Image Courtesy : Here |
During
my teen years, I was such a die-hard fan of Aamir Khan that I had posters of
him on my bedroom walls. It was a magical time before bad boys became cool, so
yeah we liked chocolate boys then, the ones with pink lips and lesser facial
hair than a new born baby. Aamir kept doing his goofy acts Mills & Boon
romance and slapstick comedy and all the girls were happy. Slowly but steadily, a
strange wind of social reform blew over him and there was no turning back.
Aamir Khan got enlightened under the game changing tree of Bollywood when he
realized that his role in this world is to impose his opinion on a nation he
thought had no persona of its own.
I
don’t distinctly remember when I stopped being a fan because his focus was
diverted and with each passing day he looked more and more like some sort of a
Bharat Ratna wannabe.
Meanwhile, in a parallel but steady track, SRK was scoring
with his signature pose and coy smiles and like millions of girls in India, I shifted
loyalties too. Well, what did you expect I did not sign some kind of YRF contract
with Aamir Khan fan club. Aamir Khan's opinions and his movies with morals kept
instilling in our nation, a feeling that he is an intellectual. Everyone else
who made movies for entertainment looked like complete morons.
When he wore only a transistor in the poster of PK, he was getting into the skin of his character, but he is
entitled to his royal opinion about Sunny Leone who usually wears more clothes
than him. He did a whole movie about idol worship and thinks he can change an
entire nation, its ancestors and a religion that was born a million years ago.
I
did not like PK for two reasons. One, it was preachy. Two, I don’t care about
what Aamir Khan thinks about my religion; so why like a movie that propagates
Aamir Khan’s opinions and enhanced lips?
Basically
everyone is entitled to their opinions. Aamir Khan voiced his utterly hypocritical view
on AIB roast as well. Next thing you know he will make a movie about humor that
is not his type. I watched the three videos of AIB at least three times each. I
shared it to everyone I knew who’d appreciate a good laugh. But my opinion on MY
blog after watching each of the videos three times is nothing like Aamir Khan,
the self-proclaimed voice of young middle aged India judging it without
even watching it once. If Monica Geller’s parents can coin the term ‘pull a
Monica’ we have every right to call ridiculous hypocrisy ‘pull an Aamir Khan’.
The
house maid who does not turn up regardless of giving a speech earlier about how
she never misses work, the friend who betrays after building up a lot of trust, that girl who scores record breaking marks
despite promising that she dint even open her book, the girlfriend who cheats
after threatening her boyfriend of dire consequences if he cheats on her – are all
different shapes of Aamir Khan.
How
to deal with the Aamir Khans in our lives, you ask? Let’s take a hint from Shah
Rukh Khan. IGNORE and keep doing what you are doing. It is pretty much working for
him; I think it should work for us too.