Satires

Satire | Jaalmag

The Sign of Four

15 April 2009

Some people can really be naïve. And some are still more naïve to understand the naivete that they inexorably exude. Our stuttering parrot of a Bollywood superkhan, Shahrukh Khan, is of course in such a league of his own. Even the egomaniacal Amir Khan cannot stoop to such low levels. And pardon my spellings for the names. These days it is easier to keep track of IPL captaincy changes than to monitor the ways these self-effacing stars keep changing their names to suit their astrological...

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Satire | Jaalmag

Talks in fool swing

15 June 2001

We have long known about the adage of not being able to fool all the people all the time. K Padmanabhaiah returned from Bangkok in June all smug, and appeared on this satellite channel and the other trying to have us all believe that the recalcitrant Naga hostiles had been fool-fledgedly emasculated. They would not pull out from the so-called talks and the silly ceasefire. Experts appeared on the idiot box; other specialists wrote their perfunctory pieces on the great Naga ceasefire. Everyone...

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Satire | Jaalmag

Chitti Chitti Bong Bong

15 May 2001

Question time, folks. What was common to the states of Assam and West Bengal which went to the hustings earlier this month? Possible Answer Number 1: Those who calculatedly made the wrong alignments, forfeited their electoral fortunes. Possible Answer Number 2: Saffron did a fade-out: losers on either side of the chicken neck Siliguri corridor. Possible Answer Number 3: The Bongs from opaar-Bongland vouched for and shaped the winners. Possible Answer Number 4: All of the above. If you opted for...

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Satire | Jaalmag

Borderline patriotism

15 April 2001

After the event, we fools are inevitably wise. Through all these years Bengladeshis have tampered our demographic landscape contiguous with their godforsaken land beyond redemption and recognition. But, it suited all those for whom these aliens vouched for at the hustings. It did not suit those who were more paranoid about the silent invasion by them infidel Mozies. There was no clarion call for patriots vis-à-vis Indianism (a new term, some upstart English-speaker coined recently). Political...

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Satire | Jaalmag

Hype hype hurray

15 January 2001

Good books are not written anymore. They are marketed. Bad books are not written anymore either. They are marketed too. Bibliophiles never had it so bad in India as they did in the last decade of the twentieth century. Writing and publishing was never the same, as even in the Eighties. It did not matter whether you were a good writer or bad; as long as your publisher was able to market it (read, hype it beyond all limits of fertile imagination), you would have earned your buck - fast and slow...

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Satire | Jaalmag

Have Indian women entered the 21st century?

15 November 2000

The Indian pseudo-intellegentsia seems to have the morbid proclivity to make an anachronistic contention of everything. Where's the anachronism? The revelation is plain and simple - the 21st century in real terms has not yet begun, it will do so only on January 1, 2001. The farce of second millennium has already taken place - the world celebrating the advent of the third millennium on December 31, 1999-January 1, 2000. So in literal terms, the question of women entering the 21st century does not...

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Satire | Jaalmag

Pope goes the whistle

1 November 1999

There is good news for members of the saffron clan. There is good news for crusaders too. The pontiff, if rumours are to be believed, is not here to convert - he is here to get converted. According to highly unreliable sources in the saffron camp, a deal to this effect was struck between the Christian boss and the Hindu bosses about a month or so back. It was a perchance happening, he said. The day that the website of one of the constituents of the saffron brigade was launched, the Pope had...

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