Opinion

My Name Is Khan: The Face That Launched A Thousand Products

Behind SRK바카라s lover-boy image lies instability바카라sensitive to social, cultural and political change.

My Name Is Khan: The Face That Launched A Thousand Products
info_icon

Brand SRK is a much bandied about term. But what are its coordinates? More importantly, how does it connect with the 24x7 news cycle, obs­essed with Shah Rukh Khan바카라s son Aryan바카라s arr­est following a dubious drug-bust?

It is important to first map the brand바카라s textual trajectory thr­o­ugh Khan바카라s cinematic oeuvre. SRK as a brand emerges in the late 1990s, fuelled by the overwhelming success of Aditya Cho­pra바카라s Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (1995) and Karan Johar바카라s Kuch Kuch Hota Hai (1998). Characters essayed by SRK바카라lover boy Raj Malhotra and yuppie Rahul Khanna바카라rewrite the psychotic anti-­hero image that come in films that preceeded them: Baazigar (1993), Darr (1993) and Anjaam (1994). The sheen of the later, romantic-domestic dramas, speaking to a rapidly liberalising economy and the attendant rise of the Hindutva mov­e­ment, stamps out the grim residue of the angry young man, traces of which appear via mobilisation of the revenge gen­re바카라in SRK바카라s earlier works. Johar바카라s following productions바카라Kab­hi Khu­shi Kabhie Gham (2001), Kal Ho Naa Ho (2003) and Kabhi Alv­i­da Naa Kehna (2006)바카라build upon the enduring Raj-Rahul fic­­t­ion, but begin to transmute the college-going lover-­boy into a more complex adult, who may be biologically imp­u­re, diseased and dying, or sexually/morally transgressive. This mutation is also significantly marked by unmooring the 바카라Indian바카라 hero from the coordinates of the national territory (initiated by DDLJ), who will hereon be located in the global metropolises of London and New York, mediating the challen­ges of transnationalism. This body of films begin to acquire new audiences in affluent and cosmopolitan South Asi­an diasporic sites, and in previously unb­ro­ken Western territories like Germany, Austria and Switz­­er­­land. Retro­spec­t­i­v­ely, as brand SRK ascends to global heights, 바카라Bom­bay cinema바카라 gets inaugurated as 바카라Bollywood바카라 on the global stage. Brand SRK then comes to function as the shorthand for pop­­u­lar Indian cin­ema in its shinier, Bollywoodised avatar.

ALSO READ:

info_icon

Bombay cinema has always escaped easy ideological readings. In keeping with this vagrancy, SRK바카라s stardom, too, evi­n­ces disru­ptive strands that destabilise monolithic not­ions emerging from his pop­u­lar canon. Dil Se (1998) marks rom­antic 바카라national바카라 imaginings as misplaced and doomed; Swades (2004) showcases reverse migration; Chak De! India (2006) questions the homogenising majoritarian fundamenta­list discourses; My Name is Khan (2010) speaks to global Islam­ophobia in the post-9/11 world; and Raees (2017) dares to for­e­ground min­ority subjectivities. In terms of their box-office clout and circulatory currency, the­se films do not match the cul­tural resonance of the former set. Howe­ver, Hindi cinema바카라s endura­n­ce does not lie merely in distribution of its fil­mic tex­ts, but more empha­tically in their fragmentary disseminations. Sou­nd-­images of Chai­yya Chai­yya persist, esca­ping its textual borders, to circulate endlessly thro­ugh global cultural texts serving as a recognisable hieroglyph of Bolly­w­o­od. This Aug­u­st, when the Indian wom­en바카라s hockey team rea­ched the semi-finals in Tokyo Oly­mpics, the team바카라s 바카라real coach바카라 Sjoerd Mar­ijne was urged by the team바카라s 바카라ex-coach바카라바카라the fictional Kabir Khan­바카라­to bring home the gold. The ban­ter between the real and the fictional had twitterati in chu­c­kles.

ALSO READ:

As Brand SRK begins to consolidate, specific films cast him in stories where the star plays upon his own persona, explicitly and reflexively: his own production house Red Chillies Enter­tai­n­ment바카라s Om Shanti Om (2007) and Billu (2009); and Yash Raj Films바카라 Fan (2016). Another strand in this braiding will constr­u­ct an affi­nity with Tamil cinema바카라s tradit­ions of star/fan-dom, evoking the regional megastar Rajinikanth: Billu, Ra.One (2011) and Chen­nai Express (2013). Brand SRK, then, dislodges the long-­standing opposition bet­w­een tradition and modernity, ser­ving as an intermedia, mediating Bolly­w­ood as som­ething that can at once be natio­nal, global and regional. If the textual terrain of Brand SRK is consistently transmutating, speaking differently to its divergent fans바카라straight/queer; men/wom­en/transgender; wealthy/middle-class/poor;­ rural/urban/cosmopolitan; regional/natio­nal/transnational/global바카라­then the extra-­textual terrain reveals the instability even further.

info_icon

The media바카라s interpretation of Brand SRK is predominantly mapped in terms of his com­me­rcial endorsements. From the outset, Khan has positioned himself as an indiscriminate celebrity-endorser, always available for hire. Ind­u­stry insiders analyse this as a strategy that ena­­bled him to sign films at half-the-price then comma­nded by his star-peers, instead earning his staple from commercials. Beginning small with Liberty Shoes (1988) and Brahma­putra Tea (1993), SRK quickly went on to associate with multinational corporations: Pepsi (1996), Hyu­n­dai (1998) and Tag Heuer (2003). His end­or­sement ensured an exponential 60 per cent annual growth for the luxury watch brand wit­h­in two years. The leading advertising monitoring firm The Agency Source (TAS) ind­exed that between 1994 and 2006, SRK appea­red in 281 print and 172 TV ads. Bra­nd SRK then inaugurated a new revenue model for film stars, where endorsements became the primary revenue sou­­­­rce instead of films. Over­all, the celeb­rity-­star has endorsed some 40 bra­nds that cur­ren­tly include Dubai tourism, Frooti, Dish TV, Pan Vilas and even Fair and Hand­some. Notably, Lux (2005) introduced SRK as its first male mod­­el in India, while Ree­bok (2010) laun­ched a collection of footwear and appa­r­el around the release of My Name is Khan.

ALSO READ:

According to the Duff & Phelps 바카라Celebrity Bra­nd Valuation Study바카라, SRK바카라s brand value sto­od at $66.1 million in 2019 and $51.1 million in 2020, accounting for the pandemic. Media rep­o­rts ind­icate Khan바카라s current cost for the shoot of a TV ad at Rs 3.5-4 crore per day, and his vis­i­bility across all TV channels is estimated at an average of 4 hours per day. SRK바카라s eminen­tly marketable, energetic presence has ensured the star바카라s omnipresence, through constantly running commercials, by framing him as conduit for a burg­e­oning consumerist society. Beyond cinema and advertising, his stage performances at public/private gatherings, and the numerous hosting gigs at awa­rd sho­ws in national and transnatio­nal sites, adds to the density of bra­nd SRK바카라s mediated ass­emblage. He is also prominently visible as the co-owner of thr­ee T20 cricket teams, most sig­nificantly Kol­kata Knight Riders, who he cheers publicly. All this is augmented by his rou­nd-the-clock visibility on internet and social media: follo­w­ed by 42 million on Face­book, 42.1 million on Twitter and 26.7 million on Instagram.  

info_icon

The sustainability of the polymorphous Brand SRK recently came to be questioned, following NCB바카라s arrest of Aryan Khan. On its hee­ls, the edu­-tech firm Byju (with SRK as its brand ambassador since 2017) faced calls of 바카라Boycott Byju바카라s바카라 trending on Twitter, and deci­ded to temporarily take ads featuring SRK off-air. The ads resumed after a 4-5 day hiatus, lea­­v­ing marketing gurus wondering if the resu­mption was incited by the social med­ia backlash from Khan바카라s fans or the prevailing T20 World Cup, where Byju is a major sponsor. Khan바카라s private life has always vital­i­sed his public aura: the early death of his parents; his interreligious mar­­riage with a Pun­jabi Hindu Gauri Khan; and his role as a father to his children: Aryan, Suh­a­na and AbRam. Even if Aryan바카라s arr­est and rem­and remain hig­h­ly questionable, the media cir­­c­us attempts to threaten the image of a resp­onsible father. Brand SRK has then revealed its instability and mutability sensitive to changes in context: social, cultural, industrial and ultimately, political. Is Aryan Khan바카라s arrest an omen for New India, in which a Muslim superstar cannot continue to serve as the metaphor for a Hindu-majority nation?

(This appeared in the print edition as "The Face of Another")

(Views expressed are personal)

ALSO READ

Priyadarshini Shanker, the writer, is assistant professor of Film Studies, University of North Carolina at Wilmington

×