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Poor countries are poor not because they lack resources, but because they lack effective political institutions.
- Francis Fukuyama in The Origins of Political Order p.14

It’s hard to dispute the above point, at least in the case of India.

Despite the burgeoning population, India has plenty of resources. Certainly, enough to feed its 1.2 billion people.

Yet, millions of Indians, young and old, go to bed hungry every night, sleep under the stars, defecate in public and are prey to countless depredations.

Because India’s political institutions are weak and have been hijacked by the corrupt and the strong. Beneath the veneer of the democracy, it’s the law of the jungle that operates in many parts of India, particularly the hinterlands where little of the fruits of so-called development has reached the poor.

In India’s case, the weak governing institutions are compounded by the disassociation of the growing middle class from what is considered the “cesspool of politics.”

China may not be a democracy but its political institutions are strong and govern more effectively than the Indian state.

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Mein Kutta Hoon, Yeh Kutiya Hain (I am a dog and she is my bitch).
- Salman Khan’s character Prem referring to his girlfriend Pooja (played by Asin) in the movie Ready

Who says Salman Khan is a superstar?

No way.

The U.S. box office numbers for Salman’s latest crapshow Ready are out and they suck.

Yeah, they suck big time for this kutta-kutiya film. ;)

Hell, even the Deol buffoons’ (Sunny and Bobby) movie Yamala Pagla Deewana did much better than Ready at the box office. No kidding.

Ready also fared much worse than Salman’s last movie, Dabangg (see below table).

For the opening June 3-5, 2011 weekend, Ready could manage a total gross of just $460,238 and average gross of $4,745. The trashy movie released on 97 screens in the U.S.

Here’s how Ready did at the U.S. box office compared to a few prominent Bollywood films:
Salman Khan's Ready Movie Box Office Numbers

Folks, Ready is an awful movie.

If you haven’t seen it, consider yourself blessed.

As the wise souls at SearchIndia.com wrote in their review of Ready:

In the dismal annals of bad Indian movies, Ready (Salman Khan, Asin Thottumkal) occupies pride of place.

The Bollywood movie, which released in the U.S. this morning, is a nauseatingly awful piece of junk that has few parallels.

A  movie with a fig leaf of a story so sophomoric that one shudders at the damage such tripe inflict on the already battered reputation of Bollywood.

As many of our smart readers are aware, Ready is the remake of a Telugu movie bearing the same name. We missed the Telugu version but it was our great misfortune to watch the Tamil version.

Directed by a Bollywood yokel answering to the yells of Anees Bazmee, Ready’s claim to fame is that the camera relentlessly maintains its focus on Salman Khan’s swollen, aging face much of the time as he makes a jackass of himself.

Related Stories:
Ready Review – Pageant of Trash
Critics Find Salman Khan’s Ready Intolerable
Is Darpok Salman Khan Ready to Confess to Murder?

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By Golly, the Apple digital media juggernaut shows no signs of slowing down.

Today, at  the Apple Developer Conference in San Francisco the digital media hottie introduced its much ballyhooed iCloud service and disclosed a bunch of other digital media milestones as well.

iCloud is a set of free cloud services that work seamlessly with applications on Apple’s iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Mac or PC to automatically and wirelessly store users’ content in iCloud and automatically and wirelessly push it to all their devices. When anything changes on one of their above devices, all of their devices are wirelessly updated near instantly.

How cool!

The free iCloud services include a rearchitected version of the former shaky MobileMe services (Contacts, Calendar and Mail), App Store and iBookstore purchases and automatic daily backup of iOS devices to iCloud over Wi-Fi when users charge their iPhone, iPad or iPod touch.

Content backed up to the cloud includes purchased music, apps and books, Camera Roll (photos and videos), device settings and app data. When users replace their iOS device, they are supposed to be able to easily restore all their content from iCloud by entering Apple ID and password during setup.

Users get a generous 5GB of free storage for their mail, documents and backup. Storage of music, apps and books purchased from Apple doesn’t count towards this 5GB total. Consumers can buy more storage.

Apple also rolled out a new $25 per year service called iTunes Match that replaces consumers’ music not purchased at iTunes with a 256 kbps AAC DRM-free version in the cloud if it can match it to the 18 million songs in the iTunes Store.

iCloud is set to debut this fall along with the iOS 5, Apple’s update to its mobile operating system.

Here are the digital media milestones Apple disclosed today:

* 25 million iPad tablets sold in the last 14 months. Continue reading »

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Ready U.S. Box Office Report – Horrrrrible
(Meagre $460,238 in Opening Wkend @ U.S. BO)

Mein Kutta Hoon, Yeh Kutiya Hain (I am a dog and she is my bitch).
- Salman Khan’s character Prem referring to his girlfriend Pooja (played by Asin) in the movie Ready

In the dismal annals of bad Indian movies, Ready (Salman Khan, Asin Thottumkal) occupies pride of place.

The Bollywood movie, which released in the U.S. this morning, is a nauseatingly awful piece of junk that has few parallels.

A  movie with a fig leaf of a story so sophomoric that one shudders at the damage such tripe inflict on the already battered reputation of Bollywood.

As many of our smart readers are aware, Ready is the remake of a Telugu movie bearing the same name. We missed the Telugu version but it was our great misfortune to watch the Tamil version.

Directed by a Bollywood yokel answering to the yells of Anees Bazmee, Ready’s claim to fame is that the camera relentlessly maintains its focus on Salman Khan’s swollen, aging face much of the time as he makes a jackass of himself.

Bollywood rogue Salman Khan plays a young man Prem living with his wealthy parents and uncles in a large house.

Don’t ask us what Prem does for a living, his plans or his background. We have no clue. And neither does director Anees Bazmee.

The rest of the movie is an endless tableau of meaningless scenes that are bereft of any logic and bizarrely awful.

A forgetful father, an oddball accountant, a devil of a grandson, two brothers with ponytails and a retard-like heroine are some of the grotesque creatures making up the Ready menagerie. Continue reading »

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Ready Review – Pageant of Trash

The first reviews of Salman Khan’s new film Ready are out.

And they are not positive.

Here’s a sample of critical reviews for Ready:

Times of India

The first half involves running around the trees (read beating around the bush) while the actual story starts only in the second half. The graph of the narrative does pick up somewhere in the second half but the tempo falls intermittently thanks to the convoluted writing and the protracted proceedings. By the time the film reaches its melodramatic high-voltage climax giving Salman simulated scope to go topless, it leaves you exasperated.

The entire villain tribe is unusually unkempt and intentionally irritating. The sidetrack of the pampered spoilt grandson (Mohit Baghel) being subjugated by Salman’s buffoonery is annoying. Sajid-Farhad’s dialogues don’t elevate the humour much and when Salman expresses romance with lines like ‘main kutta hoon, yeh kutiya hain’, you know the film is going to the dogs.

NDTV

So, the climax includes little boys standing in a line and peeing on the baddies; the dialogue includes lines like: “in that case, aa jao mere paas meri suitcase” and my favorite: “aaj pehli baar kisi aurat ne samajdari ki baat ki” and if you prefer your films to have a coherent plot, then you best sit this one out.

Ready made me laugh sporadically but beyond a point I could almost feel my brain cells shrinking and exhaustion setting in, one joke at a time. I’m going with two stars.

Rediff

If, however, I had to pay to watch Ready, Anees Bazmee’s latest film, I would feel sorely insulted. Continue reading »

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(For SI Blog Reader Gandhiji)

Yawn, Yawn!

Hey, it’s really getting tiresome.

One more Spelling Bee championship and one more Indian American winner.

Yes, an Indian is the winner of the 84th Spelling Bee. :)

This time the top honors went to 14-year-old Sukanya Roy, an eighth grade student of the Abington Heights Middle School in Pennsylvania.

Going by her last name, Sukanya is most likely a Bengali.

Sukanya clinched the championship by correctly spelling cymotrichous.

This was Sukanya’s third shot at the championship.

She participated in the 2009 and 2010 Scripps National Spelling Bees, tying for 12th place in 2009 and 20th place in 2010.

Sukanya Roy - 2011 Spelling Bee Champion

Like many of the previous Spelling Bee winners, Sukanya is a multi-faceted personality with a finger in many pies. Continue reading »

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