|
| On the sets of Zee
TV’s Business Baazigar; (below) host Cyrus
Sahukar |
Business magazine editor Arundhati
Dutta wants to set up India’s largest retail online mall so
that people from any part of the country can just log on and
order just about anything at the click of a mouse button.
Sales manager with a shipping
company Partho Ghosh wants to sell mineral water in small cups
on a mass scale.
Nineteen-year-old Ashwini Diwan’s
wants to launch a commercial website where people can win
items for Rs 10.
Arundhati, Partho and Ashwini are
the three Calcuttans among 20 Indians trying to become
Business Baazigar in the latest reality show on Zee TV. With a
budget of Rs 11 crore, the 24-episode Business
Baazigar, hosted by MTV funnyman Cyrus Sahukar, is
also one of the costliest shows to come out from the Zee
stable. Starting March 31, every Friday and Saturday at 8 pm,
the show which has a tagline of “Idea lao, paise le
jao”, will fund the business venture of the eventual
winner.
“Nothing like this has ever been
tried before anywhere in the world,” Ashish Kaul, senior
vice-president of Zee Network, told Metro. “The basic
concept is to empower an Indian to realise his dream, who in
turn will not only be able to change his destiny but also that
of the society around him. Business Baazigar should
start, what we are calling, meaningful television.”
Once Business Baazigar was
launched some time in late 2004, entries just kept flying in,
thick and fast. “We got 200 entries on the very first day and
a total of two lakh entries,” Kaul revealed. “Then it became a
huge and arduous task to sort out the entries and after a lot
of screening we brought the number down to 250. After a round
of video-conferencing, we shortlisted 50 entrants who were
then flown down to Mumbai.”
Here, the jury — Zee Telefilms
chairman Subhash Chandra, Passionfunds CEO Mahesh Murthy and
IIM Ahmedabad professor Anil Gupta — took over completely.
They met the 50 aspirants, heard out their ideas and finally
picked the Top 20 amongst them. These 20 ideators, coming in
from different parts of the country, will then face off on the
sets of the show as they try and impress the jury at every
step.
“The contestants will be given small
tasks on every show,” Kaul added. “They may be given one rupee
and a bottle of mineral water and asked to survive a whole day
in Mumbai. Now for some, ‘survive’ may mean lasting through
the day; for others, it may mean making a hundred out of that
one rupee. Unlike other shows, the contestants are not
eliminated in every episode. They are there till the very last
episode, when the winner is announced.”
Zee Telefilms have also funded an
idea that couldn’t make it to the Top 20. A young woman
entrepreneur has already received the initial funding for her
dream shoe laundry, which will repair, mend and polish all the
shoes of a family. |