It's terrible to say the least, that the actor, whom the
nation has been ga-ga about ever since he first appeared on the big screen,
throws his cloak of responsibility (for the first time?) and advocates the
heinous crime of wife-beating.
A recent washing machine ad by him is fast gathering
controversy. In the ad, the actor is seen bragging to his friends 'dhulai kar
di" when they ask him about his problems with his wife. Later the wife
enters and the actor sheepishly says that he was playing a prank.
Some time ago, a parliamentary standing committee called
for harsh penal provisions to make celebrities who endorse brands, accountable
for misleading advertisements. The parliamentary panel on consumer
affairs, in its recommendations on the Consumer Protection Bill, 2015, had
called for a jail term for up to 5 years and a penalty of up to Rs 50 lakh. The
committee wanted that for first time offence, the celeb in question must be
penalised with either a fine of Rs 10 lakh or imprisonment up to 2 years or
both. For the second offence, the fine should be increased to Rs 50 lakh and
imprisonment up to 5 years. For subsequent offences, the penalties may be
increased proportionately based on the value of sales of the product/ service
in question.
I am not advocating such harsh measures but if a product
misfires and the actor has not bothered to understand what he is saying, or
sold his soul to make a few quick bucks- he owes it to his fas to say 'I am
sorry'. Loving means saying 'Sorry'. Do you love your fans, Nawaz?
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“I agree that celebs should accept endorsements with a
certain amount of responsibility. But it is unfair to make them accountable for
products/ads as the subject is technical and requires sound understanding of
science as it’s related to the ingredients of the product and consequent
claims,” Madison World chairman Sam Balsara had said when punitive measures
were suggested.
However, industry experts felt it is unfair to single out
celebs for such mishappenings.
Mishappenings? My friends, celebrities are by default
endowed with a responsibilty to not percolate or inseminate harmful
messages.
According to Anirban Blah, managing director of talent
management agency Kwan that handles brand endorsements for top Bollywood stars,
who had also spoken then to a section of the media, "No celebrity has the
means to verify what the brand is saying, and they don’t run testing labs. What
they have is a legally binding document. Almost every endorsement has a
contract which warrants that it is making no false representation of any sort
in its advertising.
I don't agree with Blah. Does an actor like Nawaz
need a testing lab to understand what he is saying? Does an actor like
Nawaz not understand Hindi (in fact, he is very uncomfortable doing interviews
in English and loves it more if they're done in Hindi)? Does an actor like
Nawaz have to sit and only sell his face, and pocket sh** loads of money? Does
Nawaz hasn't to read contracts that the the ad which he is going ahead to shoot
is making false and atrocious analogy of "washing clothes"?
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Has Nawaz understood that he has equated women to clothes, which can be changed at the first opportunity? Does Nawaz understand that his bachcha-party fans (if he has any, 'coz I don't think he has a kid following- and thank God for that) will imitate him and endorse his thoughts, for every visual acts on the subliminal levels of their impressionable minds?
Does Nawaz have the facts and figures of how wife-beating is increasing by the year? FYI Nawaz, wife-beating exists in every strata of our society, and it's just that in rich- class homes the woman suffers in silence because her inner voice keeps (mis)guiding her 'Log Kya kahenge'? Women who experience domestic violence overwhelmingly tend to have greater overall emotional distress, as well as disturbingly high occurrences of suicidal thoughts and attempts. According to a study by the National Centre for Biotechnology Information, suicide attempts in India are correlated with physical and psychological intimate partner violence.
Nawaz should have kicked this ad before doing it with conviction (I believe he is an actor who does films and ads only if and when he is thoroughly convinced). I have known of actors who refused to do scenes in films simply because they would convey a wrong message. Why films, even actors have done the same for TV. I distinctly remember talking to Rohini Hattangadi a few years ago and she said that she didn't want to do a scene in a TV serial where she has to break her bangles, she refused and the director had to change the scene.
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I admire brand consultant Harish Bijoor who feels that both the company and the celebrity are liable. “Celebrities use their charm and appeal to entice consumers. Celebrities use their charisma to sell and tout. When they do that, they need to be more careful. The key stakeholder is the brand owner, and then it is the brand-endorser. Both are liable," he had told a section of the media when the Nestle Maggi controversy had broken out.
If Nawaz could just learn a few things even from Raveen Tandon, who in her interview to Brand Equity, had once said: "I started off endorsing brands at a very early age, when I was around 17 or so. Some of the brands endorsed over the years include Cadburys Eclairs, Dollops ice-cream, Lux, Breeze, Emami, Nirma, SunSilk, 7Up etc. (She recalls doing a brand endorsement in the early days for a princely sum of Rs 500 that was shot by adman Prahlad Kakkar) Those days my dad used to handle my dealings and he had laid the ground rules loud and clear - no cigarette and no tobacco endorsements. I have stuck to those rules always.
Celebrities do have a responsibility. In a product like tobacco or cigarettes the government puts very cl e a r signs on them so you know that this is something you should not be endorsing. After that you have your own sensibilities. Intentionally if you know a product is harmful or the government is advising to get off it and then you endorse it, then that is your moral responsibly. I can't understand how some celebrities are endorsing alcohol or paan-masala when knowing that millions are dying with the intake. Just for a few more crores they are setting a wrong example. Surely as a celebrity, there is a certain moral responsibility..."
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FYI Nawaz: Alec Baldwin appeared in advertisements
for the financial services company Capital One Bank. There was an outcry on why
he had appeared in in commercials for an institution that had received a $ 3.5
billion bailout. Baldwin responded with a tweet: “I donated all of my fee
from Capital One 2 arts charities."
Say Sorry Mr Nawazuddin Siddiqui. And RIGHT NOW! And
also, how about returning your fee to that washing machine brand or then,
donating your fee in question for a charitable cause? Do let us know what you
decide and be brave to come out and say even if you disagree with me.
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