Central Beat magazine May-July 2017 Central Beat May-July 2017 | Page 25

May 2017 CentralBeat / BollyBeat Page 25

Shah Rukh shines in first TED Talk

What do you get when you put SRK , one of India ’ s most popular actors ever and sharp-talker extraordinaire on the stage for a TED Talk ? You get more than you signed up for . You get funny , emotional and honest talk , by “ an ageing superstar ” that will tug at your heartstrings .

On 27 April , Shah Rukh Khan became the first Indian actor to deliver a TED talk . SRK has also been roped in for the Hindi version of the popular talk series . TED Talks announced that the show will be aired on Star India and will be called TED Talks India : Nayi Soch .
According to a report in the Business Standard , hordes of fans were waiting for the star to arrive at the venue in Vancouver , Canada .
“ I ’ ve been made to understand there are lots of you here who have never seen my work , and I feel really sad for you ,” Khan joked to the excited audience . “ That doesn ’ t take away from the fact that I ’ m completely self-obsessed , as a movie star should be ,” he added , according to TED Blog .
Referring to himself as an ageing superstar , the 51-year-old actor said , “ Humanity is a lot like me .” He added : “ It ’ s an ageing movie star , grappling with all the newness around it , wondering whether it got it right in the first place and still trying to find a way to keep on shining regardless .”
He spoke about his move to Mumbai and his meteoric career trajectory . He was 40 years old and had done some 50 films , with about 200 songs . However , things began to change with the advent of the Internet . Everything he said was scrutinised , everything he did drew a comment , and hate was free-flowing . Khan spoke of his early days , from the refugee camp in New Delhi where he was born to the night his father died when Khan was only 14 . “ From that night onwards , much akin to humanity in its adolescence , I learned the crude tools of survival ,” he says .
The framework of life was simple then . You ate what you could find , and you did what you were told to do . “ You married the first girl you dated , and you were a techie if you could fix the carburetor in your car ,” Khan says . “ You went wherever life took you for work , and people were mostly welcoming of you … Most important , you were who you were , and you said what you thought .”
In his late 20s , Khan shifted to the sprawling metropolis of Mumbai , and his framework — like the industrialized aspirations of humanity — began to change . He met people from all over the world , and definitions became more and more fluid . Ideas were flowing with more freedom and speed , and he experienced the miracle of innovation and cooperation . His own creativity , supported by the resourcefulness of the collective , catapulted him into superstardom .
“ By the time I was 40 , I was really flying . I had done 50 films by then , and 200 songs , and I ’ d been knighted by the Malaysians and given the highest civil honour by the French government ,” Khan recounts . “ Humanity was soaring with me ,” he says . “ We were both flying off the handle , actually .”
Then the internet happened . “ Everything I said took a new meaning ; everything I did — good , bad , ugly — was there for the world to comment upon and judge ,” Khan recalls . “ Everything I didn ’ t say or do was also met with the same fate .”
In this new world , reality became virtual , and virtual became real . “ I started to feel that I couldn ’ t be who I wanted to be or say what I actually thought ,” Khan says . “ And humanity at this time completely identified with me . Both of us were going through our midlife crisis . Humanity , like me , was becoming an over-exposed prima donna .”
“ The whole world , and all of humanity , seemed as lost as I was ,” Khan says . And here we are . With all of the complex problems and confusion in the world , Khan , now 51 , still believes that there has never been a more momentous time for humanity . What has he learned , and how can it help the rest of the world ?
“ The present you is brave . The present you is hopeful . The present you is innovative and resourceful . And , of course , the present you is annoyingly indefinable ,” Khan says .
The dignity of a life , a human being , a culture , a religion , a country actually resides in its ability for grace and compassion , he continues . “ I ’ ve learned that whatever moves you , whatever urges you to create , build , whatever keeps you from failing , whatever helps you survive , is perhaps the oldest and the simplest emotion known to mankind , and that is love ,” Khan says .
“ You may use your power to build walls and keep people outside ,” he continues . “ Or you may use it to break barriers and welcome them in . You may use your faith to make people afraid and terrify them into submission . Or you can use it to give courage to people , so they rise to the greatest heights of enlightenment .”
“ The future you ,” Khan concludes , “ has to be like an aging movie star , who has been made to believe that there is a possibility of a world which is completely , wholly , self-obsessively in love with itself .”
( HuffPostIndia )
Mega movie star Shah Rukh Khan at his first TED Talk .
Priyanka Chopra

Priyanka Chopra Has One Big Regret

It may be hard to imagine that one of the most successful Bollywood actresses of all time may have regrets when it comes to career or life but Priyanka Chopra has opened up about one big regret of her life – the fact that she endorsed a fairness cream during her younger years .
In an interview with international magazine Glamour , Priyanka Chopra talks about the realities of growing up in India and facing prejudice against skin colour .
She notes , “ A lot of girls who have a darker skin hear things like , ‘ Oh , poor thing , she ’ s dark . Poor thing , it ’ ll be hard for her .’ In India they advertise skin-lightening creams : ‘ Your skin ’ s gonna get lighter in a week .’ I used it [ when I was very young ].”
She further elaborates that she also ended up endorsing a fairness cream after she became a celebrity but admits that she regretted it almost immediately , saying , “ Then when I was an actor , around my early twenties , I did a commercial for a skin-lightening cream . I was playing that girl with insecurities . And when I saw it , I was like , ‘ Oh s ***. What did I do ?’ And I started talking about being proud of the way I looked . I actually really like my skin tone .”
Several prominent Bollywood celebrities have been recently weighing in on their culpability when it comes to endorsing fairness products in the country . Actor Abhay Deol recently took to Facebook to publicly call out his own peers from the industry who have done advertisements for various fairness creams and his posts have since gone viral .
( The Better India )