1. Realty shows are mostly commercial exploitation of the budding talents under 
different categorisations, and most of the TV channels in all major languages 
have these shows with prizes up to Rs.50 lakhs or more for the winners.
 
2. Many of these dances are vulgar with sexual connotations, aping the African 
beats and music of disharmony. 
 
I was reminded of a young group organising a music show in London with all 
parapehrnalia, and the hall was full when the programme started. More than 75% 
of audience remained until the end appreciating the performance.
 
It was at the end that the performers declared that they never knew music nor 
trained in instruments and this show was there to prove how audience could be 
fooled by any group and the gullibility of the audience not protesting to this 
non-sense boldly.
 
3. Most of the performances border on irregular movements and vigorous exertive 
displays with psychedelic lightings exciting the audience in unison. But for a 
few programmes confining to Classical or light music, all others are abhorrent 
to watch and hear.
 
4. True, the children are put to too much stress not only by the parents but by 
the brash remarks by the judges as it happened in the recent case in the 
Bengali programme. There should be self regulatory mechanism by the organisers 
to be polite and give encouraging words to those children failing to get to the 
top as many get eliminated.
 
 


--- On Fri, 7/4/08, Dr.V.N.Sharma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Dr.V.N.Sharma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [ =>> Jharkhand <<= ] For protecting Young Ones
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, July 4, 2008, 5:52 PM







 




 

 
  


IBNLive Chat:'Pushy parents are snatching their kids' childhood'

IBNLive Specials



 







Reality TV seems to have created an unreal atmosphere for children in India 
today, making them highly competitive. Children are displaying adult-like 
behaviour without understanding the nuances completely. 

Should parents be barred from pushing their kids towards such pressure 
situations? Is this the end of innocence for children in India?

In order to throw light on the unreal pressures of reality shows on children, 
IBNLive.com organised a chat with senior psychologist Madhumati Singh. 
Reproduced below is the chat transcript. 

Mike Mohan: I just feel that quality of TV entertainment and media has come 
down to disgraceful levels. Going back to those days where we had a single 
channel, most programs were inspirational and educative. Sadly today, most of 
the producers have forgotten their social responsibility in using the power of 
media. Television today stands as threat to the Indian society and Indian 
methods of upbringing. Doctor, how would you deal with this? TV had a lot to do 
with my childhood. I learned many of the languages and about the whole world 
through it. With the kind of content coming in today I just hope that it is no 
longer a source of education. I feel individual families should have their own 
home-grown entertainment what was probably prevalent before cable TV entered 
our homes.

Dr Madhumati Singh: Your answer lies in the message you sent. We have more 
accessibility in media and thus wider choice. So, let's gets assertive and 
clear about picking the right choices for our families and us. Also let us 
provide a better and more 'fun' alternative (cycling, walk, nature walk, 
dancing in the rain etc) to our kids than what the 'idiot box' provides.




Simran: In all fairness, do you think the producers should be hauled up in the 
Shinjini case? After all, she did have a prior medical condition it is revealed 
now. Why did her folks allow her to go up on stage in such a situation then?

Dr Madhumati Singh: Yes, I agree with you. It looks like her mother (who broke 
down when she was rejected) had over aspirations for her, which sadly some of 
us parents land up doing. Over-impose our personal aspirations on our kids.

Mohit: Why are parents pushing their kids so aggressively these days? If you 
don't participate in talent hunts, does that make a child less talented?

Dr Madhumati Singh: Why parents are doing so is because they have got into this 
rut of 'excellence in parenting' which is definitely on an overdrive causing 
psychological burnout to the kids and family. Dropping and picking up kids from 
one activity to another takes the very fun and creativity out of the activity 
and becomes just another 'have to' thing. It's high time parents re-organise 
what their kids like and what they may have imposed on them. Try to find out 
what the child enjoys and, yes, our aim should be to bring up happy and healthy 
kids.

Ramani: Today is the age of talent, competition and success. You must be ready 
for failures and rebuffs. Comment. 

Dr Madhumati Singh: Yes, we are all on a fast track but it's good to slow down 
a bit and rethink about where we are going and do we need that speed to reach 
there. Life is not a 100-metre dash, it's a long marathon where stamina and 
endurance and even pace is important.

Amrita Gulati: There is a lot of talk here about the negatives of talent shows. 
But it can't be argued that talent shows have given kids a platform to perform. 
Also their level of confidence has shot up, don't you think?

Dr Madhumati Singh: Yes, I agree, talent shows are a good platform for a 
child's creativity to flourish, and their efforts can't be undermined.

Ramani: The child and the parents are aware that there is intense competition. 
The judges are also stressed as they have to handle so many shows and 
participants. Does this not happen in exams? Yes. So this is all part of life 
and all should not expect to win or get acclaim. 

Dr Madhumati Singh: Yes, it's all a part and parcel of life, you lose some and 
you win some.

Umar Farooq Awan: We all know that the producers of such reality shows try to 
make an extra effort to give us nail-biting episodes. Honestly, humiliation of 
any person on national TV must stop. We all are humans after all; some can take 
it some cannot. In India we don't need Jerry Springer-type shows. We are still 
civilised. 




Dr Madhumati Singh: Yes, public humiliation of any kind should be stopped. It's 
uncivil and extremely aggressive stand to take especially at a public programme 
as talent shows.

Backinthejox: Clearly, the fault is with everyone: from the parents, to the 
people who create the shows and the ones who watch it. It is easy to point at 
another person and say they are at fault when something goes wrong.

Dr Madhumati Singh: A lesson to learn for all. However, this case should be 
taken more as exception than rule. Let us as parents look into how happy our 
children are while they enjoy their childhood, and not a mechanical robot, 
doing one task and then another.

Ravi23: Should counselling be made mandatory for parents? Can that help? or is 
it too Western for our comfort?

Dr Madhumati Singh: Yes. Counselling should be made mandatory for parents. In 
fact, 6/10 times when I see a child for his/her problem, it's the parents I 
have to counsel.

Simran: What advice would you give to parents who are pushing their children 
towards such heights? Don't you feel the whole concept is unnatural? Please be 
honest.

Dr Madhumati Singh: Parents who are pushing their children are taking away 
their childhood away from them. It's very important to first be objective, and 
clear what your child enjoys and how he/she can be internally driven, i.e. 
learning to compete with one's self and not with others. It takes time and 
parents are in a rush for everything. Parents need to 'listen' to children and 
direct the child according to what brings joy and happiness to the child. at 
his pace.

Natalie: Who do you think is to blame for Shinjini's present condition?

Dr Madhumati Singh: The onus lies with the parents to ensure she is medically 
fit, and ready to face the challenge. If we keep pushing our children, then why 
should the organisers cross-check that? Don't parents know what is best for the 
child?

Glenn: Kunal Ganjawala, Shreya Ghoshal, Sunidhi Chauhan are a few names who've 
become what they are today with humble beginnings from 'musical shows' which 
have today evolved into reality shows. These reality shows gave 'life' and took 
the voices of singers like Rahul Vaidya, Amit Sana and Abhijeet Sawant to the 
world. I want to know - why has the public who till date have religiously 
picked up their cell phones and messaged the short codes voting for the last 
sorry appeal of these participants suddenly so gripped by the feeling that 
reality shows are killing?

Dr Madhumati Singh: Yes I agree. It's more of a knee-jerk reaction to the 
recent case, and should be treated as exception rather than rule. And also give 
a reality check to parents to reassess their conduct with their kids with all 
the activities they are pursuing.

Sumit: Don't you think reality TV gives some important practical lessons in 
life to children. Facing the outer world or how to cope in difficult 
situations. They learn a lot .Yes of course, keeping aside some vulgar stuff 
but that too to some extent is important. What is your opinion?

Dr Madhumati Singh: I agree with you. Some children intrinsically are very 
competitive. They get the adrenalin rush for having come 'first' etc. Yes, 
participating in competitive fields makes a person stronger and resilient to 
life's challenges ahead.

Sameer: The creative liberties of children are curtailed in these reality 
shows. They are so formatted that the creative intelligence of the child is 
diminished rather than put under the spotlight.

Dr Madhumati Singh: Dance and singing talent are specific areas which are being 
tapped by some shows, and it's a good platform for talent to be taken to a 
bigger level of creativity and I think it's quite healthy. Competing in itself 
is not unhealthy but if parents are insensitive to the child's innate talent 
and creating pressure, it's not done.




 




 

 
  

 














      

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