August 21, 2010

Pablo Neruda

I love the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda's poetry. Had he been alive, he would have turned a 106 on the 12th of July this year. If only I knew Spanish I would have enjoyed the flavor of his poems even more. If reading his translations can be so exhilarating, imagine the impact of reading those poems in in the language in which the poet thought of those words. Writing love poems is difficult. It is hard to become mushy or melodramatic. The ability to express this complex human emotion on paper is not easy. Neruda was a respected diplomat who always used green colored ink to write his poems. He felt green was the color of hope. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1971. He shared his insight on poets and poetry when in his Nobel Prize acceptance speech. He said ...

August 14, 2010

Make Better Slides

The Wikipedia told me about the "Chinese water torture". This was a torture that was supposed to drive its victim insane with the stress of water dripping on a part of the forehead for a very long time. It was characterized by the inconsistent pattern of water drips. Supposedly, the desire for the human brain to make a pattern of the timing between the drops will also eventually cause insanity to set in. That was then. Today that method is replaced by subjecting unsuspecting colleagues to horrible presentations that makes the water torture look almost benign. There are many reasons why presentations go haywire. You have probably suffered through many sessions where the speaker reads through what really looks like the pages of a book - except that all 5000 pages including the graphs and tables of research data are all put into one slide. The font is small enough to inspire people not delay any more the decision whether to wear specs or not. Worse still many presenters feel that the slide is like a teleprompter. They read it out line by line and imagine that the audience is either illiterate or so lazy that they will not read stuff even if it is in front of them. Here is the big secret -1. If you have sentences to share with your audience, use a Word document2. If you have data and graphs to show – use Excel. Give them a printout that they can either read ahead of the meeting or can sus out after you have gone home3. If have a conclusion to share or an idea you want them to remember use PowerPointThe Slide Rule (pun intended): Have a single point on a slide – preferably with a visual. The visual should be about the story that goes with the slide. The slides are for the audience to remember as key take aways. Slides are not speaker notes. It is not about the slides anyway.

August 11, 2010

Funny People

Do you think Indians in general have a sense of humour?Our culture is full of stories the witty person - think Tenalirama, Gopal Bhand, or Birbal. The theater forms have all had the comic as an integral part of the story. Indian cinema - Hindi as well as other Regional language cinema has also seen development of humor. Hence in a country of a billion people there is a healthy percentage of people who relish different shades of it. Humor is very situation specific and context specific. What you find funny as a ten year old may not be so when you are older. Some humor is specific to a region or social class. Each language has its own notion of humor as does each class of society. The breadth of humor one appreciates is a by product of the extent of exposure one has had to people who are different. As Indians have become more confident, we have learnt to laugh at ourselves. Only someone who is secure within can laugh at himself or herself. Self deprecating humor is reflective of a self assured person. I believe economic prosperity and exposure to a global environment have expanded the variety of jokes we laugh at today. You see more comedy shows on TV than we did a few years back. Youtube and the Net has given us access to more brands and flavors of humor. So as a country we are discovering the joys of a global fare.

August 1, 2010

In Praise of Irrationality

We have all grown up in a world that clearly values rationality and rational behavior. Being emotional was frowned upon. Whenever someone displays emotions in public view it makes news (Think of Maradona's expressions as the team played and lost) and the world turns its cameras to look at the person who just "lost it". When I studied Science in school, I was told by my teacher that if there was something that cannot be explained by Science it was not worth knowing and that it was obviously irrational. Such was the vehemence with which I was nudged towards being rational. As I grew to develop my own view of the world, I got fascinated by the limitations of rationality. Rational stuff had a logical sequence and clearly activated that part of my brain that I had difficulty accessing. You try this one and you got to do this real quick: A bat and a ball cost $1.10 in total. The bat costs a dollar more than the ball. How much does the ball cost?Write down your answer. If you said that the ball costs 10c, then you are part of the majority. That is the good news. The bad news is that the correct answer is 5c. Shane Frederick, Prof at MIT Sloan posed this question to more than 3,000 students at eight different universities. Fewer than half gave the correct answer. The trick is to not go by your instinct which gives the wrong answer, but to take a second more and reflect on it. Shane has developed a 3 question test - that question is one of the three - that can be almost as accurate in predicting characteristics that other tests like the SAT, ACT, or the Wonderlic Personnel Test. He also found that those who do well on the cognitive reflection test tend to be more patient in decisions between smaller sooner rewards and larger later rewards. They are also more willing to gamble in financial domains.

July 24, 2010

Udaan

Four school mates scale the walls of the Boys Hostel to watch a seedy B Grade film Kanti Singh Ke Angoor. To their horror they discover that the middle aged man getting cozy with a woman in the row behind them is the Hostel warden. This chance encounter turns a harmless teenage adventure into the beginning of a life changing experience. Forced to come back to Jamshedpur to live with his authoritarian father who Rohan - the protagonist (Rajat Barmecha) has not met for eight years. Udaan is the story that is beautifully layered. There is the relationship among four friends that is brief but endearing. Rohan is coming back home to a father (brilliant performance by Ronit Roy) who scoffs at his poems and does not hesitate to wallop him mercilessly when drunk. Rohan is forced to sign up to study Engineering and work in his father's small run down foundry. It is grim existence for a dreamer. Rohan still manages to sit on the banks of Subarnarekha river and write some really sensitive poetry. The other layer in the story is the brilliantly handled relationship between Rohan and his 6 year old step brother (played by Aayan Boradia).

July 18, 2010

Mother Pious Lady

I have always believed that India has had two landmark events that continues to impact where we are headed as a nation. Political independence happened in 1947 and then economic independence happened - at least for the middle class in 1991 when India took the big bold step towards liberalization. I think we had to achieve political independence to make way for economic independence. I believe that political and economic freedom will clear the way for India to build an inclusive society that will help us to say that we have achieved social freedom as well. There are many ways to understand a society. When societal shifts take place, they show up in many places because the expected traditional behavior gets replaced or gets reflected in a new idiom. While some things change, at least at the surface, they tend to show up in mysterious ways. You need a sharp eye to observe these, decode them and then hold up a mirror so that others understand it too. Santosh Desai's book Mother Pious Lady tends to offer these priceless nuggets of insight about contemporary India by leveraging the insights that he has of Indian consumers thanks to his years of experience in advertising. Add to it his insightful, entertaining and pungent style of writing. Mother Pious Lady is all that.Santosh talks about advertising often (See this video) and is a popular choice as a speaker in in advertising forums in India and abroad. It is difficult to describe India and Indians in short snapshots. Here is an ad I found to be insightful and hilarious.Mother Pious Lady is a lot like that ad you just saw. It has loads of short essays that take up different elements of everyday India. If you are intrigued about what the title means, it is from a matrimonial ad that Santosh came across once :) Matrimonials are a great insight into a society. For a society obsessed with fair skin (Just look at the number of skin lightening products in India starting from Fair & Lovely by Unilever), it is not surprising to see that showing up in ads. "Wheatish complexion, slim and homely, KKB, non Manglik, 5'3", father very high govt official, mother pious lady, brother MBA with handsome salary seeks respectable marriage" is a complex code that can be understood only by an Indian. Here is Russel Peters (a stand up Canadian comedian who is of Indian origin) describing his take on arranged marriages. Or this ad for that matter...Why during any event, are hordes of volunteers wearing large badges made of ribbon running around barking orders looking very busy? Why will someone when caught jumping a traffic light yell back at the cop, "Do you know who I am??". Why is squeezing the last drop out of any bargain so intrinsically coded in our genes? Why do stainless steel utensils matter to us? Insights on food, music, Bollywood etc all find place in this book. Are all the essays equally insightful and entertaining - ummm no. But then that should not be expected in a book which has almost a 100 essays and peeks into a psyche as complex as India's.The language is witty. The symbols get decoded and little by little things that have always made sense only to Indians gets to make sense. I loved the book. To understand what economic freedom does to a society, look at how it has affected consumer behavior and then get an ad guru to describe it in an interesting manner. Mother Pious Lady does just that.

July 5, 2010

Kindle New Possibilities

The weight of the school bag has been the subject of much debate and speculation. Last January the Central Board of Secondary Education issued a circular to all heads of institutions, to lighten the weight of school bags, especially at the primary level. (see the video here). Sometimes schools have come up with ideas to alleviate this weighty issue. Apart from limiting the number of books that children need to study, schools have also been asked to make arrangements so that students up to Class II can deposit their books in the school itself. Diverse studies on school bag weights conducted by different NGOs across the country have found the average weight carried by a student to a school to range beteen 6kg and 10kg. Internationally, most countries observe norms that limit the weight of school bags to less than one-seventh of the weight of the student. The BBC quotes a study that shows that more than a third of Italian pupils carry bags which weigh more than 30% of their body weight at least once a week.The studies advise limiting the weight of backpacks in accordance with labor law standards. "Rate of low back pain in children are approaching those seen in adults. Although the economic importance of the problem is small at this age, the lack of certified limits for backpack carrying is short-sighted."While India's largest public school system - The Kendriya Vidyalayas actually prescribed a formula for the weight of the school bag. As per the norms, the bag for children in Class-I and II should not be more than two kg, while it should be less than 3 kg for students of Class-III and IV. The prescribed weight is less than four kg for children in Class V-VIII, while the upper limit is six kg for students in Class VIII-XI. What the norms miss out is that the school bags do not carry just books. There are story books, Music, DVD, make up, games, the occasional pets, iPods... the list goes on. Check out ths video and educate yourself.["allowFullScreen":"true","allowscriptaccess":"always","src":"http://www.youtube.com/v/9cqStzggozU&hl=en_US&fs=1?color1=0xcc2550&color2=0xe87a9f","allowfullscreen":"true"]WHAT IF...What if we give each child a Kindle (or equivalent eBook reader) on the first day they step into school. We could then load all the readings, supplementary reading and perhaps even the school library on to the reader. We could put the entire set of readings (class 1-12) along with the Wikipedia made available to them. The content could updated once the children go to the school or to a cybercafe. The weight of all the books and notebooks could be replaced by this device that weighs approximately 300 gms or about 10 oz.ADVANTAGES1. Latest content available and corrections incorporated easily. Think of the freeware that is available today (MIT has 1900 courses available for free as on date)2. Children can read at their own pace. Visually challenged readers can use audio features to listen to the text. There are lots of text to speech converters available.3. Possible to submit homework also online. Projects etc will be better researched4. Cheaper than buying textbooks and notebooks every year and for each subject5. One time cost of the Kindle can be paid back over the 12 years.UNANSWERED QUESTIONS1. How do we make Wi-fi connectivity available in rural areas?2. Who will bear the cost of the e-Book readers - esp for those who cannot afford it?The answer to both can be in Corporations stepping forth to put money gifting readers in schools they adopt. The content can be pre-loaded before giving it to the student. Once a quarter the content can be updated. Mass scale adoption will dramatically bring down the cost of the reader. Maybe we can experiment by doing a pilot in someNo more back breaking school bags. Now the children could simply carry their lunch box, water bottle, the iPod,Makeup box to school. How much easier would that be :)-----------------Acknowledgement: My friend Kaushik Chakraborty first suggested this idea. He recommended we give a Kindle to each employee when they come to for a Leadership Development program.

June 26, 2010

Rajneeti

Prakash Jha the director of Rajneeti, is a multi faceted person. From his first documentary made in 1974, his body of work spans more than 25 documentaries, nine feature films, two television features and three television series. My favorite would have to be Mungerilal Ke Haseen Sapne, a popular Hindi TV comedy serial based on James Thurber's novel The Secret Life of Walter Mitty. In 1989, he took a sabbatical from films, and moved to Bihar for four years, during period he formed two organizations, Anubhooti, which trains young people from region, in film making, and Samvedan, in Champaran, to promote small and micro industries. The National Award winning film Gangaajal (trans: Water of the Ganges) made in 2003 based on the infamous incident in 1980 in Bhagalpur, Bihar when 31 undertrials were blinded by cops pouring acid in their eyes. Prakash Jha is no stranger to storytelling. Rajneeti (Trans: Politics) is a blend of the great Indian epic Mahabharat, some elements of dynastic politics of India's ruling party and generous "tributes" to The Godfather.

June 13, 2010

Interview with Samit Basu

"Let us imagine that you had bought, in secret, the world’s most precious jewel, the Eye of Empire, a massive ruby known to have left a trail of lives—violently lost—behind it as it journeyed across harsh lands in the care of desperate men." So begins Samit Basu's new book Terror on the Titanic - his first Young Adult novel. Meet Samit, India's first fantasy novelist and the first well-known Indian author to cross over into comics. He is the author of an extremely popular trilogy of fantasy novels, the GameWorld Trilogy, comprising The Simoqin Prophecies (2004) The Manticore's Secret (2005) and The Unwaba Revelations (2007). He has written comics for Marvel Comics in India. Outlook featured him along with Shreya Ghoshal - India's top playback singer and Konkona Sen Sharma the brilliant actress. He got inspired to start a career as an author during a dull class at IIM (Ahmedabad) while pursuing his MBA. Read on what this talented writer is all about.