Sonali Bendre said it was saddening to see that the film industry was in the news for all the wrong reasons, especially in the last two years.
Actor Sonali Bendre believes Bollywood has always been a soft target but the negative headlines about the industry have increased today due to a rise in the number of media organisations across the country.
Bendre, the star of hit ’90s movies like Diljale, Duplicate, Sarfarosh and Zakhm, said it was saddening to see that the film industry was in the news for all the wrong reasons, especially in the last two years.
“It’s horrible to have negative headlines about your profession because this is what has given me name and fame. This is what has made me and so I have immense respect for the profession that I come from and for the people who work in this profession because I have made my family here.”.
“The film industry has always been a soft target for everybody. It’s always been easiest to attack. You have had cases which have been filed against the actors in some unknown and vague areas,” the actor said.
In the last two years, Bollywood was under the constant media spotlight, especially after the death of Sushant Singh Rajput in June 2020, which led to an “outsider v/s insider” debate in the industry as well as an investigation by Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) into alleged drug nexus.
Superstar Shah Rukh Khan’s son Aryan Khan’s arrest during a drug raid on a cruise ship off the Mumbai coast last year was another case that dominated headlines for a long time. Aryan was given a clean chit recently.
Bendre said the negative news around the industry has amplified now because earlier there were “four media outlets that would be talking about it, but now it is 4,000 of them”.
“Suddenly it feels a lot more. But this is exactly what was going on. You’ve always looked at this profession and spoken badly about it, saying there’s underworld money that is invested here or that people who work in the industry have loose morals and that they indulge in drunken behaviour.
“It’s always been the salaciousness of the industry that has been highlighted and shown since time immemorial,” the 47-year-old actor said.
According to Bendre, the good points of the film industry are rarely highlighted.
“It’s the same industry, which gave us a war anthem, came together for any sort of collection and brought people together for a good cause,” she added.
Bendre is resuming her acting journey with The Broken News, a web series that also marks her OTT debut. The show started streaming on ZEE5 on Friday.
An adaptation of the popular 2018 British series Press, the show tackles themes of sensational and ethical journalism.
It follows the story of two rival Mumbai-based news channels – Awaaz Bharati, an independent, ethical news channel, and Josh 24/7 News, which offers sensationalist and invasive journalism.
“We have to understand and accept the fact that there is going to be bias. We want it to be unbiased, but we are human. You try to be unbiased and as long as you’re trying to be unbiased, it’s good enough…
“So the moment you understand that there is a bias, look at the opposite side of the spectrum. Look at the bias on that spectrum and then read or hear something from that side. Also, hear or read something which is a little more middle, basically,” she said.
Directed by Vinay Waikul, The Broken News also stars Jaideep Ahlawat, Shriya Pilgaonkar, Indraneil Sengupta, Taaruk Raina, Aakash Khurana and Kiran Kumar.
Source:indianexpress.com