It's not Fawad Khan! The reasons why Pak serials work in India

TheRager thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#1

It's not Fawad Khan! The reasons why Pak serials work for Indian audience

by FP Staff Nov 18, 2014 14:38 IST

#Aunn Zara #Fawad Khan #Humsafar #OnOurMind #Zindagi Gulzar Hai

Ever since India's Zindagi channel started broadcasting Pakistani serials, these soaps from across the border have become quite a rage and comparisons of these serials with our home grown shows have become a topic of several discussions.

Zindagi Gulzar Hai, Humsafar, Aunn Zara, Kitni Girhain Baki Hain are just a few of the more popular teleserials that are giving India's homegrown productions a run for their money. It's tempting to explain this popularity by exhibiting the handsome stars like Osman Khalid Butt and Fawad Khan (who got his Bollywood break because a fan ofZindagi Gulzar Hai recommended his name to producer Rhea Kapoor), but that wouldn't be the complete picture.

While our serials are, in many ways, more elaborate in everything from production budgets to costumes and plot lines, the Pakistani teleserials are still holding viewers' attention and prompting a kind of following that India last saw in the Hum Log andKhandaan era.

They're all family dramas that circle around a love story. The stories that the Pakistani shows tell have an old-fashioned quality to them, but in some ways they are more adventurous than their Indian counterparts. For one, they don't go on indefinitely like our soaps. Often based on existing novels, most of these shows are made up of a fixed number of episodes. For instance, Zindagi Gulzar Hai told Kasaf and Zaroon's love story in 26 episodes. Aunn Zara covered the high drama of an arranged marriage in just 19 episodes. The storytelling of Kitni Girhain Baki Hain is even more contained: each 90-minute episode tells a different story, becoming more like a telefilm than a serial. Compare this to ours that go on and on -- sometimes for years -- powered more by advertising revenue than plot twists.

You'd think that serials in which the dialogues are in Urdu would seem foreign to us, but it's a testament to both the writing and the performances that the characters in the Pakistani teleserials feel much more relatable than the leading ladies of the K-serials. They seem to talk like regular people (without a background score) and dress normally (they don't wear silk saris while cooking and have spiky mascara-ed lashes when asleep). Their homes look like real apartments, instead of radiating the plastic artificiality of Indian telly homes.

Courtesy: ibn live

It's also interesting to look at the women in the Pakistani shows. Kasaf of Zindagi Gulzar Hai and Khirad ofHumsafar are traditional, docile and faultlessly proper, much like their Indian counterparts like Iccha ofUttaran or Anandi of Balika Vadhu. And yet, they come across as much more believable and sometimes even seem more modern than our small screen heroines, despite staying well within the boundaries of Islamic propriety.

What is particularly noteworthy is that in these Pakistani soaps, the women end up coming across as much more independent and strong-willed than their Indian counterparts, despite the significantly more conservative societies in which they live.

Our telly heroines, like Sandhya of Diya Aur Baati Hum, usually needs a man: Diya needs Sooraj to stand up for her and her dreams. In contrast, Kasaf in Zindagi Gulzar Hai, fights her battles herself. She isn't afraid to tell off her father who has divorced her mother and doesn't fulfill his paternal responsibility towards the children from his first marriage (Kasaf and her two sisters). Later, when her husband secretly reads her messages and letters, she isn't afraid to confront him about the way he's invaded her privacy. Behadd was about Masooma, a single, working mother who figures out how to handle her daughter's insecurities when Masooma falls in love a second time.

Humsafar also has an interesting portrait of modern femininity in Zara, who is the hero Ashar's best friend and also in love with him. When he gets married to someone else, she's furious and tries to break up the marriage. While she does sound like the distant cousin of characters like Kamolika and Ramola Sikhand (the K-serial vamps), Zara is much more than just a jealous villain. We see she is a good daughter and a loyal friend. We see her struggle with depression. Likewise, in Zindagi Gulzar Hai, we meet Asmara, who seems flighty, attending concerts and constantly shopping, but eventually calls off her wedding with the man she loves because she realises he is a chauvinist and conservative.

Even the minor female characters seem like real people, rather than the cardboard cutouts that are the Indian non-star cast. We see mother-in-laws who aren't contenders for the monster-in-law title. Instead, they are independent, suave working women who aren't obsessed with meddling in their sons' lives. They don't spent their days plotting against their daughter-in-laws. Of course, there are clashes and some lashing out at them, but they're far more balanced and realistic as characters. Similarly, sisters-in-law don't behave like harridans to the new bride. In Zindagi Gulzar Hai, Sara (the hero Zaroon's sister)is a feisty young woman who is belligerent about her rights and refuses to kowtow to her fiancee and her family when they disapprove of her late nights and Western outfits. A lot of misfortune befalls Sara but at the same time, she wins the audience's hearts when supports Zaroon's decision to marry Kashaf -- his family objects because she isn't considered posh or rich enough to be his equal -- and befriends Kashaf.

These women characters introduce us to a Pakistan that is very different from the one we hear about on television or read about in newspapers. The reason may be that they target a niche audience. According to an article in Caravan, "Zindagi's core target audience is English-speaking, smartphone-owning women between the ages of 15 and 44, who live in big metros, and cities like Bangalore, Pune and Indore. The channel's profile pins her down as a 'quietly humble, progressive yet rooted person with a millennial, or forward-looking mindset.'"

Reportedly, the channel Zindagi has sifted through 4,000 hours of content to find the right soaps for its target audience. Yet, for all the steps forward, there's no ignoring the virulent conservatism in these shows. It's inevitably the women who compromise and adjust, while the men get away with just about anything. Although the shows are essentially love stories, there is no physicality in this romance. At best, the lead characters holding hands (next thing you know, the woman is pregnant).

In the age of Game of Thrones and Masters of Sex, will this squeaky, clean and platonic version of love hold people's attention? Zindagi hopes so.

http://www.firstpost.com/bollywood/fawad-khan-reasons-pak-serials-work-indian-audience-1808575.html

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pinkeye thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#2
Nice article. But one interesting observation or a query, still the site felt to mention FAWAD KHAN only while writing about why zindagi shows wrk. His name is still that important to get clicks. So shed off that double standards. Yes he is not sole reason but a major one surely.

I am huge Fawad Khan fanatic, but no I do not confine myself to watch only his work. Thats why I enjoyed other shows too. But there is a high percentage of people who does not do that, so he surely grabs max eyeballsfor the channel. Having said tat will also say, the channel needs to ggive up their obcession for single actor to have long term benefits. That industry is not only about FAWAD should be known by the channel and not the audience.
TheRager thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#3
^^^Not just that...80% of the article is about Fawad's show. 😆
pinkeye thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#4

Originally posted by: RockChicGirl

^^^Not just that...80% of the article is about Fawad's show. 😆



😆 😆
Yup mostly on humsafar and zgh, proving how keenly shows were observed and discussed. Media people only bothered to watch his shows exclusively to write the esaay.
Neerjaa thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#5
Thank you . Very well analyzed article
MaxMayfield thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#6
TFS
I dint get the bit on "women being shown as adjusting and men getting away with just about anything" bit in the article...

add that to double standards in the same one...

I mean they went on detailed description of how kashaf dint tolerate zaroon's interference in her privacy...or asmara and sara being different from typical vamps...

and then commenting on conservatism in the show and then women being the ones compromising the most...its like..."kehna kya chahtey ho" moment honestly?😕

904129 thumbnail
Posted: 10 years ago
#7
Umm?? Excuse Me?? 😕 What did they mean when they said that, Women do the adjusting bit and men get away as they are???? Wasnt It Zaroon who adjusted in No A.C, No Mineral Water, No Handwash And A Small Bed In ZGH?? But I liked the way they described about Sara And Asmara.. Not being the typical K-Series Vamps!! And the points where they mentioned that When the potragonists speaks, The BG is not included.
BornHyper thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#8
Fawad Khan is not the reason for the pakistani shows to be popular BUT Fawad Khan is definitely the reason why this article is getting all the eye-balls
ridzisharma80 thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#9
I can say that it's not only fawad khan bt yes he played d as d root in dis case...for whom we came to know about d Pakistani serials...without root,one tree can't grow and spread its branches...so for me fawad is d starting reason for watching Pakistani serials...😊
NiharikaMishra thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#10
Yes, they are true to some extent! Its not just Fawad for the success of the Pak shows.
Honestly, many of us weren't even having the slightest idea that Pak shows can be so good. And even more Honestly, for me Pakistani entertainment was limited to Coke Studio, n I thought they could make just good music. And yes, some good art cinema like Khuda Kay Liye (yes, it has Fawad), or Bol (Yes it as Mahira too) and Zinda Bhaag.
The credit goes to Zindagi for bringing the best shows to us. They consciously chose Zindagi Gulzar Hai to be their first show to be telecasted, knowing it had some of the best talent from Pak TV Industry. Not just Fawad and Sanam, but excellent character artists like Samina Peerzada, Mehreen, Shehryar and others.
If only Fawad would have been the reason, the first show would have been Humsafar (the show which gave Fawad his share of limelight) and Behadd telecast wouldn't have been delayed.
We love Fawad a lot but we love Zindagi even more for introducing him to most of us and ofcourse, for their choice of shows which gives us the impression that we have of Pak TV industry now.

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