_
From: Press Agency Ozgurluk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2001 18:10:14 +0200
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Ozgurluk] Turkish reality TV: Who can survive on the country's
minimum wage?


 Turkish reality TV: Who can survive on the country's minimum wage?

By SELCAN HACAOGLU
The Associated Press
8/30/01 2:44 AM

ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) -- In a new twist to reality television, a Turkish
show is pitting two middle class couples against each other to see who
can survive on the country's paltry minimum wage of $84 a month.

Contestant Engin Ozden walks for four hours each day from the studio to
work to save 35 cents in bus fare.

His competitors, Hikmet and Suzan Kocaibrahimoglu, eat stale bread and
sit under a street lamp at night to conserve electricity. They have each
lost about 20 pounds since the show started Aug. 1. Suzan
Kocaibrahimoglu hasn't used deodorant in a month.

"It is impossible to live on this money," said Suzan Kocaibrahimoglu.
"It is a kind of torture."

But the show, broadcast daily on private Channel D television, is
reality for hundreds of thousands of Turkish families struggling to make
ends meet on a minimum wage that loses value almost every week as the
Turkish lira plummets against the dollar. Since the start of a February
financial crisis, the lira has lost about half its worth.

Half of the country's 65 million people live on a monthly income of less
than $200, far below the poverty line of $474 a month for a family of
four.

The couples' televised struggle has made them heroes to many Turks, who
have long felt that they have been suffering in silence and are being
ignored by politicians who many believe are corrupt and the cause of the
financial crisis.

"They are like one of us, same difficulties, same misery," said Fikri
Tektas, a janitor working in a building near the studio.

Hikmet Kocaibrahimoglu said he has received dozens of phone calls
thanking him for dramatizing the nation's struggle. People have also
approached him in the street to shake his hand.

They say "we are supporting you because you are showing our
difficulties," Hikmet Kocaibrahimoglu said.

The television station says the show, which is broadcast at midnight, is
among the country's most popular, but refuses to release any figures on
viewership, saying it is a trade secret.

August's competition was the second installment of the show. The July
contestants tied.

As part of the daily 30-minute show, the two couples live in apartments
filled with cameras and microphones. When they go out for work, a camera
crew follows them.

Both couples buy stale bread for 3½ cents a loaf, one-third of the
normal price, and carry free water in buckets from a nearby mosque to
save on utility bills. Their telephones ring constantly with relatives
and friends calling to offer words of support, but the couples never
make outgoing calls.

Keeping to the image of a normal life, the contestants are required to
buy a newspaper each day and watch a movie and read a book during the
contest.

Contestants are not allowed to accept discounts.

"It is really difficult and requires lots of sacrifice," said Hikmet
Kocaibrahimoglu. Even a 17-cent ice cream cone is a luxury, he said.

Turkey is a conservative, overwhelmingly Muslim country and the couples
have been extremely careful not to kiss in front of the cameras, which
are everywhere, except the bathrooms.

In real life, Hikmet Kocaibrahimoglu is a finance manager at a private
company. His wife does not work.

Engin Ozden owns a restaurant in Istanbul while his wife works at a
bank. Both couples are middle class, earning about six times the minimum
wage.

The couple who spends the least money during the month without exceeding
the minimum wage will win a car, $17,250 in cash, and a one week trip to
Europe. The show ends on Thursday, but the winner will not be announced
until Sunday.

"They are lucky. Most Turks are stuck with minimum wage for life, and
there is no award awaiting them," said Menekse Yucel, an


-- 
Press Agency Ozgurluk
In Support of the Revolutionary Peoples Liberation Struggle in Turkey
http://www.ozgurluk.org

_________________________________________________
 
KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi
 
General class struggle news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe mails to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Geopolitical news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__________________________________________________

Reply via email to