Thursday 24 May 2012

'MEME'ICRY


This one’s for you and meme!

Okay, bad joke. But true nevertheless. These days our entire virtual world seems to be full of memes. Everywhere you look, you find one friend sharing a meme with another because of its intrinsic humorous value. They have become such an important part of our adolescent lives that we’ve even started COMMUNICATING through memes. One of my friends loves saying, “Y U NO DO THIS?!” and another had a meme war with her uncle. This new fad for memes escalated to such an extent that we just threw a surprise birthday party for our best friend with a ‘meme theme’. All of us wore meme masks and screamed “SURPRISE”, and frankly he looked a tad bit scared when he entered.

Who wouldn’t be, after seeing a face like this screaming, “SURPRISE”.

For the uneducated (or simply lazy) who’ve never heard of them, memes, or if you’re a pricy terminologist, internet memes are essentially ideas prevalent throughout the Internet spreading like wildfire for no logical reason at all, distracting us from whatever we’re doing or would like to be doing (Pshh Board preparations!) because of their droll nature. The word ‘meme’ was used by Richard Dawkins in his work ‘A Selfish Gene’ in 1976 wherein it became virulent in just a few hours. Rage comics are an essential part of meme-ing and are usually simple cartoon drawings of a person expressing a readily identifiable emotion. Since the first ever one expressed rage, the name stuck on as ‘rage’ comics although it isn’t always the emotion expressed.

So now, since we’ve got that history lesson behind us (I’m a Humanities student, what can I say?) let’s move on to the cool part. The part where I describe in detail five rage comics which have become famous solely because they mimic a certain person’s expressions.

#5. Butthurt Dweller


Beware. The mug on this rage face is clearly unattractive. But you know him. He’s that one guy you always find everywhere, sorely lacking any aesthetic approbation or seeming to have none of the recommendations that prove him to be a quality member of the human race and yet manages to achieve superiority over every other person. This fellow, unshaven, pimply, with long greasy hair yet a receding hairline, bespectacled and scruffy, still sports a smug, smarmy look that makes you feel inferior to him. Giving no acquiescence to his unseemliness, he considers himself above each and every person around and the memes reflect that. He’s usually the one with no formal education, still living with his parents, no means of livelihood, usually found either in his room behind a video game console or sequestered in the local bar, shunned from society because of his distasteful, judgmental behavior. This meme also goes by the name of ‘Gordon Granudo’. This comic was inspired by a certain Finnish gentleman known as KimmoKM.



#4 Are You Serious? Rage Face


The ‘Are you serious?/Seriously?’ rage face is a comic drawing of a perplexed looking David Silverman of American Atheists, captured when he was engaged in a hot debate with Bill O’Reilly of Fox News. The dialogue went somewhat like this:

O’Reilly: I’ll tell you why [religion is] not a scam, in my opinion. Tide goes in, tide goes out. Never a miscommunication. You can’t explain that. You can’t explain why the tide goes in.
                                     
Silverman: Tide goes in, tide goes out?!”

O’Reilly: The water, the tide- it comes in and it goes out. It always goes in, then it goes out. … You can’t explain that. You can’t explain it.

Yes. I’m speechless too because if a highly educated member of the press does not know elementary science, then what hope lies for us mortals?






#3. Obama Rage Face



This rage comic was sparked off when President Barrack Obama was spotted wearing a sturgeon face in a press conference during an official visit to the UK. This comic has come to represent the emotion that one feels when everything goes better than was expected.

Just what did they see?

This photo was later anointed the ‘picture of the day’ by the British news media. It made rounds on social networking sites and sites like ‘9gag.com’ and ‘photofails.com’. Later the words ‘Not Bad’ got attached to the rage comic and it was used whenever something was approved by the creator.







#2. You Don’t Say?



This rage comic is my personal favourite as its inherent sarcasm is very endearing. It is a comic drawing of actor Nicolas Cage and is used whenever someone makes an extremely obvious or stupid statement.  The image of Nicolas Cage was taken from a scene in the 1988 black comedy movie Vampire’s Kiss’, which revolves around a troubled young literary agent’s descent into insanity after convincing himself that he is turning into a vampire. This unique facial expression was taken from a particular scene in which Cage’s character Peter Loew torments his secretary in a very diabolical manner accompanied, of course, by the obvious accoutrements- Scary violins in the backgrounds, the secretary’s mousy, albeit terrified, appearance and Cage’s gooseberry eyes popping out. It’s scary. Brr.







#1. True Story



This is it. The big one. The one we’ve all been waiting for. The True Story rage face inspired by Neil Patrick Harris or (as we all know him) Barney Stinson from How I Met Your Mother, smiling paternally, holding a wine glass aloft. It often appears at the end of rage comics indicating that it was based on a true story even when it seems to be obviously spurious. In the series, Stinson often uses the catchphrase ‘True Story’ at the end of every anecdote, for example:



True story Mr. Stinson, true story indeed.





So here they were. Rage comics that mimicked the facial expressions of both the well known and the obscure alike. Rage comics that have become an essential part of our lives. And rage comics that will hopefully live on and endure.

Shuchita.

Sunday 6 May 2012

CONTROVERSY, THY NAME IS AL JAZEERA


Etymologically, Al Jazeera means ‘The Island’ (ironic, considering how it actually describes the Arabian Peninsula). Politically, it is one of the most controversial news agencies of all time, what with its willingness to broadcast dissenting views and circumvent censorship to contribute to the free exchange of information in the Arab world. Globally, it has turned out to be one of the most influential brands, just lagging behind Starbucks and is the most watched news channel on YouTube, receiving 2.5 million views per month.

Al Jazeera is an independent news agency owned by the State of Qatar, headquartered in Doha. It caught worldwide attention when it was the only channel to cover the war in Afghanistan following 9/11, when the US was eager to follow Osama bin Laden on a wild goose chase. Its facilities and exclusive footage was also highly sought after during the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. The channel’s tremendous popularity has also, for better or worse, made it a shaper of public opinion. Its coverage often determines what becomes a story and what does not, as well as how Arab viewers think about issues. Whether in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, or Syria, the stories highlighted and the criticisms aired by guests on Al Jazeera’s news programs have often significantly affected the course of events in the region.

For SMUN 2012-2013, Al Jazeera has a team of journalists so brilliant, they could give Pulitzer a run for his money. Abhishek Bhan will be sending hourly reports on the ‘critical’ situation that will indubitably develop in the Crisis committee; Ankita Nanda describing the perspicacity of the Delegates in the Historical General Assembly; Sukaina Husain elucidating the various laws the Legal committee is bound to interpret; Akshara Anarjita enumerating the proceedings of the Commission for the Status of Women; Prajesh Kochandy painting a lurid image of the events unfolding in the Disarmament and International Security or the DISEC committee and Arundhati Srivastava giving us all an overview of the MUN, from the point of view of Al Jazeera, of course. Shannon Mathew is our official photographer who will be shadowing you all noiselessly, incessantly capturing committee proceedings.

 So beware. Beware of the blatant carnage that will undoubtedly be let loose on Thursday. I hope to see you all debating seriously, discussing your agendas logically and above all, having fun with unmatched ferocity.

Signing off,

Shuchita Goel
(Editor, Al Jazeera, International Press, SMUN'12)

TOO FAST, TOO FURIOUS



I see an insect in my room. It moves very fast, buzzing off from one wall to another. Only one significant thing makes me stare at it (except for the obvious reason that I don’t want it in my hair). Though it moves very fast, after a span of some seconds it jerks to a complete halt. When this happens repeatedly, I am irresistibly reminded of the timeless tale of ‘The Hare and the Tortoise’. The hare skittles ahead in a burst of speed, gets tired in a matter of minutes and takes a short nap. The tortoise plods on valiantly, never giving up hope, and lo and behold! He wins the race!
So the point of this little anecdote was that people try to forge ahead with full steam only to get tired and eventually they slam into an invisible wall which they don’t seem to able to penetrate. This happens because they went about their work too fast and furiously tried to complete something, which under appropriate circumstances, should have taken a reasonable amount of time and patience. It’s just like a painting. The slower you make it, the more attention you pay to details and the more perfect it turns out to be! The same can be said for writing books. Vikram Seth took a REALLY long time to write ‘A Suitable Boy’ and J.R.R. Tolkien took an even longer time to write ‘The Lord of the Rings’ and look at perfection of the results!
So all I’m saying folks, is take it easy, do stuff with patience, don’t give up hope when the going gets
rough and don’t join the ranks of the fast, especially not the furious!

He seems to have received the message

THE FIRST BIZARRE ACCOUNT


Once upon a time, there was a bat. Yes, a bat. Everything about him screamed nondescript (We will refer to the bat as ‘him’ because he is very touchy about these matters and as I am currently writing this at gunpoint, it is solely in my interest to oblige to his slightest commands). Coming back to the point, the bat had one sole ambition. He wanted to conquer the universe. Laughably simple, is it not? For a bat with that big a head (ouch!) it probably was.

So one day, tired of zipping around the universe in his Bat Mobile, (Yes, this was THE original Bat Mobile, not the shoddy stuff that the humans copied for Batman in a pathetic attempt to capture its glory) he decided to land on a planet. This interestingly turned out to be Earth.

The Bat Mobile screamed as it fell through the atmosphere, and with a big ‘whoosh’ landed on the most unlikely roof imaginable. To be precise, it was mine. Of course, ‘landed’ isn’t exactly what I meant. ‘Blew a four foot hole through the roof’ is more like what happened. The Bat Mobile landed in my wastepaper basket, and I, who was watching nearby wide-eyed, could only think of one thing- What would my mother say when she saw the mess? My best bet was that she would think I was armed and dangerous.

Well, to cut a long story short, the bat climbed out of the Bat Mobile and pointed a cute little gun at my forehead. Seeing this bizarre little bat, my first reaction was to laugh. Wrong move. Calmly he pointed the gun at my bookcase and blew a two foot hole in it and smirked. This shut me up.

I then said something very intelligent. “Wha… Whaddya want?” I blubbered.
The bat eyed me and then sighed, “Take me to your… President.” He checked up the term on Earthspeak.bat
“But I am not on a first name basis with the President” I protested.
The bat sighed again. “Well then, give me something with which I can communicate with him.”
“Oh, I have an idea. Why don’t I record what you want to say, and then put it on YouTube?” I said excitedly.
“Okay. What does that mean, Earthling?” The bat said, looking confused.
I explained the concept to him, and he visibly brightened. “That would be capital!”
“Err… Okay. There you go. It’s recording.”

Here is what he said.

“Hello dear Earthlings. I have something to say to you. You are not the sole intelligent beings on this planet. There are others… Others with power unimaginable who control this planet. We are the ones who control this planet though you do not have the slightest inkling of our activities. But now we are tired of hiding. Though I am not their representative my brethren have told me of their predicament and I sympathize. So I have come to be their saviour. They do not want to harm you or else they could have vapourised you in an instant if they wished to. I hope you realize the dire gravity of your situation. If you do not concede to our demands you will die. And our demands are very simple. We have found a planet for you in a parallel galaxy. It is larger than this hole you live in and much more comfortable. The only problem is that it is inhabited by the Gastric Grislers, who for your information are grisly monsters who kill you the moment they see you. But that shouldn’t be a problem should it? We give you a timeline of one batore which is approximately eleven Earth months. If you do not go, then may The Almighty Batt have mercy on your soul. Goodbye, dear Earthlings…” he finished.

I was thunderstruck. The bat calmly picked up my jaw from the ground (this is strictly metaphoric) and threw his gun at me which started hovering near my ear. He told me to write a full account of his doings and upload the video and zipped away in his Bat Mobile.

So as I write this, I know I have become an unwary witness of something that I should NOT have witnessesed. But these things keep happening. And so, till my next installment of ‘Bizarre Accounts by a Mad Writer’ I bid you farewell. Adieu.

THE POLITICAL PARAPHERNALIA SURROUNDING TAGORE


“And into that heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country awake...”

Rabindranath Tagore. A name associated with mysticism and romantic poetry. A name that no Indian can fail to recognize. And a name, which increasingly began to give voice to the minds of the colonized and oppressed, and expressed a passionate desire to be identified as one of them, after failing in his quest to blend the spiritual and romantic notions of an individual’s soul with the divine.
Rabindranath Tagore had multitudinous facets to his personality and one of those was his fierce criticism of Nationalism. His antipathy to the conventional idea of a Nation was legendary. He felt that nationalism was not a spontaneous self-expression of man as a social being but a great menace which was “supremely dangerous to humanity”. It was a “terrible absurdity” which had rapaciously thriven long upon mutilated humanity.

He denounced Nationalism, condemning it to be self-idolatry and criticized it to be a neatly compressed bale of the dregs of humanity, bound in iron hoops, and labeled with scientific precision. This marked animosity of his with the ideal of a Nation was immortalized when he warned the masses that they, who were living under a delusion that they were free, were actually sacrificing their freedom and humanity to the fetich of nationalism and living in a dense, noxious atmosphere of worldwide suspicion, greed and panic. He astringently accused nations for fixing their fangs deep into the naked flesh of the world and systematically petrifying its moral nature in order to lay a concrete foundation for its gigantic abstractions of efficiency. But in spite of all these scathing comments, he was essentially a humanitarian who has faith that man would have his new birth, in the freedom of his individuality, from the shrouded vagueness of abstraction.

Tagore was a political dissenter in India who was against Mahatma Gandhi’s ‘Cult of the Charkha’. He felt that the Swadeshi Movement was predominantly led by the wealthy, orthodox and reactionary Hindus with little or no connection to the lower strata of society, especially the Muslims. He has superbly articulated the darker strains of political intrigue that were the undercurrent to this movement in his 1915 novel ‘Ghare Baire’. His experiences in the Swadeshi Movement indisputably played a critical role in his antagonism to Nationalism in its radical avatar.

Tagore always emphasized on the loftier ideals of humanity instead of acclimatizing to the patriotic rhetoric of his times. He believed that every manifestation of patriotism becomes the magnification of the self on a stupendous scale – it magnifies our vulgarity, cruelty and annihilates every notion of humanity. He violently protested against the ruthless lust of arrogant, imperialistic power-seeking individuals, who were suppressing the voice of the people in order to gain supremacy.

Tagore was a man who eloquently expressed the unspoken desires of the Indian consciousness at that time. Through his relentless tirade against the tralatitious political, cultural and social superstitions, he peeved many of his detractors. He was criticized for being an apostate and his ideals were perceived as being up in the air. He was reduced to being a figure of merely parochial significance and was assumed to remain only a hagiographical legend in Bengal.

Rabindranath Tagore has left a colossal legacy behind, political included. His alternative, out-of-the-box vision has become more appropriate in the modern world, filled to the brim, as it is, with fanaticism and zealotry. It is time we gave it the importance it deserves.

Friday 4 May 2012

MIND YOUR LANGUAGE!


The last speaker of Bo, an ancient language in India in the Andaman Islands, which has now been amalgamated with ten other major languages of the Andaman Islands and is now referred to as the Great Andamanese, died in a bleak hospital in Port Blair; the Cochin Creole Portuguese language died with the demise of William Rozario in Vypeen, Kerala; and Eyak, a language spoken in the Gulf of Alaska vanished in 2008 when its last speaker, Marie Smith Jones died at the ripe old age of 89. It’s official: vernacular languages are being exterminated at an alarming pace where it is more than likely that by 2100, more than half of the 7,000 languages spoken on Earth will have died out. This rate of extinction of languages by far exceeds even that of animal species.

WILLIAM ROZARIO
BOA SENIOR



When Boa Senior, 85, the last speaker of Bo died, nearly 55,000 years of thoughts and feelings and ideas- the collective history of an entire tribe- died along with her. The Cochin Creole Portuguese was widely regarded as a bastardized version of ‘real’ languages but that does not eclipse the fact that it was still spoken by a large community in India and does not exist anymore.

Nowadays, the wiping out of colloquial histories of tribes has become a common garden event. Eviction of tenants from their lands, battles, genocide, illness, urbanization, globalization, you name it. The reasons are wide ranging and innumerable. As children are taken away from their communities and ruthlessly forced into education systems that slowly strip away traditional wisdom and replace them with new-fangled ideas of the world, so the world’s tribal languages are crumbling into decay. And with the death of tribes and the extinction of their languages, unique parts of human society that once flourished, become nothing more than memories to be cherished and venerated.
It is of vital importance to preserve these languages because saving them is much the same as saving humanity. Your language is your culture and your culture is your identity. In the cosmic scheme of things, people aren’t worth a penny. Among the teeming masses, your death and the death of people close to you will seem like nothing. Your only legacy would be the continuance of a language you speak. It will live on. But if that very language is tottering on the edge of extinction, then your entire cultural history with be worth for naught!

There are a lot of challenges that vernacular languages face and globalization, first and foremost, is one of them. Although the world is now better connected than ever and we are communicating in ways that we couldn’t even have imagined a century ago, it also poses a major threat to ancient languages in the world.

The language most commonly associated with globalization, often disparagingly, is English. The spread of this language alarms many who view it as a ‘killer’ language that is one which displaces the use of a nation’s mother tongue as it spreads.

Take case in point: In India, after independence, the British left us more than architectural marvels and bitter memories; they left us a language. A language which has rapidly undermined other Indian languages in its favour. It has been estimated than nearly 9% of Indians now speak English as their first language, which includes you and me. This number is second to only Hindi, our national language. For us, English has become the modern lingua franca, a language with which we associate ourselves because it is fashionable to do so and speaking English seems a very sophisticated and elegant practice. How did this happen? How did a dialect, spoken by a backward, semi-literate tribe in the south-eastern corner of a small island in the North Sea spread, like some malignant pandemic virus, across the globe? Should we feel guilty that our way of speaking is obliterating so many other native tongues? Is it not a more sinister kind of colonialism than that which the British practiced in our country some 60 years ago? English is overtaking every other language in the rat race to become prima donna in the Linguistic Premier League. Chances are that for a few generations most humans will be speaking English. But don't despair and don't exult. The Romans fondly believed it would be Latin.

Thus, what we are witnessing in the 21st century is linguicide. The complete and total annihilation of vernacular languages. In the 20th century, power came from behind the barrel of a gun. Now it also comes from the Oxford English Dictionary.

Shoe.

NOT-SO-DESPICABLE ME


They are the shadows in the dark, the blood on the walls; Mephistophelian, they roam the darkness, extinguishing all that is pure, seeping into the lives of innocent men and women, like a noxious gas that brings no good. They plot schemes that bring about the downfall of all those who have sworn to protect; they hatch plans that inter the already dying ideals of faith and humanity. They are… Now wait just a minute. Where are the super villains I was just describing? What happened to fictitious characters like The Joker, arch-nemesis of the Batman, with his warped view of the world, sadistic sense of humour, a schizophrenic clown with that hideous smile carved on his face that says “why so serious?”? What happened to Dr. Doom, the genius inventor, sorcerer, pure evil personified, enemy of The Fantastic Four? What happened to Lex Luthor, Dr. Octopus, Darth Vader, Jabba the Hutt, Harley Quinn, Poison Ivy, Venom and Bane?

An incompetent villain is like incidental music with too much pizzicato violin plonking. A mediocre villain makes your hero, and all the other characters, look proportionately less impressive as well. And there's nothing more unimpressive than a villain who's got a mental block against disposing of his or her nemesis.
So let’s see the top 5 not-badass-at-all villains that have been left at our door, for us to endure.


 #5. Heinz Doofenshmirtz 



He is a 47 year-old mad scientist appearing on the popular TV show Phineas and Ferb. He is the head of Doofenshmirtz Evil Inc., but there is nothing evil about this character. Admittedly he attempts to wreck havoc on “the entire Tri-State Area and then the world!” but always ends up being beaten by Perry the Platypus. He is so used to being foiled that he tends to be upset on the few occasions when Perry does not stand in his way. The only thing impressive about him is his purchased doctorate off the internet under the pseudonym StrudelCutie4427.


#4. Rainbow Raider




With a name like Roy G. Bivolo, (ROYGBIV, a mnemonic for the colours of the rainbow), everyone thought he was destined to be an artist. There was a teensy problem though. He was colourblind. He thought he painted beautiful pictures only to be told they were made up of clashing colours due to his itty bitty problem. His father, saddened by this, made him a sophisticated pair of goggles that would allow Roy to create beams of solid rainbow-colored light. But Roy, tired of the unappreciative world, turned these goggles to sinister use, taking the name of Rainbow Raider as he has the insidious power to affect people’s emotions by coating them in a specific color. How very ingenious and diabolical. I’m sorry, this is as scary as a leprechaun putting on a pair of bull’s horns and charging at you. 

Seriously, Rainbow the Clown, from The Power Puff Girls, is scarier.


#3. The Team Rocket Trio


At first sight, you’d think they were the perfect villainous trio, what with their epic motto and credentials. But as the Pokémon series progress, all you can feel is frustrated. If you really want Ash Ketchum’s Pikachu that much, then hatch a better plan and TAKE HIM! The trio consists of Jessie, the aggressive one, James, the effeminate one, and Meowth, the one who hatches all the plans to please their boss Giovanni, who considers the trio to be incompetent. As they are.

Team Rocket blasts off again?




#2. Kite Man




The idea of a Kite Man was flawed from the start, because choosing such an unwieldy method of transport left him open to freak gusts of wind. If that wasn't enough, the colour of his costume was pink. Baby pink, to be precise. Decidedly emasculating for a villain. And if that wasn't enough, his method of attack was to throw kites at people. That didn't even hurt in kindergarten. Utterly useless, he met his end by falling off a tower (without his kite obviously), somehow surviving, but then being eaten in jail in Gotham City by Bruno Mannheim. It served him right. He was such a wuss, he didn’t even join the Secret Society of Super Villains in Gotham City. Perhaps, the only redeeming quality of this character is that he was named after Charlie Brown, the main character in Peanuts who has a notable fondness for flying kites.

And for the crowning glory...


#1. Condiment King



You might as well call him the Mustardy Ketchup Man. He makes use of various condiments, notably ketchup and mustard, to foil his enemy, Batman, but is almost never taken seriously, because of the ludicrous nature of his ‘powers’. His only real danger comes from the possibility of causing anaphylactic shock in his victim, who would have to a) exceedingly unlucky to be hit by a nut-based product and b) have forgotten to bring his EpiPen while out on a jaunt. Useful only for his potential as a punning device: frequently guilty of as-salt, you can't ketchup with him...even despite the fact that he just doesn't cut the mustard for us.

So here they were. Villains who don’t scare you in the least or put the fear of God in you. Shame on them. I shall, as always, end with a Parthian shot.

‘Bane could see it. Batman, pale, blinded by light, smeared with filth, dressed in tatters, so thin his ribs almost burst from his skin, his arms and legs flopping, drool leaking down his chin. And then he said, “Put fire to his feet. I want to hear him scream.”

That, my friends, is all what a super villain has to be. Diabolical, full of hatred, vindictive to the core, filling the dregs of humanity with a hatred so powerful it could make The Joker seem like a cheap trickster.
-Shoe.