कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
Onfield Nationalism From A Box
Outlook
|July 03, 2017
A gullible nation, groomed for decades by television channels striving to maximise profit, has come to regard India vs Pakistan matches as proxy war
A Facebook post from an acquaintance, someone who knows his cricket well and the extreme unpredictable ways it can be played out, referred to the India-Pakistan Champions Trophy final match as a “gentlemen versus terrorists” clash. He was all set to watch the match, filling his refrigerator with cans of beer so that he would have enough stock to last him the eight-hour marathon show on TV.
Except for a muted protest from one of his friends, calling the term unfair as it was merely a cricket match, the rest were happy to let it be. An India-Pakistan match, even in the best of times, is like a war, where instead of guns being fired, it is a contest between a piece of broad wood, called the bat, and a leather-stitched round object called the ball. While the two sets of skills—bowling and batting—clash with each other, fans from the two sides, the majority sitting in their drawing rooms or bedrooms in front of television sets, go through a gamut of emotions, its ebb and tide largely dependent upon how well or badly their team is playing.
Since the number of those watching the match is phenomenal—an estimated 288 million watched their 2015 World Cup clash as compared to a mere 2.1 million that watched Australia play England; the Champions Trophy final at the Oval in London became the third highest watched match in the history of cricket—the stakes are bound to be high. Just like the live coverage of the Gulf War in the ’90s made CNN an international brand name, drawing an unprecedented global audience to the channel, an India-Pakistan match has, over the years, become the most lucrative cricket clash, where earnings of broadcasters shoot the roof. Millions of fans, and even those who care little for the sport, get drawn to the match, given the history of a bloody past--from Partition, that resulted in riots and the largest migration in humanity, followed by four wars over the decades.
यह कहानी Outlook के July 03, 2017 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Outlook से और कहानियाँ
Outlook
Sacred and Sublime
A road trip through Sikkim reveals how prayer flags, meditation caves and mountain monasteries weave Buddhism into the landscape
4 mins
June 22, 2026
Outlook
‘Modern Warfare is Network-centric’
In an exclusive interview with Neeraj Thakur and Saurabh Sharma, former Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) General Anil Chauhan, who recently retired, speaks in rare detail about the unfinished project of military integration, lessons from Operation Sindoor, the future of India’s warfighting strategy and the growing importance of sovereign defence technology.
7 mins
June 22, 2026
Outlook
Balancing Competing Rights
The judgement may lead to more cases being filed concerning “religious character”
5 mins
June 22, 2026
Outlook
“The Impact of AI is Only Beginning”
India’s post-1991 middle-class growth model is reaching a breaking point. Saurabh Mukherjea’s Breakpoint: The Crisis of the Middle Class and the Future of Work examines how technological disruption, stagnant wages, debt and structural weaknesses in education and employment are reshaping Indian society and work. Automation and AI are reducing demand for routine cognitive work, especially in IT services, BPOs, finance and administrative roles. Edited excerpts from an interview with Nabodita Ganguly
7 mins
June 22, 2026
Outlook
Barricade the Border
The BJP's electoral success in West Bengal underlines a significant political shift in the largest state bordering Bangladesh. It is time to fence the border to counter large-scale illegal immigration
6 mins
June 22, 2026
Outlook
‘The Cockroach Always Survives’
It started as a satire.
5 mins
June 22, 2026
Outlook
Social Ailment
Artificial intelligence-based systems are not socially neutral; they are already exposing existing socio-cultural realities
4 mins
June 22, 2026
Outlook
The Transformer
The future of work in India will depend less on whether AI replaces jobs and more on how the country prepares to utilise AI and its workforce to work alongside it
5 mins
June 22, 2026
Outlook
‘Future Wars Will be Multi-domain, AI-driven’
Operation Sindoor marked a significant moment in India’s evolving military doctrine, showcasing growing synergy between the Army, Navy and Air Force across conventional and emerging domains of warfare.
6 mins
June 22, 2026
Outlook
Constitutional Freeze
Why Section 4 of the Places of Worship Act, 1991, does not apply
4 mins
June 22, 2026
Translate
Change font size

