How real is reality TV?
Reality TV has always been controversy’s child. Whether it is about the winners of a show or the outlandish episodes with high drama and mud-slinging amongst the contestants, a question that has always been asked about reality TV is, how much of it is real?
This question was given further impetus recently, thanks to an episode of a Dubai TV show called Ramez Underground, which starred none other than our very own King Khan.
In the clip, SRK is shown to be pranked as his car slowly sinks into quicksand and then, to cap matters, a man dressed as a Komodo dragon starts lumbering towards the superstar. When the video went on air, there were comments about how SRK lost his cool at the man, but three days later, the conversation shifted to how it was indeed a prank. Unlike his moving, convincing performances in movies, SRK’s lukewarm reactions on the reality show looked scripted.
In fact, Shah Rukh’s manager Pooja Dadlani even went on record to say, “It was staged, and Shah Rukh Khan was aware and was acting as if he was angry.” The buzz is the actor was paid a whopping amount of Rs 2 crores to be a part of the prank, though his team hasn’t confirmed it.
This isn’t the only instance where reality shows have gone down the scripted road. Naman Shaw and Megha Gupta came together for the fourth season of Nach Baliye and parted ways soon after the show ended. Rumours were abuzz that the couple teamed up to participate in the dance show. Sara Khan married her long time boyfriend Ali Merchant in Bigg Boss. But soon, stories were tumbling out that the couple were paid a huge amount, to be part of the TRP grabbing attempt.
Sreesanth got a second chance to revive his career after the spot-fixing case after he participated in the dance reality show, Jhalak Dikhhla Ja. The show saw him get into an argument with Karan Johar, which prompted the ex-cricketer to walk out of the sets. However, there were rumours that it was all scripted as well.
Actor Gaurav Chopra, who has appeared in several reality shows, starting out with Nach Baliye 2 in 2006, says that creating drama and buzz to grab eyeballs has become the priority these days. He says, “These shows want people who will cry, throw a fit, abuse and cause drama. They bring in celebs to strip them down and air their dirty laundry,” he reveals.
A 29-year-old female ad executive, who has appeared on a reality show, spoke about how she was briefed about her behaviour on the show.
“I was part of a reality show where an ordinary person could meet a celebrity. While I had to pretend to be surprised at my favourite star appearing in front of me on camera, I knew about it beforehand. Despite it being a light-hearted show, I was given a strict list of dos and don’ts to be followed, especially when it came to asking certain touchy or controversial questions. I’m sure the more controversial the show gets, the stricter the list of things you can’t say tends to become,” she deduces.
Publicist Dale Bhagwagar says that these tactics have helped his clients stay on the show longer. “I train my clients to fight, wear bikinis and jump into the pool, and to stay in the limelight if they are pitted against strong contestants during the evictions because if they don’t give TRP’s chances are they will be evicted,” he reveals. “Even on shows like Khatron Ke Khiladi, the contestants are told what reactions to give.”
Kritika Anand, who was in charge of creating tasks in Bigg Boss’ season 10 admits that they do create situations that will heighten the drama. She said that in the last season since VJ Bani didn’t get along with Lopamudra, we to put them together.
Ehsaan Noorani, a judge on the reality TV show called The Stage, says talent-based shows don’t often fall prey to scripting. He says, “Shows like the Masterchef series or Fear Factor are tough to script since there you depend so much on talent. However, when it comes to shows that only look at an entertainment, I do find that a lot of them scripted,” he says.