MTV Desi targetted for Desis

I Want My Hyphenated-Identity MTV

By DEBORAH SONTAG

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/19/arts/music/19sont.html?pagewanted=1&adxnnl=1&adxnnlx=1119266395-vwgitTboiAdAFjXRT7F1RA

Published: June 19, 2005
ON a fine spring day in Manhattan, Reshma Taufiq, 28, was the first to audition for a role on a new MTV channel that will be aimed at second-generation desis, or immigrants from the Indian subcontinent. Her emerald-green bodice fit snugly atop navel-baring jeans, and her long black hair curtained her cheekbones as she sweated under the studio lights, trying sexy, then cheery, then exuberant variations on “Live from Jackson Heights, Queens, it’s MTV Desi.”

Courtesy of MTV Desi
Ms. Taufiq summed herself up: R&B artist who is bilingual in English and Hindi; news reader for a local ethnic channel on which she conducts phone-in quizzes on Bollywood trivia; frequenter of the late-night desi party scene who thinks that arranged marriages are not such a bad idea; and, well, chemical engineer now working in software development at Hewlett-Packard.

Azhar Usman, 29, with his knitted skullcap and full beard, presented somewhat differently. An MTV executive, he explained, had recruited him, saying: “We’re going to redefine the identity of the MTV host. It doesn’t have to be someone sexy and good-looking.” A comedian (and lawyer) from Chicago, Mr. Usman used the audition to invent an exaggeratedly accented (and quite amusing) character: Vijay the V.J.

Most of the applicants thanked MTV for thinking of them as a demographic ready for a music-video channel all its own. “It’s so nice to be recognized,” said Tara Austin, a Sri Lankan-American from Los Angeles. “I am just an American girl at the end of the day, but I have a strong South Asian background. I eat with my hands, you know? We’re, like, so hungry for hearing our own culture.”

That’s what MTV World is counting on as it introduces three new channels focusing on the growing population of young, acculturated Asian-Americans: first, MTV Desi, which will go on the air in late July; then MTV Chi, for Chinese-Americans, by the end of the year; and MTV K for Korean-Americans next year. The channels will not be merely tweaked reproductions of MTV India, MTV China or MTV Korea, three of MTV’s 42 channels abroad. Rather, they will, like their target audiences, be hybrids, blending here and there and grappling with identity issues, mostly in English.

MTV Desi will serve as the prototype. Interspersed among Bollywood videos, electronic tabla music and English-Gujarati hip-hop, it will feature brief documentary clips profiling desis, comic skits about South Asian-American generational conflicts, interviews with bicultural artists and desi house parties, live. MTV Chi will mix up Mandarin rock, Canto pop and Chinese-American rap; MTV K will tap into South Korean hip-hop and the little-known but vibrant Korean-American pop scene. MTV Desi will start on satellite nationally and then move to digital cable systems in various parts of the country.

MTV World’s premise for these new channels was commonsensical: that young bicultural Americans have tastes different from those of youths in their ethnic homelands and therefore need, as it were, a customized MTV.

In that premise lay a confluence of academic and commercial thinking. For at least a decade, academics have explored the idea that many immigrants possess “transnational” identities. That is, aided by jet travel, technology and global commerce, they - and their children - maintain vital, current links to homelands that are never really left behind. There has been a fervent debate in intellectual circles about the “cultural space” inhabited by the children of recent immigrants and to what extent its very “hybridity” makes it a place of its own.

MTV’s exploration was less theoretical: market research through house parties and minigroups involving Asian-Americans in New York and Los Angeles. MTV concluded that second-generation immigrants not only desire their own age-appropriate connection to their parents’ homeland but that they also passionately want to see their struggle to define themselves as hyphenated Americans mirrored on television.

“If you’re a young Chinese-American or Indian-American, what channel do you tune into to see yourself, to see artists that reflect your lifestyle?” asked Nusrat Durrani, 44, senior vice president and general manager of MTV World. He has an almost missionary zeal about this project, but then, as a native of Lucknow, India, who now lives in Brooklyn, he has a firsthand view of hybrid life. As he sees it, the Asian-American population, which is booming, is also coming of age. “This country has had the African-American experience, the Hispanic-American experience, and now it is the time for the third-largest group, the Asian-Americans,” he said.

The Asian-American population grew to 12.3 million in 2004 (or 14 million, when including Asians of mixed race) from 6.9 million in 1990, according to the Census Bureau. The three target audiences for the new MTV channels, especially Indian-Americans, are better educated and more affluent than average Americans, according to the census. The median family income of an Asian Indian in the United States was $70,708 in 1999, compared with $50,046 for all Americans; 64 percent held at least a bachelor’s degree, compared with 24 percent for all American families.

Still, Mr. Durrani said, “The Asian-American experience has not been articulated on the national stage, although there are these incredibly vibrant subcultures, artists from all these communities who are entirely untapped.”

ENTER MTV, ready to give these artists a platform, to “superserve” the young ethnic populations of the United States and, then, perhaps, to entice young Americans of all backgrounds to tune in and check out a universe, cultural and musical, that they know little about.

These channels won’t live or die by the size of their crossover audience, said Van Toffler, president of MTV Networks, a division of Viacom. Initially MTV will be supplementing an investment of what he called “several millions” with some programming from MTV UK, MTV India and other international MTV’s.

But there is nonetheless the hope that these channels will reach beyond their niche audiences, meaning that MTV, which has long exported American pop culture to the world, is trying to import global pop culture into the United States.

When MTV began to establish channels abroad in the late 1980’s, critics viewed the expansion as quintessential cultural imperialism that would homogenize youth culture worldwide. Early on, though, MTV learned that it made better business sense to be “glocal” - their motto is “think global, act local” - than to impose a wholly American cultural product. Young people, wherever they were, would watch international acts for only so long before they wanted to see something of their own. So each of MTV’s international channels developed local talent and its own personality: MTV Indonesia has a call to prayer, MTV Italy has cooking shows, MTV Brazil is, visually speaking, extremely colorful and, sartorially speaking, quite bare.

Still, the MTV’s around the world share that distinctive, hyperkinetic MTV footprint, and they are profoundly commercial, and not always profoundly artistic, enterprises. So some second-generation immigrants are leery of MTV’s zeroing in on their market potential.

One young woman hoping to be a V.J., Niharika Desai, 27, declared during her interview that she had auditioned partly out of curiosity to see “what corporate America thinks of me.”

Her comment met poker faces from Mr. Durrani, who that day wore all black and studded jewelry, and Lem Lopez, a Filipino-American executive producer for MTV World, who wore his long hair in a slipknot atop his head and his floral shirt loose and half unbuttoned.

“Not that you’re corporate,” Ms. Desai said to them, pedaling backward. “I know that you’re a kinder, gentler version of the Man.”

Projecting a kind of perky punk aesthetic, Ms. Desai wore her hair shaggy, with a streak of blond, her jeans folded up and her Converse sneakers faded. A video editor who grew up in upstate New York, she verbally motored on, trying to make amends, sort of.

“My whole thing coming here, it’s really cool that there’s going to be a desi channel,” she said. “I also have some thoughts. Growing up, I became who I am more from influences in Poughkeepsie than from the Indian community. My parents didn’t raise me watching Hindi films and what not. So I implore you, please do something more than Bollywood.” Actually, she punctuated Bollywood with an expletive, and then again when she clarified: “Don’t get me wrong. I love Bollywood. But desi kids in America would so benefit from having a cool influence and learning hip stuff, too, like M.I.A.”

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

Published: June 19, 2005
(Page 3 of 4)

Ms. Desai was referring to Maya Arulpragasam, a Sri Lankan-English performer who goes by the stage name M.I.A. Clearing his throat, Mr. Durrani, who seemed to be charmed by Ms. Desai's irreverence, said simply: "I want to put you completely at ease. This isn't corporate America. And M.I.A. is so central."

M.I.A. is the daughter of a Tamil militant whose family fled the violence in Sri Lanka and eventually settled in a housing project outside London. There, she said in an interview that will be shown on MTV Desi, she started over as refugee "scum," with hand-me-down clothes, in special schools, on the lowest rung of the English social ladder.

Ms. Arulpragasam is a mesmerizing entertainer who cuts and pastes musical genres - old-school electro, futuristic dance hall reggae, Bhangra, punk, hip-hop - while moving from Cockney to Tamil to American slang and back. Her sound is catchy and full of political attitude, and her videos mix urban grime and guerrilla war scenes. The one for her single, "Sun Showers," puts her in the jungle, on an elephant, washing clothes in a river, dangling on a tree limb as she rhymes and cracks open a mango.

"It's an awesome video," Ms. Desai said after watching it in preparation for a screen test in which she would "throw to," or introduce, "Sun Showers."

Mr. Durrani agreed. "M.I.A. is MTV Desi," he said.

Actually, it is Mr. Durrani who is really MTV Desi. Not only is he an immigrant - he was also lured to this country by MTV.

As Mr. Durrani describes it, in the early 1980's, while an M.B.A. student in Lucknow, he received a gift - a tape with the first music videos he had ever seen, including David Bowie's "Let's Dance," which he found "magical and transporting." Years later, when Mr. Durrani was married and working in Dubai as a marketing director for Honda, he watched MTV for the first time. And he needed to be part of it, he said.

He traveled to New York, making a cold call to the human resources department at MTV headquarters in Times Square. Told that he did not possess the qualifications for a job there, Mr. Durrani was undeterred. He and his wife, Afshan, a fashion designer, discarded their comfortable expatriate life in the shopping capital of the Middle East and moved to New York to start over as students. In the summer of 1996, Mr. Durrani, while working on a master's degree in communications, secured a foothold - an unpaid internship - at MTV and never let go.

IN a recent interview in his Times Square office, Mr. Durrani sat in front of a Bob Dylan poster and discussed his father's scratched vinyl 78's of Indian divas like Begum Akhtar, his own exposure as a youth to Western music ranging from Sam Cooke and Dean Martin to Dylan and Bowie, and his passion for discovering a new generation of bicultural musicians in England and America.

Most of these artists have not enjoyed the success of M.I.A. or Jin, a Chinese-American rapper with a song shouting, "Yeah, I'm Chinese, and what?" and proclaiming, "The days of the pork fried rice and the chicken wings/ coming to your house five years is over/ Y'all gonna learn Chinese!" Both of them have already gotten air time on the regular MTV.

But Karmacy, a vibrant hip-hop fusion group composed of self-described "bicultured individuals" of Indian origin, has not. Karmacy is something of a cult band based in Los Angeles, and, as Sammy Chand, 30, the lead member and producer of the group, said, "We've been in our own little universe for such a long time." MTV Desi changes that. "You can always go city to city, club to club, but MTV Desi will really give us a way to speak to our audience in a unified manner," he said. "It will be like a Grand Central station for everyone into our kind of music."

When Karmacy introduced a new music video at the Key Club on Sunset Boulevard in May, MTV Desi was there to record it. "Blood Brothers" is percussively rapped in English and Gujarati, with synthesized sitar and flute. In three acts, it tells the story of the conflict between two Indian brothers when one emigrates to the United States to seek fame and fortune. "How do I move on, bhai (brother)?" the chorus goes, then repeats the question in Gujarati. "Cuz no matter where I go/ My soul is in the same place."

Ms. Taufiq, the V.J. applicant who works at Hewlett-Packard, said she had opened as a singer for Karmacy.

For her audition, Ms. Taufiq was shown a Bollywood music video, an extravagant number from "Happiness and Tears," a huge hit film in 2001. She knew it well, and her head bounced along. When Mr. Durrani exclaimed that the leading man, Hrithik Roshan, was a seriously handsome man, Ms. Taufiq recoiled somewhat, saying, "But he has six fingers!"

Mr. Usman viewed the same video, watched it with a progressively widening smile, laughed robustly at the end and said, "Are you finding this ridiculous?"

Given several minutes to prepare an introduction to the video for a screen test, Ms. Taufiq decided to pretend that she was broadcasting from Jackson Heights, in front of Kebab King, whose quality, she said, could be measured by the long line of yellow taxis in front.

**
Mr. Usman decided to go with: "My uncle in India says desi stands for 'doctors earn significant incomes.' My relatives in Pakistan say desi means 'Don't ever say India.' Here on MTV, desi means South Asian flavor, style and music. Check this new video out. It's going to knock your socks off. You've heard of a big production budget. How about 500 backup dancers? This is like 'Grease' meets desi, making it ...greasy. No, that doesn't sound right."
**
Mr. Lopez grinned. "That's absolutely on the money, man," he said, and then Mr. Usman broke into broken English as Vijay the V.J.

"People think in my country everybody so sad, crying, terrorism," Vijay said. "We not terrorism, we dancing. Not dancing like panties falling down .... What is this panties falling down" the buttocks? And so on.

In the end, the choice of a starting V.J. was difficult. Mr. Durrani said that he worried that Ms. Taufiq was too much of an Indian-American stereotype (beautiful overachiever) and that Mr. Usman would be straitjacketed in a V.J. role. Ms. Desai had no experience in front of a camera but she was cute, hip and sassy, and this captivated, as she put it, the Man.

And so Niharika Desai - a fresh take on Carson Daly, if ever there were one - will be the first face of MTV Desi, the first to introduce this channel to its audiences and then, perhaps, to introduce their vibrant, hyphenated culture to the larger world

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

mtv desi. Yeah right. Might as well call it mtv india. 99% of programming will be targeted toward hindians. Might throw us a couple of bones by showing a fuzon video once every week. :rolleyes:

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

You are right. For all practical purpose it is MTV-India. Look at International channel (AZN TV) in US. 99% of the content related to Indian subcontinent is India Centric and India related.

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

Yup, BET is a hit among gora Americans. :rolleye:

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

:eek: :eek: Not Azhar Usman out of Chicago!! The Very Funny Stand up Comedian who tells jokes on Muslim stereotypes!! :smiley: I betchya he was there just to see if they select him and then later make a joke out of it for one of his stand up acts!! LOL!! Or atleast I hope so!

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

Mr. Usman decided to go with: "My uncle in India says desi stands for 'doctors earn significant incomes.' My relatives in Pakistan say desi means ** 'Don't ever say India.' **

Is this true of the word Desi in Pakistan?

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

:nook:

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

will this be on in the USA?

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

hmm was pakistan or urdu even mentioned in that article..... Forget MTV desi

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

Most ppl here think desi they think India/Hindus, not Pakistanis/Muslims....

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

http://www.time.com/time/insidebiz/article/0,9171,1079504-2,00.html

Chasing Desi Dollars

Why the interest? It’s not just America’s growing appetite for South Asian culture–movies like Bend It Like Beckham and stars like Bollywood actress and model Aishwarya Rai. The marketing thrust started with the 2000 Census, which revealed that during the 1990s the number of Indians in the U.S. more than doubled–making them the fastest-growing Asian minority. There are some 2.5 million desis in the U.S., and the vast majority are Indian. That may not seem terribly significant compared with, say, 40 million Hispanics, but consider how premium a customer a South Asian is: Indians alone commanded $76 billion worth of disposable personal income last year, according to market-research firm Cultural Access Group, using figures from the University of Georgia’s Selig Center for Economic Growth; median household income is nearly $64,000–50% higher than the national average. The U.S. has always welcomed the world’s poor and working classes. India has sent its professionals.

And they’re not afraid to spend. Lakshmi Subrahmanian, 48, sums up the shopping habits of her four-person, five-computer, six-figure-income family this way: “We like to buy the best.” The mental-health counselor and her electrical-engineer husband Jayram, 53, who own a five-bedroom house in Coral Springs, Fla., are about to trade in their 2002 Mercedes–it’s time for something newer. That spells opportunity for General Motors, which has begun pushing Cadillacs in desi circles. “This is a great market,” says Jean Liu-Barnocki, GM’s manager for Asian-American marketing, “and we’re putting some very targeted resources behind reaching it.”

At first glance, that might seem fairly simple. Unlike Hispanics and other Asian minorities, South Asians often arrive fluent in English. The influence may be more British than it is American–cricket is preferred to baseball–but a desi in the U.S. can still pick up USA Today and understand a Gap ad.

Whether that message gets through, though, is a separate matter. “We speak English, but we don’t speak the same language,” says Vivek Sharma, senior manager of India Abroad, a U.S.-based newspaper that, along with titles such as India Today, India-West and New India Times, is attracting ads from the likes of Mercedes-Benz, Lufthansa, New York Life, GM, Western Union, AT&T and the New York Times. Just consider that Sean, in typical eyebrow-raising rock-star fashion, picked actress Bipasha Basu for his music video in part because she was racy enough to have had an onscreen kiss–a rarity for a Bollywood star. The mores of bare-it-all Hollywood could not be further away.

To make an advertising message culturally relevant, says Saul Gitlin, executive vice president at Kang & Lee Advertising, you have to do more than toss a desi face into a commercial. Values such as education, hierarchy and status are unshakable for desi families, even if modified to reflect American lifestyles. “There’s a core belief in higher education and studying and saving,” says Phil Salis, vice president of consumer marketing at MetLife, which has created desi-specific television advertising to run on satellite channels such as ZEE TV, B4U, Sony TV and TV Asia. He’s not kidding: 64% of Indians in the U.S. hold a bachelor’s degree, vs. 24% of the overall population. Says Salis: “That’s a great opportunity for financial services.”

Marketers are also recognizing that in close-knit, largely immigrant communities, familiarity with a brand plays a much more important role than it does with the general public. “Word of mouth is huge,” says Lakshmi Bhargave, 25, a graphic artist in Chicago. “We have this theory that between Indians, it’s more like two degrees of separation rather than the usual six.” So firms show up at desi events and subtly introduce the message: We’re a part of your community too. Wells Fargo sponsored a Bollywood concert in Cupertino, Calif., in June, setting up a table in the lobby and dispensing brochures touting its new money-transfer service to India, an initiative aimed at stealing business from Western Union. “It’s not just about advertising,” says Michelle Scales, director of the diverse growth segment at Wells Fargo. “It’s about being visible in the community.”

It took Hispanic marketers 20 years to convince media executives that there was a case for targeting Hispanics, and today people like Vimal Verma, chairman and CEO of American Desi, a satellite network that launched earlier this year, are engaged in a similar campaign for South Asians. He hopes what many in the industry do: if the entertainment platform is built, the advertising dollars will follow.

That’s what the folks back at MTV are banking on too. “If you wanted to reach young South Asians, there hasn’t been a branded, credible platform,” says Nusrat Durrani, senior V.P. and general manager of MTV World. Voilà MTV Desi, which should air nationally in July. After Jay Sean’s interview, he sticks around to pose for photographs with fans. “To me, it’s been a long time coming,” the singer says between autographs. “There is a massive market out there.” Sean, an artist and an entrepreneur, pauses and then continues, “We make up one-fifth of the population of the world. Imagine that.” --With reporting by Jeanne DeQuine/ Miami, Noah Isackson/Chicago and Laura A. Locke/ Cupertino

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

Pretty cool...

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

does anione know when it's starting and what chanel? i guess it will be a paid one..

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

:rotfl: You “MULLAH”. ]Pretty insecure about your man made Pakistani “culture” aren’t you?

Quaid-e-Azam Mohammed Ali Jinnah was on crack when he said we have a different culture from the Hindus, religion is different but culture is the same, Punjabi culture is same on both sides, Indian Sindhis, Rajasthani’s and Gujaratis all have similarities with Pakistani Sindhis, Kashmiris same on both sides, even the predominantly Mohajir/Karachi culture (i.e. Urdu culture) has more similarities with present-day north Indian Hindi culture than it does with Mughal culture of old and ethnically too we’re similar to north Indians.

Punjabi-Sindhi-Kashmiri, North Indian and Bangladeshi ethnicities all go under one broader ethnic Desi umbrella, all these ethnicities from the north of the Indian Subcontinent have a sort of underpinning which unites them all.

Our parents or grandparents left their original homelands behind them a very long time ago, most of us of South Asian descent who are born and raised abroad don’t feel any biased loyalty or patriotism to our ancestors countries, we have a soft spot for the culture our parents brought with them and enjoy it and we’ll take that culture from any quality source whether it be Indian or Paki as its identical on both sides, they’re not our countries anymore America and Britain are, and it aint the states (Pak or India) we have an interest in but rather the culture.

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

I Want My MTV Desi! Channel Focuses On Indian-Americans

http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?BRD=1865&dept_id=152944&newsid=14859767&PAG=461&rfi=9

MTV Desi, a channel aimed at young people with Indian heritage, mixes the beats of Bollywood and hip-hop.

At 9 p.m. on Tuesday night, the video for “Bulla Ki Jaana” from Sufi singer Rabbi Shergill kicked off the launch of MTV Desi, a channel aimed specifically at young Americans with an Indian background.

The song combines elements of pop and folk over a traditional Sufi poem. If the channel becomes as indispensable to South Asian immigrant young people, as MTV has to the wider youth population, “Bulla Ki Jaana” might even become as iconic as “Video Killed the Radio Star”—the first video played on MTV.

“Most of the people we spoke with did not see themselves on television,” said Nusrat Durrani, senior vice president at MTV. The channel has been putting the programming for MTV Desi together for the last 18 months and thinking about the concept for even longer. MTV is known for its meticulous research into the habits of its viewers and MTV Desi was no exception.

“We’re absolutely certain there’s a need for this,” said Durrani, who is overseeing the new channel. The network conducted interviews with young people of South Asian descent in urban areas all over the country, including the enclave of Jackson Heights, and came up with a slate of programming that includes the slick, short news programming and joke shows that the network’s become famous for.

MTV describes the channel as “music-centered” with a playlist that will reflect the diverse tastes of the audience and include American stars like Gwen Stefani, Missy Elliot, Truth Hurts and Timbaland, along with bi-cultural artists like Raghav, Jay Sean and MIA.
Many of the programs are from MTV India, like “MTV Bakra,” a prank show that bears a striking resemblance to the other MTV show, “Jackass.” Bakra is the Hindi name for goat, and idiomatically is used in much the same way as jackass. And according to Durrani, Bakra predates its American cousin.

MTV Desi is the first of three channels aimed at a specific American immigrant audience. MTV Chi, for Chinese-Americans and MTV K for Korean-Americans will launch during the next year. MTV Desi will no doubt provide an opportunity for advertisers to sharpen their focus on an immigrant group with an estimated $76 billion of disposable income per year. “Until this point,” Durrani said, “there really wasn’t a place for advertisers to go.”

Unlike the far larger Hispanic population, many Indian immigrants come to the United States highly educated and enter professions in the sciences. The word Desi, a broad term that refers to people with Indian heritage—including Bangladeshis, Sri Lankans and Guyanese—has even been referred to jokingly as an acronym for Doctors Earn Significant Incomes.

And some Desis wonder if MTV will simply cater to and reinforce stereotypes about their culture, or dig more deeply. “I’m worried that it will be mostly Indian based,” said 19-year-old Queens College student, Soshi Doza. Doza, who lives in Elmhurst, was born in Bangladesh and is a youth organizer with DRUM, Desis Rising Up and Moving, in Jackson Heights.

The culture, she explained, “has always been dominated by the Indian upper classes (while) working class people are struggling.” Will it just be about what people are wearing, or will there be discussions of immigration and economic issues? “It’s always ‘People are really happy in America,’ but in reality we are struggling. How is it going to portray that?”
MTV Desi is available to Direct TV customers who subscribe to the HindiDirect package. Durrani hopes to have the channel carried by all cable providers in the near future. “This project is very special to me,” he said. “It’s a key moment for South Asian culture.”

Re: MTV Desi targetted for Desis

stop disrespecting me motherfukker. Did I say **** to you. You got something to say, do it without personal attack *******.

All I said was they would only show hindian crap. And subsequent articles more than validify my claim. What the hell is wrong with calling it mtv india. Why the false advertising by calling it desi. I guess “desi” constitutes as only hindians.

Calling jinnah a crack smoker only shows your low caste hindu mentality, I could say something about gandhi but I wasn’t raised by a pack of wild dogs like you.