Mehboob Apke Qadmon Mein
Like MPTH, GTKP was well-handled material. However, the real question is, are stories like these part of the new normal? Or to be precise, would constant visibility of such themes make one prone to accept them as part of life, and perhaps influence less immature minds who can’t tell right from wrong?
“I believe that 95 percent of our audience are maasoom [innocent], and you have to explain stories for them in a maasoom way,” Kadwani continues, especially on what drama directors and television content teams at channels want to present. It’s a struggle against temptation.
“The question is not simply about how you are depicting things, but also for whom you are making things. Unfortunately in Pakistan, even for veteran producers, your success depends on how successful your current project is.”
Kadwani tells me that is one of the dilemmas he deals with every day. It is also one of the reasons why he and Qureshi have a staunch vetting process when they are fashioning content. Their current on-air weekly line-up, which he recounts in vivid detail, is made up of diverse themes and stories.
Alif, one of the series running on television, for example, has a central character who is deliberately being presented in darker, perhaps irreverent, shades, but who has a very visible trajectory of personal redemption that anyone can guess. By the end of the serial, he may not be the person he was at the beginning, Kadwani tells me — and that’s a good thing.
People know the difference between right and wrong, Saeed, Baig and Seja tell me from time to time.
“Even if we make content with adult themes, it doesn’t influence people to go out and commit adultery,” says Seja. “Infidelity might look like the in-thing right now but, six months from now, in another quarter, another topic might seem trending. That’s just the nature of this business.”
Published in Dawn, ICON, November 17th, 2019