When almost every contestant on Bigg Boss season 3 confessed on stage that Amitabh Bachchan — the host and pop philosopher on the show—was their chief reason to participate, we didn’t doubt it one bit because it’s precisely our reason to watch the show as well.
After the second season’s tedious routine of watching Shilpa Shetty’s manicured hands flick her blown-dry hair back every two scenes, to have Big B replace the self-appointed diva sounds like the best strategy Colors could have adopted to bring back eyeballs to the show that was beginning to lose them.
Expectedly, Bachchan saved the day. His magic was unleashed on viewers as well as tongue-tied participants. He speaks chaste Hindi, quotes from his father’s verse, recounts anecdotes from interactions he has had with the participants if any, and chats convivially with their families. Bachchan is no pop philosopher. He is the guardian angel.
After the second season’s tedious routine of watching Shilpa Shetty’s manicured hands flick her blown-dry hair back every two scenes, to have Big B replace the self-appointed diva sounds like the best strategy Colors could have adopted to bring back eyeballs to the show that was beginning to lose them.
Expectedly, Bachchan saved the day. His magic was unleashed on viewers as well as tongue-tied participants. He speaks chaste Hindi, quotes from his father’s verse, recounts anecdotes from interactions he has had with the participants if any, and chats convivially with their families. Bachchan is no pop philosopher. He is the guardian angel.
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