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Friday, December 23, 2005

Merry Christmas, teri bhi Christmas

Thanks to a lot of random bloghopping, we’ve noticed a recent trend in the blogosphere that we promptly thought worthy of inflicting upon you. Plus, it coincides with the season and all that humbug. It is our discerning observation that posts being written lately can be classified into the following types —

  • The ones trying to share the warm-and-fuzzies —
    “Oooh, looky at the houses and trees so full of lights! The world is happy and bright all around! I am toasting chestnuts over the fire even as I write this. Wheeee!”

  • The ones retrospective and contemplative about the year gone by —
    “Another year passes us by and what have we learnt from it? Let us ponder for a moment on how we can make this world a better place ..” *solemn nod of head*

  • The ones grumpy and detesting all humanity —
    “Ugh. I hate the holidays. Lovey-dovey couples under the mistletoe. Bleh. I want to strangle Santa with his fuzzy hat. I wish they’d all drown themselves in eggnog. Gaah!”

  • The ones who just returned from watching Bluffmaster (2005)
    “It rocks! Such awesome one-liners! AB looks soooo hot. Nana Patekar rules. And that song Right Here Right Now is so very cool. I can’t stop singing it!” *drool, sigh and other assorted expressions*

Anyhoo, as you can see, we’d be pretty lousy at these types of posts. Although that’s never stopped us from trying our hand at things, we won’t go there today. Instead we are sticking to what we do best. So here goes. A poem, slightly drunk on the holiday spirit that is around us. At least that’s our excuse for why it is so bad, so hush.

Holiday Cheer

I sat down to write a post,
But I had nothing worthwhile to say.
What to do? I thought, and said,
Ooh, I’ll write a poem! Yay!

‘Tis that time of the year,
When snowflakes sparkle in the air,
A grouchy snowman sits out front,
Looking like he doesn’t care.

His carrot nose looks morose,
A shiny green candy-wrapper for hair,
An extra wide tire around his tummy,
And underwear he forgot to wear.

A million stars on a clear cold night,
And a million more in the trees.
But my warm comforter feels just right,
If I go outside, I’ll sure as hell, freeze.

The birds have stopped their twittering,
The leaves hide under the snow,
My pet spider has returned to his lair,
Till spring his face won’t show.

Now that we’ve babbled for a while,
We can get to the Hallmark-card crap,
We’re just gonna say it straight,
Tho’ Jr Bachchan would have sung it in rap.

From my warm home to all of yours,
Comes a wish full of holiday cheer,
Here’s hoping you all have a nice season,
And a Happy New Year!

Thursday, October 27, 2005

A load of crock

Yesh, the rumors are true. My disappearance is very much the work of aliens. But not to worry. Just when they thought they got their grubby paws on me, I fished out my CD of Disco Dancer (1982) — Tarzan (1985) — Kasam Paida Karne Waale Ki (1984) to counter the alien goop thrown at me. News reports state that they were last seen scuttling towards their mothership clinging onto their earmuffs. Oh yesh, Bappi’s music. As the Amex people will tell you — Don’t leave home without it. It can come in handy at the most unexpected times. Anyway, Area 51 is a long way off from home, and so while I’m in transit, here’s a pointless verse about the real reason for my being gaayab from my blog.

A Load of Crock

The birdie chirps from the cuckoo clock,
It hoots and howls, tick tock.
Its feathered friends at my window flock,
On the floor lies a dirty sock. (Offbeat artsy cinema types)

Armed with a camera I went for a walk,
Cutting circles around the block. (Cutting circles = chakkar kaatna)
Random pictures I have tons of stock,
But nonsense I have none to talk.

I thought I’d be inspired by Hitchcock,
When that didn’t work, I tried Sandra Bullock, (Pliss mispronounce for poetry sake)
Switched to music, played some Bach,
Gaah! Need to hit my head on a rock!

I try to write but I see a padlock,
I have run out of words?! What a shock!
Hey! Don’t you heckle and don’t you mock,
Suffer I from the clichéd writer’s block.

By the way, curious koschan. Is it Kasam Paida Karne Waale Ki, as in ‘I swear on the one that gave birth‘, or Kasam Paida Karne Waale Ki, as in the ‘belongs to the one who gave birth to Kasam‘? If it is the latter, then who is this Kasam and why the sense of belonging? Oops, gotta go. I spot an alien.

*exits dancing in shiny silver tights singing in Salma Agha’s voice*

Ye raat mein jo mazaa hai <toink toink>
Mazaa ye kuchh nayaa nayaa hai <toink toink>
Ki tumko aaj kyaa huaa hai <toink toink>
Ki jhoomta hi jaa raha hai ..
Jhoom jhoom jhoom baba~aaaa ..
Jhoom jhoom jhoom baba~aaaa ..
Jhoom jhoom jhoom babaaaaa~aaa aaaaaaaaa ooooo!

Monday, September 12, 2005

Short Shorts : Two : Train of Thought

!
?
Hmm!
Huh?
Niiice!
Grrr!
*grin* Babe!
*scowl* Creep!

The inbound and outbound trains whooshed in onto the platforms from opposite sides.

(Written as part of the 55-word story tag from Rajesh. As this is my moment of sweet revenge, I pass it on to past tag-inflicters — Dharmendra, Kaashyapeya and Anshul as well as other bakras who I think will enjoy this — Sagnik, gvenum and Anurag. If you’d like to play this game of tag, holler and I’ll do the needful.)

Wednesday, August 3, 2005

Two much

(Potential plot spoilers ahead)

Potter Potter everywhere, but not a kid to shrink
Water water everywhere, but not a drop to drink

I woke up every morning of last week muttering to myself that I would not write a post on Harry Potter ‘cos everyone, their uncle and their uncle’s dog has written about it. And yet here I am. Comments ranging from ‘I am so swept up by Rowling’s world of magic‘ to ‘I don’t know what the big deal was, it was a pretty pedestrian book‘ to ‘I refuse to read anything that is so hyped‘ to ‘woof woof‘ have peppered the blogosphere. But whichever way the wind blows, Potter has found his way into a post on pretty much every blog.

And at the risk of getting publicly lynched by Rowling fans, I still maintain what I said after I finished Book Three — that Rowling’s stories (not necessarily her writing style) are simply put — Lord Of The Rings meets Enid Blyton. A parallel magical world set in a dorm. Tolkien and Blyton fans, please to not kill me. I am oversimplifying just for example’s sake. This is not to say I won’t read Rowling. Yes, the deed has been done. The ubiquitous book has been read, the person who had to die, died, the Half-Blood Prince has been discovered and other such earth-shattering trivialities have been dealt with. And I am also mighty pleased that my guesses about both were on target. And yes, I have a theory about where the seventh Horcrux is. Much joy.

On an unrelated and more serious note — In the aftermath of the Mumbai rains and floods, there are a couple of new collablogs that have sprung into action. Please go visit them and if you can, help. Here’s what one of the blog creators, Peter Griffin (also the person behind the TsunamiHelp blog) has to say —

Almost a thousand people dead in Maharashtra, about half of them from Bombay. Transport screwed, no electricity, no running water, some areas STILL under water a week later.

They haven’t even begun figuring out how many people were injured. Or what the tolls might increase to if the epidemics we all fear do happen. (And that’s likely, if you have sewage mixed with rain water standing thirteen feet deep in some places) They have’t even begun estimating what the losses of property are going to be like. So many have lost everything.

Bombay needs help folks. We can analyse what went wrong later. We can figure out what to do about it later. Right now, Bombay needs help. Bombay’s bloggers (and some friends – the net doesn’t worry about borders) are trying to do their bit, by making sure information is easy to find. Information was one more thing we all didn’t have enough of last week. Not that it’s much better now.

http://mumbaihelp.blogspot.com/ is an effort to put online such critical “for emergencies” information as we can find. We hope to turn this into a permanent site that will act as a Bombay disaster portal.

http://cloudburstmumbai.blogspot.com/ is a collection of news, both from the media as well as stories sent in via email and blog links.

Link to us if you run a site, pass these links around to your friends, send us information, send us stories Cloudburst@googlegroups.com.

Pass the word, people. It’s a small gesture, considering the enormity of what has happened, but we hope it will go a long way.

As they say, too much of anything can be bad — Potter or water.

Monday, June 20, 2005

Tags, memes and a weird kid

It’s meme time! We have been book tagged four times now — by Anshul (yes, I do read your blog, contrary to what you think), by Kaashyapeya (understanding his typical blog post requires two dictionaries and a bottle of scotch) and twice by Dharmendra (an extremely well-read chap, but what is the point of all the books in the world if he didn’t figure out that my not noticing the first tag was an intentional oversight?)

So apparently, I give people the impression that I read. Total intellectual-wintellectual types. Ahem ahem. Okay, in their defense and to my credit, I have read. Please to notice the past tense. I was an avid reader as a kid, one of those ‘I will carry my book to the dinner table and read while I eat so I don’t have to look at that eggplant that mom is forcing me to eat‘ types. Substitute eggplant with karela on special occasions. But I was also a weird kid, when it came to what I read. I was a weird kid for several other reasons that are outside the context of this blog, so we won’t go there just yet.

A sample story goes thus — in my 8th grade we were given a book review assignment. A bunch of students wrote reviews of Sweet Valley High books. For those not in-the-know, SWH was a series about these blonde-haired, blue-eyed, perfectly-tanned-in-the-Californian-sun twin sisters and their many boyfriends. These were the junior, less-steamy versions of Mills & Boon romances, so don’t get any wild ideas just ‘cos I mentioned blonde twins.

So — giggly schoolgirls wrote SWH and Nancy Drew reviews, not-so-giggly ones wrote reviews of The Secret Garden, A Little Princess and Anne of Green Gables. And then there was me. What did I pick? We, The People by Nani A Palkhivala. A brilliant man and an exceptional book. But Palkhivala in the 8th grade? Yes, I was definitely a strange kid. As if this was not bad enough, the book made such a big impact on me that I went on to read it four more times. I digress from the topic of this post to include an excerpt of his Vision for India speech, to give you a sample of the man’s writing —

When I was in the United States, I was often asked one question — How does India, with its great human potential and natural resources, manage to remain poor? The correct answer is very unflattering and hardly the type of answer which an ambassador of any country may be expected to give: We are not poor by nature but poor by policy. You would not be far wrong if you called India the world’s leading expert in the art of perpetuating poverty.

So as I was saying, I think book tags/memes are a rather difficult experience for me. A music tag, on the other hand, I’ll take any day. Illusions apart, I don’t read much, so I will naturally crib and whine about the whole exercise. This in turn, will make me look like an ungrateful wretch to the kind souls who tagged me. And then there’s the business of finding some unsuspecting goats to pass on the tag to. More wretchedness. All this, so people get to know what books I own, read and like, something I highly doubt people care to know in the first place. Sigh. Now for the drill —

  • Total number of books I own:
    Approximately 400 + 200 at home in India. I haven’t read at least half the books I own, which apparently is typical of a book-lover, so looks like I’m on my way to becoming one. Much coolness. But I do intend to read them all soon. Honest.
  • Last book I bought:
    Pre-ordered the sixth HP book — Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Yep, I am one of those.
  • Last book I read:
    Asterix at the Olympic Games. Yes Asterix comics count as books. Don’t even think about arguing with that. Not seeming so well-read anymore, are we now?
  • Five books I love:
    I usually hate ranking things I love. So I shall pull my ‘it’s against my principles to objectively rank something that is inherently subjective‘ dialogue and chicken out of answering this one. But I must mention Enid Blyton. She is the reason I started to read, and my childhood and imagination are infinitely richer thanks to her. And Zorro! The swashbuckling hero was the primary reason I learnt to ride a horse. Pining for a masked man on a horse to sweep me off my feet was too passé. I wanted to be the flamboyant one *riding* the horse, fighting the baddies and whisking some man off *his* feet. Yes, I told you before — weird kid. Speaking of weird kid, add Calvin and Hobbes to the list. Truly, one of life’s great joys.
  • Five people I shall tag (aka Five people who will refuse to visit my blog again):
    This is the fun part! I pass on this tag to —
    1. Rajesh (Unlike me, he actually reads. Expect a liberal sprinkling of Pratchett, Asimov and Douglas Adams in his responses)
    2. Sivani (I see she hasn’t been tagged yet, and if ever there is a blogger who is the very epitome of being well-read, it is her)
    3. aNTi (He got music-tagged but not book-tagged, and he shouldn’t miss out on the simple pleasures of life)
    4. Sriram (He has an opinion on everything and loves to express it, so here’s his chance to put that talent to some good use, for a change)
    5. Deepak (Another avid reader who has been music-tagged. What is this? Everyone gets music-tagged except me. No fair!)
    6. gvenum (He reads even less than I do, and I’d love to see how he deals with this. Hee haw!)
    7. iii (He hasn’t blogged in six months, so am hoping this will wake him up?)

All done. Seven bakras .. er, I mean book-lovers. Yes, I went beyond the stipulated five. I’m so generous no? And if any of you readers would like to answer these questions, just consider yourself tagged and use my commentspace to spread the joy. No, seriously, please do so. It’ll be fun!

Since no post of mine is complete without at least one Bollywood reference — talk of Zorro reminded me of Shahrukh Khan dressed all Zorro-like in the title song of Baazigar (1993) — a most unintentionally howlarious moment in a relatively serious film. Which in turn reminded me of another song from the same movie that seemed appropriate for this post. So for your listening pleasure, I conclude with singing —

*pam pam pam pam papampam pam pam pam pam papampam*
kitaabein bahut sii padhii hongii tumne
magar koii chehraa bhii tumne padhaa hai ..

You may have read many a book, but have you ever read a face? One can find deep fundas in the most unexpected places in Hindi films if one looks closely enough, no? *pam pam pam pam papampam .. *