Always The Sidekick

Prime Time Desis.jpgIt’s not that it’s a bad thing that there are South Asians on prime time television. It’s just that it seems that they are always playing the sidekick character. Fine, maybe not “sidekick” as much as “part of ensemble cast but definitely not lead actor” role. NBC Thursday night is a perfect example. You have Danny Pudi playing Abed on Community, Aziz Ansari as Tom on Parks and Recreation, Mindy Kaling as Kelly on The Office, and Maulik Pancholy as Jonathan on 30 Rock.

Not since Margaret Cho’s 1994 TV-series All-American Girl has there been an ensemble cast entirely of Asian Americans on prime time television. The show infamously imploded as cast and execs clashed and Cho has not been quiet about it. That was sixteen years ago.

Since then, we have seen the rise of Desi ensemble casting but…in other countries. You have the Kumars at No. 42 from the BBC network; Brazil’s Indian themed soap opera Caminho das India; and yes, I’m even counting Canada’s CBC sitcom Little Mosque on the Prairie. Well, it looks like network U.S. network execs are finally jumping on the bandwagon.

They are the two comeback stories of this pilot season, projects developed years ago that have been resurrected and have landed orders at the broadcast networks…The two comedies — “Nirvana” at Fox and “Outsourced” at NBC — have something else in common: They both are ensemble shows about Indians and Indian Americans.

<

p>

A third project, a U.S. version of popular British comedy “The Kumars at No. 42,” about an immigrant Indian family, also is poised for revival. Eight years after NBC took a stab at the format, the show’s British producers are shopping it to U.S. networks, including FX. [thr]I’m pretty excited by this turn of events. When Cho’s show first came out, I was a young teen and I remember totally being able to relate to her character. I don’t really remember much of the context, but I remember the feeling I had from watching her show. The pilots are still being filmed for Outsourced and Nirvana so I don’t really know how they are going to translate onto TV, but I would hope that the same empathy for the characters prevails in these shows.

Outsourced looks like it has the potential of being really funny…

NBC picked up “Outsourced,” written by Robert Borden (“The Drew Carey Show,” “The George Lopez Show”). Comedy tells the tale of a demoted novelty company manager who is sent to India to manage a motley crew of customer service reps.

<

p>

Based on the independent movie of the same name, “Outsourced” has been in development at NBC for more than two years (Daily Variety, Oct. 7, 2007), under the guidance of twice-Emmy-nommed director Ken Kwapis, who helmed the pilot of the American version of “The Office.” George Wing and John Jeffcoat wrote the film. Exec producers on the pilot are Tom Gorai and David Skinner. [variety]

Nirvana also has some pretty big names signed on to work on the pilot episode and is written by Ajay Sahgal.

Sakina Jaffrey (“Third Watch”) has scored a role on the comedy pilot, about two grown Indian-American brothers who clash with their controlling immigrant parents as they assimilate American culture. She’s believed to be playing Dr. Sarita Mattoo, the boys’ mother. Scott Ellis (“30 Rock”) has also signed on to direct the half-hour, which was penned by Ajay Sahgal. Harish Patel, Rachael Leigh Cook, Ravi Patel and Utkarsh Ambudkar also star in the project, which comes from 20th Century Fox Television. [futoncritic]

You never know with these pilots, what gets picked up and what doesn’t. It’ll be interesting to see how these two shows pan out over the next few months. I know I’ll be watching!

This entry was posted in Arts and Entertainment, News, TV by Taz. Bookmark the permalink.

About Taz

Taz is an activist, organizer and writer based in California. She is the founder of South Asian American Voting Youth (SAAVY), curates MutinousMindState.tumblr.com and blogs at TazzyStar.blogspot.com. Follow her at twitter.com/tazzystar

88 thoughts on “Always The Sidekick

  1. Even if desis were 90% of the population, and there wasn’t a single one of us on TV, I wouldn’t care. For members of a so-called post-racial society, why are 75% of your posts about race?

    If you are upset about this, stop whining and make a show about desis that can be profitable. If it can be profitable, it will be picked up. If not, make a better show. But please stop whining.

    And Latinos have plenty of representation on TV. On Telemundo.

  2. Even if desis were 90% of the population, and there wasn’t a single one of us on TV, I wouldn’t care. For members of a so-called post-racial society, why are 75% of your posts about race? If you are upset about this, stop whining and make a show about desis that can be profitable. If it can be profitable, it will be picked up. If not, make a better show. But please stop whining. And Latinos have plenty of representation on TV. On Telemundo

    Someone’s Rush Limbaugh signal was interrupted for way too long, this afternoon.

  3. But, it is reasonable to point out that South Asians are more prominent on “mainstream” American scripted television, in proportion to their share of the population.

    This might have something to do with the “Jewist template” that desis like to follow. There are so many Jewish people in entertainment(They are really good at it) but their population doesnt match the amount of attention they get. Indians could follow this path(looks like it), but Indians dont have the white skin that helps when you are dealing with visual creatures. Much like Jewish people, Indians cant jump high or run fast, but Indians will study our way into your life in some medium.

    Another factor to look at is the news. On ABC news in Chicago the anchor is Ravi Baichwal, CNN is making Sanjay Gupta a house hold name, on ABC news at 2 in the morning the lead anchor is an Indian woman, CNN also has the bald money guy, that funny guy on “The Daily Show”, Fox News likes to ask Gov. Bobby to chime in on things and you also have Alpana Singh the most famous foodie in Chicago and host of the very popular “Check Please”.

    Pretty ridiculous(in a good way) when you think about the tv time for desis today in America. No complaints from me.

  4. hen toss the actors from canceled shows, you are left Longoria & Lopez

    without a trace, csi miami, and ugly betty are still on.

  5. Does Aasif Mandvi count? Or is he, you know, only like Fareed Zakaria?

    look again, oh righteous one – he’s in the collage

  6. without a trace, csi miami, and ugly betty are still on.

    “Without a Trace” was canceled in May of last year. Ugly Betty is finishing up and will not be renewed. And CSI Miami has to have some Latinos – it’s Miami after all, but they are not leads. This leads to another interesting pattern – it is easier to cast dramas with a mixed ethnic cast than comedies. Law & Order, which I loathe, has had mixed casts almost from its beginnings. But comedies tend to be almost of one shade. The notable exceptions are The Office, but an even better example would be the freshman Community, where each episode ends with a little skit by the two non-white castmembers.

  7. “Law & Order, which I loathe, has had mixed casts almost from its beginnings.”

    And lots of the newer comedies have more mixed casts– Heroes, Lost, Grey’s Anatomy. Some of the main characters (like my favorite on Grey’s, Dr. Bailey) are minorities and are portrayed as strong and important characters.

  8. You could argue that having desi actors as part of supporting casts is just the intermediate step to eventually having one in a lead role. Thus the mainstream is being “acclimatised” to such actors; once they are seen as “normal”, then a mainstream audience will be ready to give a desi lead actor a chance.

    You could also argue that ethnic minority actors are just being out-competed by the sheer numbers of white actors out there. Clearly its not as simplistic as that, but I’d wager it’s a factor.

  9. Actually there is an ensemble cast entirely of South Asian Canadians on the YTV Network in Canada. The show is called “How to Be Indie” its a “Canadian” show. The main, lead character is a girl name Indira Mehta, 13 years old and the show revolves around her, her friends and her family.

    1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_to_Be_Indie
    2. http://howtobeindie.ytv.com/about.php
    3. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1379412/

    Every time this show comes on, I can’t help but watch it… although a lot of elements in this show are problematic, it still would have would have made growing up a lot easier… Taz although this is not as great as a link to Humble the Poet, it may be worth checking out…

  10. Caminhos das Indias was an all Brasilian cast.
    Brown people in lieu of brown people.
    Total simulacrum. Ride the dragonaut. Support the underground.

  11. @potatoes – that’s so weird. They totally used a screenshot from my Sundance video to take that picture. Why would they use that picture, instead of one of the gorgeous pictures of Sendhil out there already? Odd..

  12. Do Afghans qualify as desi? If so, Mezhgan Hussaini who is in the news for dating Simon Cowell after being a make-up woman on American Idol is supposed to have had bit roles in Sunset Beach and The Bold and the Beautiful.

  13. Re: Outsourced

    Unless the Indian cast is made to act like gibbering, ass-scratching monkeys, the project will be cancelled in two days flat. Americans do not laugh at their own misfortunes unless they are also allowed to laugh much harder at someone else’s. Nobody in America thinks outsourcing is funny, and any show that treats Indians like people will only fuel further outrage.

  14. Interesting collage (as is the news about South Asian-centric shows in development).

    No Kunal Nayyar from CBS’s “The Big Bang Theory”? Or am I just not seeing it?

  15. “Caminho das Índias” (not “India”) never had any desi actors, just Brazilian actors wandering around Rajasthan and mispronouncing Hindi.

  16. Brown people in lieu of brown people.

    Brazilians are brown? I thought like Americans they can be black, white, mixed, brown. Certainly almost the entire ruling class and most major media figures are white. I guess their national soccer (football) team best represents the full cross-section of society.

  17. “Outsourced” is a terrible movie. I had the misfortune of watching it on a flight from India to New York. It was awful but I could not stop watching it…cringing all the way through. A series on outsourcing sounds like it will be as bad.

  18. Have you guys heard of “How to be Indie”? It’s a Canadian teen-girl show, about an indian teen girl (“Indira Mehta”) doing annoying teen-girl things while brown and canadian…so, lead actor’s a brown girl, lots of brown actors, etc. No sidekicks there. The grandfather sounds jamaican though.

    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1379412/

  19. Unless the Indian cast is made to act like gibbering, ass-scratching monkeys, the project will be cancelled in two days flat.

    Or going by Wes Anderson’s previous or the news reports on Afghanistan on TV, Americans are helping the poor natives out of their problems.

  20. Brazilians are brown? I thought like Americans they can be black, white, mixed, brown

    I think 70% of brazilians are black (according to wikipedia)

  21. Oh stop whining, mutiny. Big bang theory has a desi “lead.” What else could you possibly want?

  22. Have you even watched “Heroes”? Mohinder is pretty much the main character. Maybe not so much in Season 4, but back when the show didn’t suck, it was basically based around him.

  23. Brazil does not use the same cultural definitions as Americans for race, so you can’t really say what people “are” using American terminology. American culture tends to subscribe to the “one drop” ideology– if you have one drop of minority (especially African) blood, then you are that race, not “white” (even if you look white). That is why we focus on President Obama being the first African-American president. In reality, he is half white and half black– yet most Americans consider him black. If he goes to another place, such as Africa, people might not define his race in the same way. This is a socially constructed labeling system– it is not universal.

    In Brazil a large population is of mixed ancestry (white, indigenous, african), and many people don’t identify themselves as “white” or “black”. Due to the large population of mixed ancestry, there is a lot of variation, within families even, so people often do not define themselves as one or the other– this could strangly put brothers or sisters in different categories. I watched a really interested documentary on Brazil– Brazil decided to make affirmative action for public colleges in Brazil and used the American model– saying affirmative action was for the “black” students. This created a controversy, because many people did not know who was “black” or not. People had to redefine their idea of themselves to decide whether or not to apply for affirmative action. They had to create a commitee to look at pictures of students and decide if they were “black” and eligible, or not. In one case, one identical twin was approved and the other denied.

    So anyways, it is erroneous to artificially put the American racial labeling system on another culture.

  24. “Don’t believe the hype delurker most Brazilians are black or mixed with black.”

    According to most country and regional profiles, studies and stats I’ve encountered, Blacks are actually not a huge percentage of the population of Brazil as a whole, not as much as Native Americans; but that may mean “full-blooded” black Africans. There were huge areas of Brazil to which slaves were never taken, nor ever went on their own once they were free. Part of Brazil is dry, almost desert, something few peole visualize. The South of Brazil is mostly European and native, the Euros being especially German and Italian, the result of immense immigration (distinct from colonizing, they hasten to emphasize) prior to WWII. Oh–and Japanese. Lot’s of Japanese in South America. And you know what? The Germans tend to look German, the Italians tend to look like various Italian types, and the Japanese look like Japanese. Naturally some complex and startling mixtures are more common in Brazil than many other places you could name, but I came to the conclusion that the “melting pot” is a particular reality in the urban coastal areas, especially Rio. I don’t know what the percentages are, but you can always get another opinion. Here’s one: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immigration_to_Brazil; or maybe get a few Brazilians to weigh in.

    hmm, how did a tv show discussion lead to this…oh, well.

  25. Can we stop bickering and just agree on how much we all hate white people? That’s where this thread is eventually headed anyway. (joke)

  26. 64: mezghan wrote: Do Afghans qualify as desi? If so, Mezhgan Hussainy who is in the news for dating Simon Cowell after being a make-up woman on American Idol is supposed to have had bit roles in Sunset Beach and The Bold and the Beautiful.

    No. Anyone who spells Hussain with a “y” does not qualify as desi. Sorry.

  27. There was an Indian character on Head of the Class back in the mid-80’s. His character’s name was Arvind.

    BTW great reference to Last precinct!!

  28. IBuyFairandLovely,

    Afghanistan and the Northwestern Frontier in Pakistan are not Desi country, but we are South Asians. We just speak Farsi and Pashto versus Urdu. Plus, few Afghans need to use skin cream lightners.

  29. Don’t forget behind the camera Desi’s have Jay Chandrasekhar, Mira Nair and M. Night Shyamalan

  30. Raj koothrappali from the Big Bang Theory is not a sidekick character…. hes one of the 5 main characters ..shelodon,leonard,penny,howard and him