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Going bungee jumping
Just Links
The Gita on Leadership
This Life on Lithium
Flow
The Slogan Generation
The Long Tail: A Review
The Gori Details
साहित्य पढ्न झ्याउ लाग्छ
लेख्न गाह्रो छ
Researching kuire researchers
Getting the most out of your MBA
FIVE QUESTIONS
Business lessons from an old job
Creative collaboration
Teaching economics
Returning to Nepal
Nepali typing using Unicode
Dating Comrade Natasha
The Dinner Conversation
National Consensus: Who Needs It?
I want my NTV
Neither here nor there
Julus for Hire
Diagnosing doctors
What They Can't Teach You at Harvard Business School?
A Suitable Girl



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     The Gori Details
Blogger: ashu, January 18, 2007
    

STRICTLY HUMOR

The gori details
by oohi ashu

Nothing like a modelling contest to remind you that beauty is only skin deep . . .

So there I was in CatManDo, working hard on a PowerPoint presentation all through Saturday afternoon, wondering what to do at night to let off some steam.

Should I call up friends and go see Mani Ratnam's movie "Yuva' at Jai Nepal Cinema with dinner at Thamel's Jatra afterwards? Or chill out with them at an airport sekuwa-ghar with beer? Or I could make some thick soup at home, and curl up with Ha Jin's book "The Bridegroom". Then again, listening to some humid jazz at one of Lazimpat's smoke-filled bars sounded good too.

Then the phone rang. My buddy Surendra Man Sthapit (aka SMS) was inviting me to the finale of 2004 Saboon Sundari Star Contest.

"For free, yaar,' SMS went on. "I've got you a pass, through my wife's employer. There's dinner afterward. Be
at Hyatt Regency at seven. I'll meet you at the lobby. And, uh, wear something nice, ok?.'

OK, sir!

The Hyatt was packed to the rafters with Kathmandu's who's who. Not the literary, poetic types -- with soulful doggy eyes. Nor the rabble-rousing political brigade, with left (or is it right?) arms up in the air. These were corporate types with Khajurao-figured wives in various stages of undress.

The multinational crowd was there in force, and so were
the media tycoons with their pretty secretaries. Elderly women - matronly types - sporting salt-and-pepper hair, were resplendent in their saris. The men were all dressed like Naya Sadak bankers. All seemed to know one other,
and in the pre-event cocktail, they all chatted with one another with effortless rib-poking banter.

The show begins.

Eighteen girls make an appearance, each wearing outrageously skimpy costumes that no sane woman would wear on the streets of Kathmandu. The models are scrawny —some look positively underfed, fit to appear on a Department of Health warning-against-malnutrition poster.

"Don't they feed these girls?" I lean over to SMS.
"Only lettuce," he answers.

What are these, then?
Goats?

The ethnography of the contestants is fascinating, and some of the visibly non-bahuni lasses have bahun surnames. What is going on here?

"When bahuns sleep around, they contribute to the melting pot of this great nation,” whispers someone next to SMS. The guy seated in front gives us a dirty look: we are ruining his concentration, with our discourse on amateur anthropology.

Well, it looks like the fair ones have an advantage in this contest. And sure enough, the dusky ethnic types -- despite all their pouts, oomph and writhingly sultry allure -- don't stand a chance.

The winner is as gori as she can be: Fair & Lovely indeed!

Feeling a bit out of place, I survey the audience: The Kathmandu elite in attendance is composed of old-line aristocrats -- largely irrelevant these days and in need of money. There are the yunnies (young, upwardly-mobile nepalis) who have amassed new money but are in the process of acquiring class by attending beauty contests as invited guests. And what could be better for both types than to cross-pollinate one other . . . to see and be seen together at events such as these?

Over in the far corner are those 60-something men who can't seem to get enough of the 18-year-olds' sashaying down the ramp, with their hips going clicketi-clack. Next to us is a nattily dressed Alfa Male who displays an enthusiasm for chatting up other people's wives while neglecting his own. The corporate also-wannabes are clicking away with their Olympus digitals just so they can ogle at the pictures with co-workers on Monday morning.

Given the state of the country (and this is 2004, folks!), I guess it is a form of escapism to spend a Saturday evening watching other people watching beautiful young women.

Hell, I could still get back to Ha Jin.

[Originally posted in parts on Sajha Kurakani, and subsequently published under a pseudonym in The Nepali Times newspaper, 2004

http://www.nepalitimes.com/issue/199/NepaliPan/2562 ]


Viewed: 2989 times.
COMMENTS:
Date: July 06, 2007
Name: ashu
Comments: Meera, Thank you for reading this humor piece and and sending me your comments. I understand your point. I am sorry that you find that particular sentence "offensive". That said, I would take this piece as a 'strictly humor' piece . . . that is, I would laugh with it, if it's funny or laugh at it, if it's not, and leave it at that, and not read anything beyond that here. This was written in a spirit of light-heartedness. After all, as the great humorist E B White once said, "Humor can be dissected as a frog can, but the thing dies in the process and the innards are discouraging to any but the pure scientific mind." oohi ashu

Date: July 05, 2007
Name: meera
Location: midwest
Comments: "When bahuns sleep around, they contribute to the melting pot of this great nation,” whispers someone next to SMS. Rude, utterly disgusting to say the least. Ashu dai why don't you tell that "someone" that many of us are biracials with parents who fell in love and actually married. We were not born because our dad slept around. Offensive!

Date: January 25, 2007
Name: CaMoFLaGeD
Location: Amrikaa
Comments: Nice one Ashu Dai,

I have never watched beauty contest,I would rather go to Sekuwa-Ghar and have sekuwas with chilled Tuborg! How does that sound? hmmmm!!

Thanx


Date: January 24, 2007
Name: scarlett
Comments: lolz.. a strong sense of deja vu there..me been in the same boat wearing same shoes..wat size do u wear anyway?

Date: January 21, 2007
Name: Aagantuk
Location: tyai USA
Comments: Ashu jee, imagine munching "Goat Sekuwa" in Sekhuwa-Ghar....!!! Good to know that Ha Jin finally saved you from a momentary hell....

 

 

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