The business of drama
TV content is determined by revenues, ratings and is bogged down by a lack of creativity; can the small screen be salvaged?
Lost glory: Can TV plays make a comeback?
TV dramas are getting worse but there are ways to revive creativity in the industry
The promos look promising; the sound tracks are melodious to listen to; press releases claim that this is a different serial. And here is what we get to watch: an attractive, vivacious young girl has set her heart on a good-looking, diligent, young man. They are cousins / neighbours but have hardly interacted with each other before. And as fate would have it they are not destined for each other. At least not initially.
A couple of episodes later the girl ends up marrying a good-for-nothing loafer. She puts up with his shenanigans, including his verbal and physical abuse, uttering cringe-worthy lines: “Maine toh ab sochna chor diya hai” (I have stopped thinking now). During the last set of episodes, she is divorced and it is the end of this world for her until she is rescued by a knight in shining armour in the form of her ex-lover.
In another ‘different’ serial aired on prime time, the protagonist is a young, spunky woman. Expectedly, she has a suitor with picture-perfect looks. The creepy suitor is an obsessive lover and stalker. She rebuffs his advances; the stalker-hero slaps her, even kidnaps her and after many twists and turns the couple end up getting married!
TV landscape is littered with cookie-cutter serials in which the only aim of the female lead character is to get married. Once she has achieved her aim she will endure verbal abuse from a mother-in-law from hell and ill treatment at the hands of her stalker husband. Eventually she is rescued by an ex-lover, who due to misunderstandings had drifted away, and all is well.
When I asked a TV drama-loving friend what serials he could recommend for my weekend TV bingeing he said he had lost interest in them some time ago because they had become unwatchable. Blogger Kanwal Murtaza often laments about the quality of dramas in her posts: “Our dramas are hitting an all-time low and our channels have no qualms showcasing such rubbish.”
Reviewers are also severe in their criticisms, finding major flaws in storyline, direction, acting and dialogues. “While surfing channels, it appears the only criteria to become an actor is good looks and nothing else. Expressing emotions through facial expressions have gone out of the window. The actors are wooden, second-unit directors are directing serials and, most importantly, there is no story. Making a drama is the easiest thing to do, it seems. Just get two young actors, hire a cameraperson and voila you have a drama,” Omair Alavi bluntly tells me.
Up until three years ago private TV channels were airing some of the most memorable dramas in recent times. Humsafar, Dastaan, Mera Saaein, Meri Zaat Zarra-e-Benishan, Bari Aapa, Durr-e-Shehwar, Shehr-e-Zaat, Annie ki Ayegi Baraat, Zindagi Gulzar Hai, Maat, Kankar, Rihaii, Bol Meri Machli, Bilquees Kaur, Pyare Afzal and Ullo Baraye Farokht Naheen are some of the names that immediately come to one’s mind. Each one of them had riveting storylines, powerful scripts, memorable acting and strong direction. Viewers who had earlier switched their allegiance to Indian soap operas were compelled to watch local dramas because they had become immensely watchable.
TV dramas need strong narratives
There is a dearth of ideas and television has lost its mojo, it seems. Is the writer to be blamed for this mess? Perhaps good dramas are being shown but are getting lost in the clutter.
I asked actor and director Rubina Ashraf who has seen all phases of TV dramas in both public and private sector. “On average, I read three scripts a day. The stories more or less revolve around a girl’s marriage or are saas-bahu sagas. And it’s been a while since I read a compelling script. I wouldn’t blame the writer for this. The onus lies on the channel head and the content in-charge.” Explaining further, she says the writer furnishes a script commissioned by people at the top.
Additionally, there is so much drama being shown that somewhere good plays are lost, she says. Citing the example of Mahwish Hayat and Humayun Saeed starrer Dil Lagi, which is currently on air on ARY Digital, she finds it is not run-of-the-mill, well-written with good performances. However, she, too, laments that such plays are too few and far between.