Jaya Bachchan bats for Bollywood in Parliament

Rediff.com  » News » Jaya Bachchan bats for Bollywood in RS; toasted for her speech

Jaya Bachchan bats for Bollywood in RS; toasted for her speech

Source: PTI  -  Edited By: Utkarsh Mishra
Last updated on: September 15, 2020 21:52 IST
Get Rediff News in your Inbox:

Batting for Bollywood on the floor of the Rajya Sabha, MP and veteran actor Jaya Bachchan on Tuesday argued for government support to the entertainment industry and slammed those tarnishing its image.

IMAGE: Samajwadi Party MP Jaya Bachchan speaks in the Rajya Sabha during the ongoing Monsoon Session of Parliament, in New Delhi, on Tuesday. Photograph: RSTV/PTI Photo

Bachchan's speech, in which she used a Hindi proverb to say those defaming the industry were biting the hands that fed them, earned her fulsome praise from many of her colleagues in Bollywood that has been under a cloud since the death of actor Sushant Singh Rajput in June.

Though Bachchan did not take any names, her speech came a day after Bharatiya Janata Party's Lok Sabha MP and Bhojpuri actor Ravi Kishan said there was a problem of drug addiction in the film industry.

 

She also said she completely disagrees with those who term the entertainment industry a "gutter", a term used by actor Kangana Ranaut to describe Bollywood in a tweet last month.

Through a Zero Hour mention in Rajya Sabha, Bachchan said the entertainment industry was being flogged by social media and asked the government to protect and support it.

"People who have made a name in this industry have called it a gutter. I completely disagree," she said in a speech that not just made her the toast of Bollywood but was also trending on Twitter for much of the day.

"I was really embarrassed and ashamed that yesterday (September 14) one of our members in the Lok Sabha, who is from the industry, spoke. I am not taking names. It is a shame," Bachchan said in a clear reference to Kishan's statement on the alleged Bollywood drug cartel.

"Jis thali mein khate hai Usme chhed karte hai. Galat baat hai," she said referring to a popular Hindi proverb that translates to biting the hand that feed you.

She said the entertainment industry provides direct employment to five lakh people daily.

"I think it is very, very important that the government supports this industry and not kill it. Just because there are few people, you cannot tarnish the image of the entire industry," Bachchan said.

"At a time when the financial situation is in a depressing state and employment rate at the worst levels, in order to divert the attention of people, we are being flogged by social media," Bachchan said, adding that there is no support from the government.

The government, she said, must stand by the entertainment industry because it always comes forward to help in times of crisis.

"If there is a national calamity, they come forward, they give money and their services," Bachchan said.

The issue of the alleged nexus between people in the film industry and drug traffickers came up in the Lok Sabha too.

Replying to a question in the Lok Sabha, Union Minister of State for Home G Kishan Reddy said in a written answer that the Narcotics Control Bureau carries out searches, seizures, arrests and investigations continuously throughout the year on actionable inputs developed on its own or received from other sources.

"During the period of COVID-19 lockdown, no such actionable inputs were received by NCB revealing the nexus between people in the film industry and drug traffickers," he said.

Bachchan's speech trended on social media with many within the industry tweeting and retweeting it and praising the actor for speaking up against the negativity surrounding the film industry since Rajput's death.

The Producers Guild of India, which had come out with a statement to criticise the singling out of the industry as a drug den recently, tweeted Bachchan's speech with the hashtag 'Respect'.

"The Producers Guild of India applauds Jaya ji for standing up for our industry #Respect," it said on Twitter.

The hashtag was used repeatedly.

Director Anubhav Sinha, actors Farhan Akhtar, Sonam Kapoor and Tapsee Pannu also lauded the MP. The exception was actor Kangana Ranaut, who put out a caustic tweet criticising the speech.

Ranaut, in the news for her provocative comments, has claimed the movie mafia is behind actor Sushan Singh Rajput's death.

Sharing Bachchan's speech, Sinha wrote on Twitter, "I send my greetings to Jaya ji. For those who don't know, please see this. This is how spine looks like."

Kapoor said, "I want to be her when I grow up."

Pannu said she agreed with Bachchan that the industry has always extended a helping hand in times of crisis and it was now 'payback' time.

"For we have always stood by the initiatives, causes and awareness campaigns. It's time for payback. Hitting the nail on its head and how! Yet again a woman from the industry spoke up #Respect," the actor tweeted.

Other Bollywood celebrities such as filmmaker Zoya Akhtar and actor-producer Nikhill Diwedi also came out in support of Bachchan.

"And yet another woman stands up," Akhtar wrote on Instagram.

Actor-director Farhan Akhtar wrote, "Respect. She has always stood up to be counted when it mattered. #Jaya Bachchan."

Diwedi said a 'false narrative' was being projected about the film industry.

"Jaya Bachchan is right. A false narrative that a certain malaise infects the entire film industry is being created by few to look good in these times...," Diwedi tweeted.

Ranaut, however, struck quite a different tune and asked the 72-year-old actor to be more sensitive to others. She also brought in Bachchan's two children.

"Jaya ji would you say the same thing if in my place it was your daughter Shweta beaten, drugged and molested as a teenage, would you say the same thing if Abhishek complained about bullying and harassment constantly and found hanging one day? Show compassion for us also(sic)," Ranaut tweeted.

On August 26, she wrote, "If Narcotics Control Bureau enters Bullywood, many A listers will be behind bars, if blood tests are conducted many shocking revelations will happen. Hope @PMOIndia under swatchh Bharat mission cleanses the gutter called Bullywood," she had tweeted.

Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
Source: PTI  -  Edited By: Utkarsh Mishra© Copyright 2020 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.
Related News: Rajya Sabha, Lok Sabha, Jaya Bachchan, Samajwadi Party, Ravi Kishan
SHARE THIS STORY 
Print this article

Jaya Bachchan bats for Bollywood in Parliament

'Harris administration' talk ignites Republican furore - Times of India

'Harris administration' talk ignites Republican furore

File photo of Democratic vice-presidential candidate Kamala Harris
WASHINGTON: Use of the term "Harris administration" by Democratic vice-presidential candidate Kamala Harris ignited a furore on Tuesday among Trump Republicans who have long been suggesting that Joe Biden is a “Trojan horse” for socialists and he will eventually be supplanted by his radical deputy if he gets to the White House.
Speaking during a virtual roundtable with small business owners in Arizona, Harris stumbled briefly in course of her remarks, saying, "A Harris administration… together with Joe Biden as the president of the United States..." before correcting herself to finish with "The Biden-Harris administration will provide access to $100 billion in low-interest loans and investments from minority business owners."
The momentary flub was seized on by Trump supporters to ramp up their hypothesis -- also discussed by many non-partisan analysts -- that Kamala Harris will for all purposes be the putative president if Democrats win the White House because Biden is too old and infirm for office.
"Kamala Harris lets the truth slip: a Harris Administration together with Joe Biden," the President’s son Eric Trump tweeted, adding Rasmussen survey that he said showed 59 per cent of likely voters think Biden, who is 77, is unlikely to finish a four-year term in the White House.

Trump himself has repeatedly cast Harris, 55, as the leader of the ticket in an effort to whip up nativist frenzy among his racist base, including by giving life to "birther" theories to the effect that she may not be eligible to serve as President (because she was born to foreign parents in the US before they became American citizens)
After constitutional scholars and legal experts knocked down the argument, Trump has settled on a strategy of questioning her competence and her "radical" politics, while suggesting that it is inappropriate for a candidate who lost in the primaries to become a potential Oval Office occupant via the 25th Amendment (which among other things allows a vice-president to succeed an incapacitated President).
Part of the Trumpublican hysteria was aimed at covering up a disastrous day for the President and his campaign, including the use of Russian MiG-29 fighters and a Russian AK-74 rifle in an ad seeking support for US troops, which itself was aimed at offsetting disclosures that Trump had denigrated the military.
The Trump administration was also rocked by reports based on whistleblower complaints that its Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had performed a high number of hysterectomies on immigrant women in detention centres.
The US President also invited universal ridicule by saying "I don’t think science knows," when dismissing the plea from California Democrats who pleaded with him to pay heed to climate change science in course of a discussion on wildfires that have been devastating the west coast, where incidentally, all three states affected (California, Oregon, and Washington) are Democratic strongholds.
In an unprecedented move on Tuesday, the magazine Scientific American, endorsed a political candidate for the first time in its 175-year history, backing Joe Biden "to support science, health, the environment, evidence-based policy, and reality over disinformation."
On his part, Trump claims endorsements from various police and law-enforcement unions and organisations while repeatedly praising "men and women in uniform" and presenting himself as a "law and order" candidate.
Several commentators are starting to express apprehension on the scenarios that could unfold on Election Day of there is no definitive, conclusive result or if either side refused to accept an electoral verdict.
The concerns were heightened on Tuesday after a senior Trump administration official seemed to exhort the President’s supporters to arm themselves in case a Trump win -- which he claimed was a foregone conclusion -- was not accepted and Biden became President.
"And when Donald Trump refuses to stand down at the inauguration, the shooting will begin. The drills that you’ve seen are nothing. If you carry guns, buy ammunition, ladies and gentlemen, because it’s going to be hard to get," Micheal Caputo, an assistant secretary for public affairs at the Department of Health and Human Services, warned in a social media message that was captured by the mainstream media before it was deleted.
Caputo, whose remit includes overseeing the coronavirus response communications, alleged that there were "resistance units" in the US scientific community that had become "political animals" and were intent on undermining Trump.
The allegations, for which Caputo offered no evidence, came even as Trump continued to hold mass in-person political rallies with no social distancing or mask guidelines, gatherings which many commentators described as "superspreader events."

    Coronavirus outbreak

    Trending Topics

    More from TOI

    Navbharat Times

    Featured Today in Travel

    Get the app