Friday, July 30, 2010

The Myths, the Fads and the Frat Boys

Do you promise to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God?

Well, sure. Um ... but perhaps not the whole truth, if that's quite alright with you.

The whole truth. We insist.

Ahem, the characters had better be renamed, then, if we're going to pull this off. And the scenes will have to be tweaked just that little bit. You know, to maintain the anonymity - or at least the idea of anonymity, which the esteemed jury will admit serves the selfsame purpose.



Let the lights be dimmed until the eyes start to go very wide ... Ah, this chhajja will do just fine. After all, if the aura and hype are to be examined, it has to be done piecemeal.

Suit yourself.

And so it begins. Let us then be judged and damned in your eyes alone.


Part the First

The scene takes place in the Land of Cool, the wild wild west of India, in the butt-shaped state or thereabouts. All things of consequence happen here, and here alone - in this elitist brick fortress. There are no damsels in distress here, just four hundred knights in shining armour, bursting to get some action. Even if it means trampling upon a few of their own.

WIMWI - the eye of the media, the hungry tabloids, who like dogs grab at the bones thrown at them. But the bones have long been stripped of flesh and juice. We, then, will provide what they can not.

We are WIMWI's torch of truth, its champion of free speech. You know how every choir has that one reedy voice, loud and broken, which finishes the song two lines too late,
and out of tune? It is a voice that rings clear and harsh, the sort that makes you wince. Twice. We are happy to bring you that voice.

Most stories have a beginning and a semblance of an end. The
beginning of ours is perhaps the one thing we shall never reveal. And this tale has no end, either - it's a perpetual cycle, a tragic wheel of time. The story of Con if you are Able, repeating ceaselessly with each new batch.

To jump straight to the middle, then, and don't ask yourself how you got here. After all, why end a dream if you have to wake up to a reality as horrible as this?

It is a dry and dusty night, as most nights here are doomed to be, and the night spells a giant T.

T-Nite

Where does one even begin with this charade? Talent Nite (sic) is how it reads and perhaps once upon a time, it was as innocuous as that.

Well, we could start with two weeks ago, when the sections are first told of its gravity. Gravity, somebody once said, is the ballast of the soul. But build a tower out of ballast and voila! - you shall have your Babel. Welcome to Hype-101, the tool-kit you need to survive this hell.

Ex-CRs (class representatives) and cronies begin with their memories - oh, those mellow memories! - telling the new and gullible fachchas (freshmen) of the world and how it spins:

The next few sleepless nights, these Wise Ones say, will come to define your existence, your machismo and your social circle for the next two years. Friends will be made bending over these poster-scapes, bonds far stronger than the glue that will soon plaster those mess walls.

Huddling together in a confused delirium, they'll scream at the top of their lungs, drowning out the clangs of mess cutlery with their chants - oh, the poetry! - and chest-thumping. All around: slogans that make one cringe, tag-lines from the land of lame and T-shirts that could never again be worn in public.

People meeting decades from now, the Wise Ones say, will remember these three nights of T - oh, so much T! - and how they slugged it out to be the best and the boldest randomly chosen of ninety amateurs amongst a suit of five.

Truth be told, and it's not often it's told, the whole affair is nothing more than a circus act - a performance of song and dance and frivolity - to sit back and enjoy, designed to entertain the voyeuristic veterans. It is forgotten all at once - and never spoken of again. No, not even at those alumni dinners. Things go back to the way they were, the upstarts return to their quiet class-naps, the posters are torn down, hell freezes over, and the dorm-sweeps acquire a new, abecedarian wardrobe.

A Day at the Races - oh, what races!
Blindfolded he runs.
Crash! Blindfolded he falls.
A scar, a martyr, Harry Potter.
Eh, the rhyme is lame, but so's the game.


T-Nite is, we postulate, a self-selection process. Our very own Lord of the Flies. In the end, another ticket to a club, one of many that form on campus. Those who can suffer the ignominy and the embarrassment - who are impervious to the inanity - they are the last ones left standing. And like all who have gone through hell together, they are branded, marked for life, and sentenced to each others' company. Winning scarcely matters - unless you win, of course - and the important thing is that you've done ... something. We try very hard not to think of what exactly we did. If somebody asked us, we would be hard pressed to explain. And that's what makes us special, isn't it? How seriously we took the whole charade, how seriously we tried, and still try, to be taken seriously...



5 comments:

  1. awesome initiative. Hats off to you guys.

    and the post is an apropos reflection of all the random T-nite fart.

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  2. Well-written ofcourse!
    I'm one of the flies who quite enjoyed this song-dance inanity and we're a content happy lot who find no need to deride the preferences of those who prefer being their dignified selves. Impossible as you might find it to believe, we flies talk about the T-nite days quite happily even now and even more incredible to you might be the fact that I did happen to find my best buddy on campus in the course of the the circus. None of us say its about the winning or the talent or the competition, its about the late tiring nights spent together doing what you like, or just fooling around or even just sitting around. We, you see, are social animals and quite liked finding the other fellow flies who we could buzz with. To each his own, of course. You're welcome to your opinion. I just found myself unable to refrain from commenting. We are all cynics, just that of different things.
    The writing is of course great, the opinion can be debated.
    P.S.: What makes this the "official" WIMWI mouthpiece?

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  3. Here are my 2 cents on the issue :
    I don't quite agree with the branding of T-Nite as "Hype-101". It’s more like a Phd Thesis in ‘Hype’. The only event that probably beats it at 'hype' is the Football WC. I don’t have any problems with people coming together to do what the like. The problem I have is coercively including people who don’t want to have anything to do it or threaten them with social ostracism. Well, this is, always will be the need and intention of ‘hype’. People who have no interest whatsoever in football feel the need to watch the Football WC or else face being Joeyised out of dinner table discussions.
    I don’t think that anyone argue that T-Nite is a good idea but its structure does seem quite fishy. Why not allow people like me who have no desire or enthusiasm to perform to just watch the performances (of my as well as other sections)? I completely agree with WIMWI playa’s views that the event’s structure is intended to quench the voyeuristic thirst of a lot of 2nd year-ites. “How do you expect to win by wearing so decent clothes?” was what one Tuccha said to some of the girl’s in my section. I am still in shock wondering about the audacity of the shameless pervert. I agree its unfair to generalize citing one example, but its more like the incident lends further credence to the overall feel I had about the event anyway.

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  4. The stress which the hype created resulted people coming to blows in my section and hate mails being written on the section mailing list. All this for what?

    @Zinque - I pity you if you think you owe your best friend to the event. Aren't you damn confident that you would have found him during your two years stay on this campus irrespective of those 4 stressful over-hyped nites?

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  5. On similar lines, would not it be prudent to actually organise only one night where the students are able to prepare for the preceding three nights and then act/ dance according to the best...

    Instead what happens is a 'mujra' where only 2nd yr watches and first years are forced to do the same kind of things again and again...

    It is indeed a shame, that even the authorities continue to condone it in spite of the underlying tones...

    Personally speaking the Sports competition was much more appropriate and enjoyable and actually so real talent emerge...

    P.S. Goddamn... its five races... and we need 20 cultcomm members with walky talkies... The could have found many better uses for the money... ''Cheers ;)''

    ReplyDelete