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 Shilpa Shetty in Big Brother Prison in UK
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Posted on 01-19-07 2:32 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,11021-10043,00.html
Shilpa sheety has been in miserable conditon in Big Brother House with leaving with other House mates. Especially, Jade made racists comments of her ... accent, indain food, and behaviour..... it's relaly making a big issue in Front Pages of Newspaper in UK.

To get more information follow the above link
 
Posted on 01-19-07 2:33 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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living with , really ( correction)
 
Posted on 01-19-07 2:35 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Posted on 01-19-07 2:51 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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no matter how developed and evolved indians think they are , white people still treat them like shiuiuuuut.. just an example.. too bad shilpa had to face those btches.... she's my fav...
 
Posted on 01-19-07 2:55 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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she got paid $750k for doing that show,now she gets attention throughout the world too,not bad for a indian slut
 
Posted on 01-19-07 8:05 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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not bad for an indian slut?
I dont understand why nepalese men have no respect for women... Shilpa Shetty is not a prostitute... dumbass!
 
Posted on 01-19-07 8:10 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Why is generalization is so big with everyone. To Mr. nice guy every woman is a slut and to NeapliHottie, every nepali man does not respect women.

Anyway, as far as how Shilpa is being treated in BB house goes, I guess racism does exist. And it thrives just as much in western coutries if not more... Just a fact of life.
 
Posted on 01-19-07 9:23 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Its sad to see Silpa on that situation...
Big Brother is pretty famous and famous for these kind of scandals... They always corner one person and make his/her life miserable... I am sure Silpa knew about this and still she went with it. Got paid heftily for it too. She should have been intelligent enough to understand this was going to happen when living with just the brits in a close house. What did she expect, red carpet and ppl worshipping her? well may be in India. Brits are already fed up of indian invasion, so for a ignorant and stupid ppl like Jade and company, it was the perfect oppertuinity to convery how they felt... A famous, beautiful indian actress ... how can they resist... As much as we try to think racism doesn't exist, it does... and that is the truth.... humans are just animals inside just dying to come out.. Among other things Our cultures, education keep the beast inside locked but at a closed house and in a stupid person its hard to resist the beast... Thinking about lord of the flies, Alive... well what can I say...
 
Posted on 01-19-07 11:02 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Why on earth does she need to go to Big Brother House ? But anyway, this makes her famous in the western as well !
 
Posted on 01-19-07 11:53 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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This piece from The Economist arguing this might be more an issue of class than race . After all, Shilpa Shethy is a well bred upper class Indian in a house with 3 working class whites.

Reality TV
Oh brother

Jan 19th 2007
From Economist.com


A row over reality TV says more about class than race



MORE magazines documenting the ups and, better, the downs of celebrities are sold in Britain than anywhere else, relative to the size of its population. The reasons given for the country’s vast appetite for celebrity vary from the historical (Brits like having a class system and have created a new one on the embers of the old) to the sociological (people no longer know their neighbours well enough and so gossip about famous lives instead). The result is benign, most of the time. British celebrity culture is tolerant: ethnic minorities and homosexuals feature prominently. And it is democratic: no discernible talent is needed to enter the aristocracy of celebrity.

Not this week, though, when the unpleasant, even racist, treatment of Shilpa Shetty, an Indian actress, on Celebrity Big Brother, a reality-television show, has been at the top of news bulletins. The format of the programme resembles a performance at the Circus Maximus, though with the lions given the week off. The contestants live together in a house fitted out with cameras. The winner is the last one left in, after some have walked out in dismay and others have been voted off by viewers.

So far more than 30,000 people have complained to Britain’s television regulator about the bullying of Ms Shetty, after she was called a dog and endured jibes about Indians and skin-lightening creams. That is the largest number of viewers to complain about anything, ever. Parliamentarians have raised the matter in the House of Commons, while making earnest points about the purpose of publicly funded television. Ms Shetty was even mentioned at prime minister’s question time. David Cameron, the Conservative leader has been asked what he thinks too.

If this all seems like a ghastly trivialisation of politics, then consider the effect Ms Shetty's treatment has had in India, where Gordon Brown, Britain's chancellor of the exchequor (its finance minister), is visiting this week. Indian newspapers have shown rather more interest in Ms Shetty than in the man likely to become Britain’s prime minister later this year. In Bihar, a poor state in the north-east of the country where more than half of all children under five years old are malnourished, banners were burned in defence of the glamorous film star. A junior Indian foreign minister, Anand Sharma, denounced Ms Shetty’s treatment. Poor Mr Brown has been forced to assure his hosts that Britain really is a tolerant place.

He is right. Ms Shetty herself has said that her bullying was not racist in the fully fledged sense of the word. Instead, it showed something of how British society is changing thanks to globalisation. The television programme put a wealthy, well-spoken Indian together with some white working-class Brits, who decided that she was not just different from them, but more upper class. One called her a princess, and meant it as an insult. All of which should, if the sociologists are right, inject new life into Britain’s fascination with celebrity.
 
Posted on 01-19-07 11:54 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Posted on 01-19-07 5:34 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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just watched shilpa win the public vote

she went thru such an ordeal n still she managed to forgive them all!

hindi film jasto.

by acting in a very dignified manner against those bullies, she has won a lot of respect

good work
 
Posted on 01-29-07 2:12 AM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Congratulaitons Shilpa ! You have gone through all the ups and downs of British Hatred !
 


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