In the two weeks or Spideypool XXX Parodyfour years since Indian Matchmakingdebuted on Netflix (I just checked: It's 10 days), I have watched my fellow South Asians do what we do best: Rip it apart.
The Netflix reality show follows Mumbai matchmaker Sima Taparia as she takes on various clients looking to settle down. It has been called casteist, colorist, regressive — all the adjectives my generation of allegedly progressive Desis use to describe things we criticize or reject about our culture. It is being maligned, in short, for doing exactly what it meant to: Presenting a multifaceted depiction of Indians around the world through the lens of our collective obsession: Marriage.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Let's start with one note: Matchmaking is not the same as arranged marriage. The most irksome critiques I've seen of Indian Matchmakingsay that it glorifies an ancient practice which sold child brides to wealthy older men or trapped people in toxic marriages. Taparia's role is nothing of the sort; paradoxically, she functions as a human dating app, taking each client's characteristics and desired traits in a partner and then looking for someone who might fit. No one is under any obligation to marry or even keep dating their matches — in fact, none of them ultimately did.
What makes this so interesting is that the characters are not characters at all, but real people, flawed and romantic and three-dimensional. Just as racism has layers and levels, so too do casteism and colorism. They don't go away just because the younger generation wants them to, and they infect and ingrain themselves in us in uncomfortable ways that demand interrogation. I am far less incensed that Richa wants a "fair" partner than I am when my supposedly woke friends hide from the sun on vacation so they won't get darker. Over the years I've heard friends express that they want to marry by a certain age.
A big part of the upset within my own community seems to stem from the fact that non-Indians are consuming this show as entertainment, just as many binged Tiger Kingin the same year. That show told the story of a troubled and insular community which felt like escapism for many viewers, but rang too true to some. If someone is getting their Indian cultural education only from media, it's bound to be skewed, but it shouldn't be any one show's job to take on that labor or sanitize reality. Any time the Indian community's inner turmoil faces exposure, we clamor to cover it up. Yes, we have problems, bigotry, and baggage — but god forbid the world see it before we've set our own house in order.
I first saw that hypocrisy come to light with Slumdog Millionaire, a film I firmly defend to this day. One of the most common critiques I hear is that it depicts poverty — not even howit depicts poverty, just that it does at all. Why not tell a story of rich or middle class Indians? (Indian popular cinema has this more than covered, by the way.) But I've been to India over 20 times, and I'm still struck by the sight of sprawling slums next to luxury high rises. The movie didn't perpetuate a stereotype, it exposed an ugly truth, and then it was up to us to right it.
To the same end, Indian Matchmakingis not inventing something damaging, but sharing it with the world via Netflix. Public shaming has kicked the Indian community into gear on more than one occasion. In 2012, a brutal gang rape and murder made international headlines and had India clamoring to answer for how this could have happened, as well as exposing dangerous misogyny in everyone from those convicted to their lawyers and other men in power. As recently as June, it took the Black Lives Matter movement and worldwide protests for many South Asians to contemplate their own anti-Blackness, and for the product known as Fair & Lovely to rebrand. If any part of Indian Matchmakingsits poorly with viewers, it's not enough for us to tweet irritation or dismiss the whole show. We have to address where its unfavorable attitudes pervade in our own lives and start the healing there.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The flaws of Indian Matchmakingdon't have to take away from its entertainment value. This chunk of 2020 is objectively the worst, but I marvel that we've had no less than threenew TV shows about Indians or Indian Americans in time: This one, Never Have I Ever, and Family Karma. I hold the former as Mindy Kaling's best work and one of Netflix's finest originals; I looked forward to the melodrama of Family Karmaevery week with more gusto than the last three seasons of Game of Thrones.
I love having so many shows about my people now that we can pick and choose what we like and compare so many varying stories between series. Indian Matchmakingis part of a larger TV moment that brings the Indian community closer to the world at large. We have our own trash and our own treasure, our subgenres, our heroes, our villains. We have racist relatives and dramatic friends, and we have a lot of work to do. We're just like you, and we're also trying to do better.
Indian Matchmakingis now streaming on Netflix.
Topics Netflix
Kesha pens emotional Lenny Letter and fights back with an honest new singleDating app changes the game by adding a literal gameDating app changes the game by adding a literal gameMagic Johnson reveals the truth about LaVar Ball that we've suspected all alongThis amazing 'Game of Thrones' infographic shows all the betrayals over six seasons'SpiderRamen teams up with Pringles to create the ultimate college chipEnd of an era: The next 'Super Mario' doesn't have a Game Over screenEmma Stone's comments about the Hollywood pay gap give us mixed feelingsResearchers create software that converts nonThis amazing 'Game of Thrones' infographic shows all the betrayals over six seasonsHere's how much it'd actually cost Daenerys to ship her 'Game of Thrones' armyMigos was kicked off a Delta flight, and now they're threatening to sueEnd of an era: The next 'Super Mario' doesn't have a Game Over screenHangover cure from the world's heaviest drinking country is here to save your morningPorsche and AOC's sleek new monitor is absolutely beautifulAngry guy flings his powerbank on the ground in the airport, causing it to explodeFalse alarm: Tesla isn't closing all its storesWhat 'Redbone' would sound like as a cover song so beautiful you want to cryKevin Durant welcomed Nick Young to the Warriors with a perfect tweet A poor duck with a knife sticking out of its head is making everyone very upset Michelle Obama explains her iconic side In 2020, 'semi' is the new 'ex,' because not every relationship is official There won't be any new emoji on phones in 2021 due to the pandemic All the wild looks from the 2017 Met Gala red carpet Zoom is different on your phone, so here’s when to use it Samsung is donating 2,000 glove The mysterious recycling company led by 2 Tesla execs How to set up HDR on your TV Netflix announces 'The Tiger King' after show with new interviews U.S. Senate advises against using Zoom for video conferencing 'Final Fantasy VII Remake' is a solid lesson in how to update a genre Netflix's ‘Love Wedding Repeat’ makes a mess of easy premise: Review Jaden Smith accessorized for the Met Gala with the dreads he chopped off Best streaming services with live TV for cord TCL enters smartphone territory with its very own lineup of devices TikTok pledges $375 million in coronavirus aid Google bolsters New York's overburdened unemployment website 'Twin Peaks' 30th anniversary: Michael Horse, Dana Ashbrook interview Facebook's new 'Quiet Mode' lets you take a break from Facebook
2.502s , 10133.71875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Spideypool XXX Parody】,Exquisite Information Network