me. I think only my wife got stuck. I've never had a woman make a pass at me. Unfortunately. And I am too shy to make a pass at a woman. I've too much respect for women. Maybe that's why they like me. I know nobody believes that. About 10 days ago, people from Tehelka had come -- my old friend Tarun Tejpal (Editor-in-Chief, Tehelka) -- they were asking me questions. I was saying that I was shy of women, and I think I give vent to that complex of mine. Though I'm a romantic hero in films, I have never been good with women. I have lots of girlfriends, but they are all my friends. I play with their kids more than I play with them. But I've never been able to go up to a woman and say anything to her, nice, kind, romantic, interesting, wild, or you know, sexy. And I've never had women do the same to me either.

As a matter of fact, all my heroines earlier thought I was not attractive. Strangely, after 20 years, Juhi and all still say the same.


'I know when a film is a hit'

How do you handle setbacks, like for instance when Swades sank? I knew Swades is the kind of film that would not do well commercially. I was very clear on that. I told Ashutosh (Gowarikar, director) the first day when he narrated the story to me. Ashutosh is a very old friend, again one of my oldest friends in Bombay, and I said this is not going to work dude commercially, and he said no Shah, this is going to work. I said no, it won't work, but it's a beautiful thought because he said something like, my dad thinks this film should be made. So I've made a good film and a commercially successful film like Lagaan, the next say I should have to my work is about the condition of villages in our country and how it can be improved. I said let's go ahead and do it. I'm equally sure when I know when a film is a commercial success, like Don because you've been in the business long enough. I think I got a little unrealistic with Phir Bhi Dil Hai Hindustani. That was shocking, it was unexpected the kind of downfall that film had. And then, of course, you find an excuse and say okay, it was ahead of its times. Because when you see News Now, this is exactly what we were talking about in Phir Bhi Dil Hai Hindustani, the commercialisation of media. Not many shocks shock me, I know where the film is headed; the reason I do a film is, mostly, I feel like doing it. Now I have done a film called Chak De India. It doesn't have a heroine or songs; it's about hockey in India played by women! You can't have a more negative subject to make a commercial film than that. Nobody understands hockey, nobody plays hockey and women's hockey? God! But I think I should say something about that because I used to play hockey, my dad used to play hockey, I want my son to play hockey. And I think women should be given equal opportunities in sports. They should be big stars in every field of sports. I am a sportsman by nature. So you do a film like that, and of course I know Chak De India is not going to be, in terms of commerce it's not going to be a Rs 120 crore hit. But it will be a good film, and it will be liked by people and hopefully will make some money so we'll make another film like that.

On Monday: 'I want my kids to grow up and take me seriously'

Edited by monika.goel - 18 years ago
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Posted: 18 years ago

k...K...K...all the way

(Courtesy:www.hindu.com)

New shows have been launching with such alarming frequency of late, that you need to be a confirmed couch potato to catch at least half of them. The best of last week's lot has been Filmy's Kaun Banega Champu, that not only does a brilliant job of spoofing KBC, but has also done a promo that takes off on the SRK promo for the original. Sunil Grover does a competent job of playing Ruk Ruk Khan, down to the last little mannerism (he needs work on that stuttering laugh, though). And Suresh Menon is expectedly brilliant as the assorted celebrities he is expected to play sitting on the 'pot seat' (the seats are actually designed as commodes with the flush tanks for back rests). This week, he was Sunjay Dutt as Munnabhai, pretending to have the Mahatma as his companion in the audience, and whipping out his revolver at every wrong answer. It was funny, witty without going over the top, although it can't get many marks for originality!

Koffee with Karan, on the other hand, was a tad bland. Kajol, Rani, Shah Rukh and Karan all seemed to have conferred earlier on the quips and witticisms that would make for sparkling conversation. If only Karan would move out of his comfort zone (Kajol, SRK...) and bring in some real candid conversation with film folks he may not be necessarily pally with, it would make for a real zinger...

Karamchand returned to screens after two decades, and no, he hadn't changed one whit. One wished he had, though. The deadpan expressions, the rude 'shut up, Kitty' et al are all in place, but they feel curiously dated. The story of a murdered laundry owner could have come straight out of the 1980s, with minor modifications. Audiences today are used to faster pace and smartly outfitted detectives. Star One's DON was somewhat like a latter day Karamchand, riding his bicycle and wearing his school boy satchel. Quirky, but clued in. Sadly, Karamchand seems caught in a time warp.

Shah Rukh Khan too slipped into his comfort zone when buddies Karan Johar, Farah Khan and others turned up to share the V Day KBC episode with him. The episode sparkled with SRK in his element and the participants being equally witty. Regular episodes the rest of the week just paled in comparison. One gets the funny feeling that SRK is tiring of playing the grand entertainer on the show, but is carrying on gamely, nevertheless....

http://us.indiantelevision.com/special/boxpopuli/y2k7/feb/bo xpopuli7.htm

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Posted: 18 years ago
By A.L. Chougule


When Shilpa Shetty landed in Mumbai last week, she had a smug smile of satisfaction on her face. It could have been an afterglow of her grand victory over racist bullies. Or it may have had something to do with the fact that she made more money in a few weeks of starring in the much-hyped Big Brother show than she did in her decade-old not-so-exciting career in Bollywood.

The box in the living room corner did more for Shilpa than the brightly lit screen in a darkened theatre ever did. And she is not alone in this. Though the other stars ruling the small screen haven't hogged the headlines as lucky Shilpa did, they are also laughing all the way to the bank. There are big bucks to be made from the small screen. From under a modest annual turnover of Rs 2,000 crore in 1990, the television business has grown more than 300 per cent and is valued today at Rs 15,000 crore.

Back in 1990, there were just two sarkari channels, known more for their government propaganda and virtuous programmes which nobody watched. From there, television has grown beyond anyone's wildest imagination, with 300 channels playing at a time. In 2006, the total advertising revenue of television was about Rs. 6,000 crore and this year it is expected to rise to Rs 7,000 crore, an increase of about 15 per cent.

Viewers, buyers

Amin Lakhani of GroupM, a media conglomerate which buys commercial time for big clients, says that there is a scramble to reach the consumer in both urban and rural areas. "It is a result of a booming economy and cracking growth," he says. "Television is the preferred medium."

"It possesses the dynamics of turning a viewer into a buyer," adds Siddhartha Mukherji, corporate communication managers of TAM Media Research. Translated, this may mean that the programme content of television and its underlying aim to create new commercial tastes for the consumer may be linked to each other. Hence the extensive advertising on TV. With a reach of 65 million homes of satellite channels the viewership a hit show gives is huge, says ad guru Prahlad Kakkar

Money for all

Said Shah Rukh Khan, "TV business is worth Rs 15,000 crores as compared to Rs 5,000 crores of business cinema does. There is a lot of money for everyone." Money is gushing into television, with mega bucks being ensured for channels, marketers and production houses. It has made millionaires out of wannabes — be it actors, producers, management graduates, marketing whiz kids and aspirant stars just out of college.

If you are good looking, talented and have the gift of gab, then there is no better career option than television in the present times. A monthly pay packet of Rs 50,000 is assured for a fledgling actor for 25 days of work. For middle level actors the pay averages around Rs 3 lakh per month. In the case of top-notch actors it can be anywhere in the range of Rs 4 to 5 lakh for 20 to 25 days. If an actor also takes up anchoring on the side, there is an additional incentive of Rs 20,000 to 25,000 per episode.

While Smriti Irani, one of the highest paid TV actresses, says she gets what she deserves, Hiten Tejwani, who falls in the second rung, assures that there is money for everyone. He says, "Television has grown fast and when a business grows like this, everyone who travels along with it makes money." Sandiip Sikcand, Sony's senior creative head and part-time stage actor says, "I wish I was a full-time television actor. There is good money in it."

Producers are also laughing all the way to the bank, too. In the 90s, a producer made about Rs. 25,000 per episode from a weekly serial. Nowadays, even the producer of a daily serial easily makes Rs 40,000 per episode. This means about Rs 9 lakh per month. The profit figures of a production house like Balaji are eye popping. Profit per episode of shows such as Kyunki, Kahani, Kasauti and Kasamh Se is between Rs. 1.5 to Rs 2.5 lakh.

Big B's lifeline

The growth in television has given lifelines to several actors, beginning with Amitabh Bachchan. Following the debacle of ABCL, the entertainment company he founded and steered, the debt-ridden superstar was trying to make peace with creditors, when Kaun Banega Crorepati came knocking on his door. KBC rescued Big B out of his financial mess with a Rs 35-crore deal. He instantly became television's most successful host and surprisingly enough, his success on the small screen also revived his career on the big screen.

Bachchan bounced back with a vengeance, with big films and big brand endorsements. Today Brand Bachchan is conservatively estimated to be worth Rs 750 crore. Big B's successor on the quiz master's chair, Shah Rukh Khan, is reportedly being paid Rs. 45 to 50 crore to host 52 episodes of KBC 3. In the first two weeks of telecast Shah Rukh's KBC has already raked in Rs 24 crores. SRK will be making a bit more too, with his brand endorsements and will be creating a few humble crorepatis by the side.

Television has also revived many failed careers. Shekhar Suman, who was in sheer financial mess, became television's first super star in 1995 earning more than Rs 25,000 per episode. Mandira Bedi, whose career was not going anywhere post-Shanti, became a hot star after Sony signed her on to add some glamour to drab post-match debates. Says Bedi, "It is more profitable in terms of time spent. When acting in serials, the days are longer in terms of work. You put in more effort for less money. I am really thankful to Sony and MAX. They gave me second lease of life through a different platform."

Cricketer Navjot Singh Sidhu will surely agree when told his TV shows made him a bigger celebrity that cricket. Others who have been raking in the moolah are Malaika Arora and Kunal Kohli (rumoured to be paid a bomb for being judges on Nach Baliye). The winners of Jhalak Dhikla Ja, Nach Baliye and Big Boss won around Rs 30 lakhs!

It's not cricket

Take for instance cricket. No entertainment brand can come anywhere near the game. It is a brand that keeps evolving as administrators change rules, formats, clothes and a host of other things to suit the viewer's (or the advertiser's?) taste. People watch cricket because it's great entertainment. What matters more are the boundaries, centuries and victories than the subtler points of the gentleman's game.

No wonder then that the TV rights have become a money-spinner for BCCI, which raked in a whopping Rs 610 crore by selling the logo on players' shirts and sold the telecast rights for more than Rs 1,800 crore!

Reality shows

Non-scripted programming or reality shows are definitely expensive but they have become a mainstay of television programming on every channel. "Today at least 20 per cent of programming has to be non-scripted and it is an expensive proposition. But there is demand for it and no channel can ignore reality shows," says Shailja.

But, according to Sandip Sikcand, even fiction is not less expensive. "The advantage with fiction is that it runs for a longer period and therefore the cost gets amortised. Reality TV becomes expensive because it comes for a short duration. But it acts as a catalyst to get more eyeballs. It also breaks the monotony," says Sandip.

The rate card

KBC started with Rs. 4.5 lakh for a ten-second spot rate. But the rate has come down to Rs. 3.5 to 4 lakh in the second week. If TRPs go up it will cost more and if they drop it will cost less. One-hour episode of KBC offers 12 minutes of commercial time, that is 720 seconds or 72 ten-second spots. In two weeks, that is eight episodes, KBC has earned Rs 24 crore at an average rate of Rs 4 lakh per ten-second spot. In 13 weeks, that is 52 episodes, the show will earn about Rs. 150 crore.

Kyunki and Kahani get an average of Rs 2.5 lakh for a ten-second spot. The half-hour shows have six minutes of commercial time that is 360 second or 36 spots. One episode of Kyunki or Kahani earns Rs 90 lakhs against the production cost of Rs 6 lakhs. Therefore the real money is on fiction.

For a premium fiction show on Zee the going rate is Rs 1.5 lakh. One half-hour episode of fiction on Zee earns Rs 54 lakhs.

http://www.deccan.com/Sunday%20Chronicle/Sunday%20ChronicleD escription.asp#Tv%20is%20a%20Big%20bucks%20game

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Posted: 18 years ago
Abhishek was considered for KBC?

ibnlive.com
Posted Sunday , February 18, 2007 at 15:26


New Delhi: As superstar Shah Rukh occupies the hot seat on Kaun Banega Crorepati (KBC) every weeknight, the debate on whether he's better than Amitabh Bachchan continues.

But besides senior Bachchan, it seems that junior Bachchan was also involved in the KBC scenario. It's a little known fact that Abhishek was also considered to be the host of the show before Shah Rukh.

The man behind the show, Siddharth Basu, admitted to the fact to Merinews that Abhishek was considered to host the show during senior Bachchan's illness and recovery period.

Since the producers were running out of their 'bank', they apparently thought of bringing in Abhishek for a few weeks before Bachchan could return to complete the remaining episodes before the show went in for a break.

But the strategy did not work, reported Merinews, because Abhishek was overcommitted to films. And if it didn't work out then, Basu said, it wouldn't have worked now.

It's not that many are complaining now that Shah Rukh is on the hot seat. But last week, it was widely reported that viewership for SRK's KBC was not quite making a mark. In a tte--tte with Shah Rukh Khan, CNN-IBN's Anuradha SenGupta questioned him on his take on the ratings.

"Genuinely, for the past 17 years, I have never looked at the collections of my films. You'll never find me talk of how big a hit my film is in an interview," says Shah Rukh.

http://www.ibnlive.com/news/abhishek-was-considered-for-kbc/ 33849-8.html
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Posted: 18 years ago
Big B roped in for Zee gameshow?

ibnlive.com
Posted Sunday , February 18, 2007 at 16:05
Updated Sunday , February 18, 2007 at 16:29


STAR WARS: A media report says Zee group has roped in Big B to upstage Star TV's KBC with SRK.

New Delhi: As the Amitabh Bachchan-Shah Rukh Khan comparison rages on, there seems to be one more reason to compare.

Some reports say the Zee Television Network has roped in Bachchan to host a new game show to be aired on its new entertainment channel Zee Next, to upstage Star Television's Kaun Banega Crorepati (KBC), which is now in its third season and being hosted by Khan.

The move by Zee, reported Merinews, is to compete with Star and though Zee is keeping the deal with Bachchan much of a secret, sources said the network has already got three proposals from Bachchan's AB Corps, the new avatar of ABCL.

Though Bachchan was bound by Star with a contract that did not allow him to be part of any game show similar to KBC for any other network, the time period of the contract ended, making him free to undertake new assignments.

Though it's not yet clear if the Bachchan-Khan rivalry has degenerated into a full-fledged war, but it has been out in the open now after Khan sent a point-to-point rebuttal to some recent remarks attributed to Bachchan.

The two biggest stars of Bollywood – one an ageing icon, the other the heartthrob of a young generation – are fighting a battle for popularity and subtle digs at each other have marked their rivalry during the past few months.

In a TV interview, when Khan was asked about Bachchan and the rivalry between the two, he gave a curt reply, saying: "That was your generation, this is mine."

Bachchan had also remarked that comparisons with a younger star only inspired him to act better so that Khan could imitate him. "I am quite good at what I do," Khan retorted.

http://www.ibnlive.com/news/big-b-signed-on-for-zees-answer- to-kbc/33852-8.html
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Posted: 18 years ago

Home> Delhi> Tele Express
Monday , February 19, 2007
TELE EXPRESS
A thin man with gelled hair, in a grey suit appears...
Ladies and gentlemen on board the Tele Express, please fasten your seat belts as the KBC flight ahead might give you a few jolts, warns our correspondent from the sets of the show
Ruchika Talwar
New Delhi, February 18: Most people—especially women—would die for this opportunity—to visit the sets of Kaun Banega Crorepati (Star Plus). Imagine, actually meeting Shah Rukh Khan! For me? Oh just another assignment. So, here we are, on the sets of the show. And, I can tell you, reality TV is very real. Well… Security guards frisk you and your handbag. Mobile phones have to be switched off. The size of the sets shocks you. The palatial platform where equally big fortunes are made is actually a tight-fit den. And people are packed like sardines to give the impression of a large audience. But, who cares about being uncomfortable, when the reward is SRK?
< = src="http://banners.expressindia.com/banner/eiintel.js">
The production crew is very professional. It comprises of Pretty Young Things. One girl played a mock SRK by introducing the chosen 10 contestants before the 'The Man' took over. Her colleague schooled the audience on the do's and don'ts. "No prompting please, no gesticulating too. Please clap loudly (till your hands fall off?) and laugh loudly (till your lungs burst?). Kissi ko seeti bajaani aati hai? Girls you can scream when he enters (??). But please, please don't come onto the floor. Those in the front row can't sit cross-legged."
Gee, thanks. And yes, there is a backlit signboard directing us when to laugh or applaud. That's reality for you.
A senior crew member enters. "Everything is set," she informs us, "Mr Khan will be here in just a few minutes. Please enjoy yourselves." The girls scream, they bite their nails, almost falling off their seats, exchanging impish smiles. The place echoes with their screams. I crane my neck to check if all's well. And I see a thin man with gelled hair, dressed in a grey suit offering aadaab. SRK! He exchanges pleasantries with the roll-over contestant, whom he addresses as DJ and his shy wife Rashmi as "Rash baby." All's set but where's the hot seat? Oh, they bring it after SRK is ready to sit. Now DJ joins SRK.
The crew asks, "Shall we start, sir?"
"Yes Ma'm."
"Ok, rolling, 3, 2, 1, 0…"
The familiar soundtrack plays. "Namaskar, aadaab, vanakkam…" and SRK is in full flow, stopping only for the first commercial break. Couldn't help laughing when people ducked each time the camera—resembling a horizontal giraffe—was shoved into their faces, in order to get shots from all angles of the contestant and SRK. It was in this episode that SRK introduced the thinking cap—a white hat with 'Lots of love, Shah Rukh,' handwritten on it. The hat is meant to come to the contestant's rescue when the question is tough. And bingo, it woks in this world of make-belief, sorry, reality TV. It wasn't just the girls who ogled SRK, a pigeon (must be a kabootri) joined us to catch a glimpse of SRK. Flapping its wings, it perched atop the iron rod above us! What, I thought, if there was a dropping on His head? Oh dear! SRK at KBC is witty. Not an admirer of his acting skills, I loved his performance at KBC. That's because he's not acting, here, just being himself. He's quick, alert: Compaq not only changes ethnicity (computer da, computer sai) but also gender (computer bein, miss computer), depending on the contestant. As a result, the hot seat turns cool, the contestant loosens up and the show rolls. From the crew to SRK, everyone ensures the proceedings are racy. No retakes—everything is sealed in one go from start to finish. Two episodes are shot in less than three hours. There is only one break, between the first and the second episode when SRK gives into his infamous stimulant—a cigarette. During the break, spot boys come up and slide their hands into his pants—to tuck in his shirt (what else?). Then it's the next round. Fastest Finger First selects the new contestant. The winner is exuberant. Some men escort him into a corner, where he is primped and his face is painted all over for the arc lights. Ditto for SRK. Then we have to wait. Five, 10, 15 minutes. Patience begins to wear thin. I ask someone, "What is going on?"
"He is learning about the new guy," I am told. Oho, so that's how he is so wise on the sets about his guests.
I was always curious about the phone-a-friend lifeline. Now I can reveal all: three people are asked to keep their phones free for one hour. The contestant chooses which one to call depending on the nature of the question. Everything proceeds smoothly. "Last segment, sir?" a voice asks. "Yes ma'm," he replies. After the show is over, the real show—shows of hysteria begin. Those pretty young things (trust me, they were pretty and young) break into an impromptu song after some khusar-phusar. Tujhey dekha to yeh jaana sanam… SRK sings with them enjoying every bit of the attention he receives. Then he shakes hands with everyone in the audience. Girls fall to pieces. One teenaged girl even hugs him in the presence of about a hundred others! "Sir, aapka face dekhna chatey hain, sir," a not-so-pretty-or-young man in his 50s screamed! As suddenly as it began, the evening ends with a photo session. We have reached the end of our journey. Freeze it.

http://cities.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=223031

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Posted: 18 years ago
No junior KBC this time: Siddhartha Basu

2007-02-19 20:10:31
Gujarat Global News Network, Mumbai


Promoter of India's biggest game show "Kaun Banega Crorepati", Siddhartha Basu, feels that the quiz show for juniors does not have serious participants. Though he is all for adult KBC, he is in no mood to repeat KBC Junior which was introduced at the time of Amitabh Bachhan.

In media interaction after shooting of an episode of KBC, Basu and Shah Rukh Khan both claimed that the new avtar of KBC was really doing very well and they plan to introduce new innovations.

About the lifelines Shah Rukh Khan feels that four lifelines are more than enough. He says that many feel that with four lifelines it is very easy to reach the goal of Rs.2 crore. Shah Rukh says that many are of the view that the questions have become easy but it is not so.

Shah Rukh Khan says that there was no scope of any cheating in the KBC as he himself does not know the answers until answer by a participant is frozen. Adding to this Basu points out that the system is so transparent that any one can find out about the procedure even after several episodes.

In reply to a question about the controversy over a candidate appearing in fastest finger second time Basu says that one can appear in the fastest finger second time but not in the main contest.

Basu says that as an anchor of the programme Shah Rukh Khan is great. He points out that all actors cannot become anchor and the fact that Shah Rukh Khan is a successful anchor of KBC makes him different.

To a question whether Shah Rukh Khan would make such game shows as his career Shah Rukh says it depends on the offer in future.

For news in Hindi see our Hindi daily Chaupal Chronicle

http://www.gujaratglobal.com/nextSub.php?id=2370&catype=Scie nce%20Scope
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Posted: 18 years ago
KBC News - Prashant resumes play tonight at 1, 60,000 rupees

With one lifeline left, how do you think the doctor from Bangalore will do?

Currently on the hot seat is Dr. Prashant P. Mannur from Bangalore who wants Shah Rukh to teach him how to woo women as well as buy himself an island to avoid the traffic he faces in Bangalore. Prashant has already won 1, 60,000 rupees but in the bargain also utilized three of his four available lifelines.

So after weekend filled with anxiety and one lifeline in hand, Mannur will resume his claim on the 2 crores that's on offer tonight.

How far will he get?

From shayaris to exchanging movie dialogues to lessons in falling in love – KBC has it all coming your way tonight.

Monday, February 19, 2007

http://kbclive.indya.com/news/news_prashanth.html
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Posted: 18 years ago
KBC News - Contestant on the sets of KBC hospitalized

A contestant is taken to hospital as he complained of chest pains.

KBC with Shah Rukh Khan is always fun and jovial. He jokes and the contestants get comfortable and forget all about the reason why they are there in the first place. But often for some the situation does become too much. Mr. Dutta, a contestant on the show, complained of chest pains during a recording recently and had to be taken to hospital.

A co-ordinator tells us what happened. "Mr. Dutta complained that he was feeling unwell. The thing was he hadn't eaten anything all day although food is provided for everyone on the sets. Given that plus the situation here... I mean... playing the game for such high amounts, being on TV meeting Khan... sometimes it does become too much for people. After the recording we gave him some medication but he didn't feel better and since he was complaining of chest pain we didn't want to take any chance and we sent him to a hospital in the ambulance. However there was nothing to worry about as we later came to know that it was plain acidity", she says.

Although in Mr. Dutta's case it was nothing serious, it was good to see medical help in the form of a doctor, nurses and ambulance always present on the KBC set.

Monday, February 19, 2007

http://kbclive.indya.com/news/news_kbccontestant.html
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Posted: 18 years ago
Freeze kiya Jaye?: Shah Rukh Khan

KBC question

Freeze kiya Jaye?: Shah Rukh Khan

Here's a Kaun Banega Crorepati question to all you readers in the hot seat out there. Where will Shah Rukh Khan be tomorrow evening at 6 pm?
Options:
- At home playing with his kids
- At a film shooting
- On a date with wife Gauri.
Answer: None of the above.
He'll be at an ICICI bank function in Andheri as its global ambassador.
So what do you say reader, Freeze kiya jaye? Oops! Not Khan's funds. Only the answer.

Edited by monika.goel - 18 years ago

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