By Sanjay Pinto
To deify or to demonise. With a keyboard or pad to
hammer and a wall to spout, these are the extreme options exercised by average
cricket fans. Like a weathercock; they heap encomiums when Dhoni & Co win
and vent spleen when they don’t. In the good old days, there was just the Letters
To The Editor columns with limited space to comment on issues. Today the social
media has made users Editors in Chief of their thoughts with absolute freedom
to place in the public domain, just about anything that provokes them. Facebook
and twitter are a great leveler. Here everyone is an expert. And nothing
engages the nation, quite like cricket. What started as sarcastic posts like
“If you want to watch India win, switch to hockey!” gradually degenerated into
angry outbursts such as “ Endowment Lectures by the Men In Blue. Dhoni on
'Fast Outfield, Slow Fielders.' Tendulkar on 'The Mirage Called The
Hundredth Hundred.' Sehwag on 'Senior-Junior, kya fayda?' Gambhir on ' Keeping
Mum Helps and How'and R. Ashwin on 'Best Practices and How to Get Away from
Them On the Field.”
In a matter of five hours, the lampooning gave way
to tongue in cheek posts “For a change Kohli can show his bat proudly
instead of his middle finger to the crowd” . And suddenly national pride is
back! ”And the Oscar for The best surprising act goes to Virat Kohli.” Or
better still, “India did a Rajinikanth against Sri Lanka.” Mercifully, on
cricket you can turn to tweets by the likes of Harsha Bhogle who reject
the herd mentality that “dhoni is letting it drift? But where are the bowlers
to exert pressure?” As a wall post screams: “People who criticised Team
India during the rough patch have no right to cherish their victory!
Now we cannot point fingers at the authors.When a game becomes a religion, the glorious uncertainties are forgotten and miracles are expected everytime. In the whole commentary, there were small regrets. “Just when Hockey was getting some limelight comes this win.”
What I find most heartening about facebook are
campaigns for causes; even a means to help people in distress. Remember
the ‘Search For Thamana’ initiative in Chennai? A school girl put up the
missing child’s picture and enlisted volunteers to hunt for her. How exactly
she disappeared still remains a mystery. With government websites still quite
outdated and many bureaucrats active on the site, this space is gradually
turning into an effective grievance corner. Officials get direct messages, chat
windows pop up and some are even tagged on Status updates.
I know of IAS aspirants who browse through status
updates as closely as they read newspapers, just to get different perceptions
of contentious issues. One of them who has chosen public administration as an
optional subject, recently told me that she finds wall posts quite like mini
editorials!
And if you’re preparing a speech, you don’t
really need to reach for the Toastmasters Almanac! Walls are replete with witty
one liners and smart alec comments. Sample this: “Men are like Bluetooth
– connected to you when you are around but search for other devices when you
are away. Women are like Wi Fi – see all available signals but connect to the
strongest one!”
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