Indian TV soap-addicted Pak women have high incidence of psychological problems
December 12th, 2008 - 2:27 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Islamabad, Dec 12 (ANI): Women in Pakistan, who are addicted to TV soap operas, mostly produced in India, are found to have high incidence of psychological problems.
TV soaps, like Kyon Key Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi, Koi Apna Sa, Saans, Sanskriti, Shagun, Kahani Ghar Ghar Ki, Desh Mein Nikla HoGa Chand, have been so popular among Pakistani women that girls, housewives and elderly women alike are virtually addicted to them.
Women, who are mostly confined to their homes, keep waiting for them, and when they are on air, abandon work, glue to the screens and wont like to be disturbed. In fact, the lengthy episodes are followed by detailed discussions on storyline, characters, dresses and speculative talk on what will happen next.
Soap operas are very close to life and help women understand their problems, especially after marriage, and how to handle them. Ive little time to watch TV, as I spend a lot of time out due to job but I never miss them, The Daily Times quoted Salima Khan, a schoolteacher, as saying.
For her, the soaps offer some very thought-provoking messages besides entertainment, and women could easily associate themselves with the soap characters for their being present around them.
But, taking a close look will reveal that mostly the episodes show a womans victimization by another woman or women. Woman is shown making compromises and sacrifices for the family instead of rejecting injustices, both by in-laws and husband. And even she defies, she forgets the injustice done to her soon and patches up with the rivals.
Many women in the soaps are shown as a devil, which breaks families by playing dirty politics and in-house intrigues. The mother-in-law and sister-in-law mostly play the part of villain.
But the popularity is so much that Zarmeen Shahzadi, a housewife and a TC soap opera addict, even watched them during a ban on them a few years ago using VCD/DVD or Internet.
However, Naseema, a journalist, is of opinion that soap dramas are nothing more than family feuds and present issues and challenges faced by women in a negative manner and play with the emotions of emotionally weak women.
A workingwoman, Hameeda, said these soaps were for women whore work-shy and intriguers. She said soaps promoted violence against women, Indian traditions, norms and values etc.
However, theres a flip side to this growing popularity of soap operas with women. Psychologists report high incidence of psychological problems among women watching TV soaps.
On average, I attend to 10 to 15 women daily and many of them suffer from tension, anxiety and suspiciousness caused by Indian soap operas, said Dr Fawad Faisal of Shifa International Hospital Psychology Department. (ANI)
- Pakistani women love India's 'saas-bahu' sagas - Nov 11, 2010
- Soaps a bane for Italian filmmakers too - Nov 30, 2010
- 'Mummy Punjabi' - a condensed soap opera (IANS Movie Review) - Sep 04, 2011
- Modernity a far cry for women on small screen (March 8 is International Women's Day) - Mar 06, 2010
- Prime Time Indian Television Got A Makeover In 2010 - Dec 28, 2010
- Middle-aged men rule the roost on television - Jan 09, 2012
- TV reality shows sidelineing women viewers? - Oct 22, 2010
- My productions are not gender-biased: Ekta Kapoor - Dec 08, 2011
- No place for simple people in TV industry: Smita Singh - Nov 04, 2011
- Slapped, kicked, abused - whither women's empowerment on TV? (Lead) - Sep 28, 2010
- Slapped, kicked, abused - where's women's empowerment on TV? - Sep 28, 2010
- Mahadevan to turn TV show 'Ghar Jamai' into film - Sep 08, 2011
- Bollywood woman power: Vidya, Ekta carry the baton - Dec 09, 2011
- Why have seasoned actors faded away from TV? - Mar 05, 2010
- An actor who gets song ideas from TV role - Jun 01, 2011
Tags: apna, desh, dirty politics, elderly women, ghar ghar, hoga, indian tv, kahani ghar ghar ki, koi apna sa, mumbai terror attack, pakistani women, psychological problems, saans, saas bhi kabhi bahu thi, sanskriti, schoolteacher, shagun, soap opera, tv soap operas, tv soaps, victimization