Ah yes, Bollywood. Discuss. My Bollywood experience was like this: I went to work around 11 am every day and stayed until about 8. During that time, there were no midday dance sequences. No fast zoom-ins on dramatic faces. Not much color, really. I guess, in a sense, everything I thought Bollywood was.... wasn't.
I think I recall coming here on the airplane imagining my job to involve holding a clipboard, wearing a headset, taking down timecodes, getting chai for important people, fanning the actors, showing Russian women how to dance the Bollywood dance steps, marrying Hrithik Roshan, what? Ideas about the future always come with a dose of fantasy.. and even so, I was surprised at how normal everything seemed.
I had no clipboard. No headset. Never saw timecodes. Chai was brought to me. Actors never came. Never saw a Russian woman. Never saw Hrithik in person (but still just as studly on screen).
I sat at my desk. Looked at the pidgeons. Watched the rain come and go.
Sounds like New York.
Helped director Prakash Jha with his tasks. Sent his notes, sent his text messages. Went to parties where there were open bars, buffets of food and chocolate mousse, and famous people. Planned events. Sent costumes away to radio station contests.
Sounds like Bollywood.
The big difference is in the word "intern." At most places in the States, "intern" is a glorified word for "office bitch." You do what they say, even if you're more qualified than other people in the office, you get their coffee. Even if you've been trained in the latest technology whereas they might have picked it up in college or along the way, you sit... trying to slip into conversation that you're willing to help, but knowing that you can't, really, because you're at the bottom of the office food chain. They've earned their stripes. You earn yours by being endlessly patient.
Where I worked (at Prakash Jha Productions), they were interested in what I thought. They involved me in shoots, discussions, events. My words mattered, whereas at home my words were nullified my my job title. "Intern."
Intern is a rather invented position here. I fall somewhere in the gray area between office boy and assistant director. It's a large gray area, and it shows. One day I'll just be updating this blog. The next I am planning the design for a success party for the entire cast and crew at a 5-star hotel. The next day I'm writing and sending thank you notes. Then tomorrow I am helping with editing.
Me. An intern. Editing. My God... do they know what I do back home?
The word "intern" used to sound so ugly. So laced with inexperience. So low. But here, I was trusted. Asked questions. Had conversations with the director, joked with him, and asked, by him, to come back and work on his next film. I don't know why I deserved this chance more than any other interns in the world. An intern isn't supposed to venture into those areas. They are shown their place in the office. They stay there.
But here... I was shown my place in the office. My desk. But I was hardly at it. I was called from my desk when I was needed. I had lunch with the entire staff. I was treated as someone with a perspective, with intelligence, with an opinion.
For the first time, I actually feel like college mattered. Not for just getting a "foot in the door." But for putting my skills to actual use.
Which is nice. Because college is expensive.
So it's been a nice feeling, really. Feeling like you're worth something after 4 years of learning. I had to leave my country to figure that out, but isn't that how it is always?
Sometimes you need to step away from the familiar to actually get a good look at it. To understand it.