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Tuesday, August 5, 2014

5 out of 10 for TEDx Bangalore! Whats your rating?

When I bought the ticket to go to TEDx Bangalore that was held on 3rd August 2014, I was thrilled and overcome with excitement to be part of such a high impact global movement. Well, but what can I say? It was a like eating a bowl of stale salad served in gold china in an ultra luxury hotel. Read on for what I mean.....

Let me start with the positives!

Thoughtful categorization - 7 out of 10 



The whole event was divided into 3 sections, BLR to Bangalore, Down South and Outsourced. There was clarity in what the organizers wanted to portray to the audiences bringing together a nice flow of thoughts to the audiences.

Novel Initiatives - 9 out of 10

The paired lunch box wherein the lunch packet is received in pairs thereby encouraging sharing of the lip smacking tucker as well as "food for thought". Also the awesome informal type of seating enabling networking activity in comfort and leisure.
  

The drone 10 out of 10 :-) 

Also, who could not have observed the drone that was used to record the event. Just a kiddish observation, but I would like to put it down as a like. 


The anchor of the event, Sriram Sullia - 9 out of 10 

By far the saviour of the event! He kept pace with the slips and tumbles of the organizers by engaging and entertaining the crowd, while the organizers troubleshot. As usual, his wit was unbeatable while he charmed the audience. Well done Sriram! But I was shocked to hear that he even got a barely audible thank you, and whoever was doing that did not even know his name. There was a loud blurb in the microphone that we "we thank the anchor" (zero marks for that). Guys, he has a name and if there is one person you had to profusely thank, it had to be Sriram for holding the show together.

The Negatives....

The content curation - 3 out of 10

With all due respect to all the speakers and their causes, I feel the selection of speakers, except a hand few, could have been way better that what was mustered by. The best and most invigorating of the talks were those that were beamed on the screen from other TED and TEDx events. I explain why further along this post....
I must say the content curation was way off the mark, especially the BLR to Bangalore category. The selection of speakers brought to fore the blatant lack of knowledge on the issues the city faced and the history of Bangalore. Except the Ugly Indian and Naresh Narsimhan, all the other speakers in the category disappointed. There were no impact stories nor any take away inspiring messages from the others. Abhishek and Nitin Pai had nothing new to say, period. Why were truly high impact stories such as the Akshaya Pathra from ISKCON or individuals like Ashwin Mahesh overlooked?

The Down South segment was a total let down! Also, it was a almost a misnomer since 3 out of the 5 speakers surely were not from the South (Debarghya Das from Kolkata/USA, CREA based in New Delhi, Jadav "Molai" Payeng from Assam). However, the lone shining stars of this segment and arguably in the entire event were Mrs. Shobha Murthy and Sanusree Gomes from HelpDesk. Truly awesome, yet simple solution to a problem that existed for decades. The curator probably turned lucky with this find.

In the highly anticipated Outsourced segment, the audience as I observed were fighting hard to stay awake due to the lack of invigorating talks and the awesome meal. Ibrahim Nehme and Tamadher saved the grace with some impact stories to say. Adnane could hold my attention in patches purely because of his humorous narrative. Wonder why Zac Greene had to fly half the globe to read his talk from a piece of paper, or Jon Walls to make a sales pitch on behalf of Swiss startups in India?

The Delay in Starting the event - zero out of 10

Although scheduled to start at 9:30 AM, the show never got underway till 11:15 AM. While I came into the convention centre at 8:45 AM, I could see the organizers painting the decorative blocks right near the registration counters. I knew I was extremely early and I immediately braced myself to the ensuing long delay. Events of this caliber don't start late and I felt let down right from the beginning.

The broken promise of the Uber Rides - 5 out of 10

I received an email in the morning of the event that mobility partners Uber were offering free rides 'to and from' the venue. There was promptly a discount code sent along with it and it worked great for me to get a taxi to get to the venue. We realized that promise was broken only when we decided to Uber ourselves back from the venue and were surprised that the discount coupon was not working. And then all of those who Ubered in were to crowd ourselves in the buses on our way back!


The ever-breaking Microphone, Visual Systems and Slide Clicker - 1 out of 10

All through the event, that one thing that had a high irritability value was that every time a speaker came on the stage and tried to start talking, the microphone would not work. Then one of the sound crew members would come on stage to fix it. Then when the speaker starts his talk, its the slide mover's turn to not work. The speakers were struggling and taking wild jabs at the slide mover in vain. Nithin Pai had to actually continue his talk without the slides. And somewhere between the talk, its the huge LCD screen's turn to flicker and make it even more embarrassing. Guys, this is a global event that the world is watching, and what a sorry figure we were cutting! And to everyone's dismay, none of the organizers decided to fix the problem although it was persistent throughout the event. Anyway, less said the better on this.

I would like to provide an overall rating of 5.3 out of 10 TEDx Bangalore. I was wondering if I could have spent that scarce Sunday in a better manner. Hope its better next time around, because we have Bangalore's and TED's reputation to preserve. Your ratings are welcome in the comments section.


Saturday, March 15, 2014

Unequal Celebrity Power! Moving Mandya to Singapore.....


Its always a fact that celebrities, especially those from filmdom and cricket, get their share of disproportionate attention all the time. And this is not from their fans that I am talking about, but this is from government agencies that bend backwards to accommodate, many a times what are undue expectations. Remember the tax waiver for Sachin Tendulkar's Ferrari for which he did not even pay for, and easy paroles for Sanjay Dutt to name a few in recent times.
One such event that is currently in the news involves actor turned politician Ambarish in Bangalore. The man with a massive fan following was admitted to the hospital in Bangalore in a critical condition. Many days of treatment showed only marginal improvement. With fan and family anxiety running high over his deteriorating health condition, the government of Karnataka took a decision to shift him to Mount Elizabeth Hospital in Singapore for further treatment and better facilities. He is now recuperating and recovering well and we are happy and glad that he is. 
On the other hand, there are celebrities of a different kind. Social activists who do a whale of good to society without expecting any kind of public attention. These people are driven purely by passion and act with a mission of larger good to society. More importantly, such individuals spend their own resources and go about their benevolent activity without any financial gains or incentives. One such person is Salumarada Thimakka, an environmentalist from Karnataka known for planting  and tending to 285 banyan trees on a highway near Bangalore. Contributions such as her's has an extremely high inspiration value and her contribution, given her financial background of coming from a daily wage labourers' family, can put any one of us to shame. But Thimakka is also ill now and was seeking government support for her medical expenses. Given this situation, the best the government could do was admit her in Victoria Hospital. With the sad state of affairs that our government hospitals are in right now, you can imagine the quality of care that she is a recipient of for her illness. 
Between Ambarish and Thimakka, I am not going to squabble on whose contribution is higher or more prominent and impactful, but putting forward argument why our elected representatives and the associated bureaucrats discriminate between two notable achievers. I believe that both of them need the respect and warrant the same level of attention due to their notable contributions. It is not fair on the part of the government to blatantly discriminate based either on their political affiliations, their financial standing or their familial backgrounds. 
It saddens me that while tax payers money is being spent to treat both of them, while one relaxes in a ultra luxury suite in swanky Singapore, the other one is forced to spend one more night in vicious Victoria Hospital amidst a pathetic system put together by the very same people who are getting treated elsewhere.

I hope this public and government apathy stops and equality will prevail amongst all citizens of this country.

At an election campaign....
Politician: I am going to transform this badly maintained city into Singapore....then all of you can enjoy super dooper facilities
Suresha: Hey Ramesh, how will he do it man? is it even possible?
Ramesh: C'mon man Suresh, of course its possible and very easy dude!
Suresha: What its easy? How?
Ramesh: He will just change the name of this town from Mandya to Singapore!!!!!!!