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VJ Kim
From Beauty Queen to Music TV Queen
Written
by Aparita Bhandari |
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They call her their pint-sized wonder. Meet VJ Kim, a.k.a.
Komila Jagtiani. She's one of the senior most VJ's on Channel
V, India's rival music TV channel to MTV India. As the host
of some of Channel V's most exciting show - Cool Stop, P.O.V.
and Club V - Kim's pretty much a household name in India.
On
a balmy Sunday afternoon, Kim arrives at the Crepe Station,
a charming roadside eatery owned by her boyfriend. The Crepe
Station is located in Bandra West, a tiny neighbourhood
in Mumbai housing Bollywood stars such as Salman Khan and
Shah Rukh Khan. The small but cozy Crepe Station is filled
with smart, young Mumbaikars, scarfing down Belgian waffles
or crepes. The Canadian breakfast option - pancakes, fruits
and honey - on the menu looks tempting, but doesn't do much
for nostalgia. Maybe if they switched maple syrup for the
honey...
Kim
just a tad late - about 20 minutes - and she hurries as
she parks her cute little black car on the curb, flashing
a smile to the cabbie who pulls back to let her manoeuvre.
Petite,
she wears a camisole top and a frilly skirt that show off
her porcelain skin. Her hair drawn back in a tight bun,
Kim looks more like a Spanish senorita.
"Have
you been waiting," she asks, immediately contrite.
"I used to do that too. I used to arrive on time for
all my appointments right on the dot. And then Iíd
just twiddle my thumbs. Waiting, waiting, waiting. Itís
much better to arrive a little late."
It
took Kim some time to learn the Indian ways.
A
former Miss India Canada winner - she won in 1999 - Kim
was actually born Komila Jagtiani in Mumbai, India. When
she was a child, her family moved to Canada and Komila became
Kim.
Barely
out of her high school, Kim entered the annual Miss India
Canada beauty pageant, a contest now known for having jumpstarted
the career of now Bollywood celebrity Ruby Bhatia. One of
the prizes for winning the contest is a return fare to India.
But for many Miss India Canada aspirants, the prize is considered
a one-way ticket to Bollywood.
There
were no Bollywood aspiration as far as she was concerned,
say Kim. All set to start at the University of Toronto,
she had no intention of staying back.
But
a chance audition with Channel V changed her plans.
"I was just vacationing in India, and somehow Channel
V got a hold of my number and got in touch with me,"
says Kim. "I've no idea how they did that. And they
asked me if I'd like to audition for a VJ. I had no idea
what a VJ was. They told me it was an anchor. I didn't even
want to go. I was telling them that I'm heading back to
Toronto, and that I start university real soon. But my aunt
pushed me to try it out.
"It
was really weird. They put me in this black miniskirt and
fuchsia pink top, put all this make-up on my face. Now,
I'm someone who believes in natural beauty. So, I thought
I looked horrible. Then they just asked me to talk. So I
did. I thought I made a complete fool of myself."
Turns
out the powers-that-be at Channel V liked Kim's quirky audition
and offered her a job.
"I
was like, holy sh**," laughs Kim. "There's no
way I'll give up my UFT entry. My parents have always been
about studies. But then my parents - they're the coolest
- told me that I could give it a shot. I could defer my
entrance to UFT. If it didn't work out, I could come back
after a year."
"So,
I came to Mumbai."
A
second-generation Canadian returning to India, Kim was in
for a bit of a culture shock, amongst other challenges.
"I
had no idea how tough it would," says Kim. "I
had just turned 18, and I knew nothing about India. I didn't
know the culture, I didn't know the language. I didn't understand
the mentality.
"Work-wise,
because I wasn't from here, it was like someone else coming
and taking your job. There was a hidden animosity."
But
Kim had no time to even think, what with her gruelling schedule
for the first two years at Channel V. At one time, says
Kim, she was hosting six shows - shooting everyday, working
double shifts.
"It
was weird at first," says Kim. "Everyone was super
nice to me, until I found out they didn't really mean it.
It was just superficial friendliness. In Toronto, people
tell you like how it is. The politics took a little getting
used to."
"I
learnt Hindi from everyone, from the cabwallahs to the autowallahs.
Now I can speak pretty decently."
Now
in her fourth year in India and as a Channel V VJ, Kim says
she's loving it.
"I
really like my job," she says. "I can't tell you
how lucky I am. I get to do all this travelling, I get to
learn so much. And I get paid for it. I mean itís
pretty hard at time. Like when I had to do the Lakme India
Fashion Week. For one week, I was just talking, talking,
talking on the mic. But then I also got to travel to Italy
because of my job. That was really cool."
"I
got to interview Celine Dion; that was my first major interview.
And I got to go to Florida for that. I've also interviewed
Jennifer Love Hewitt."
Some
of Kim's future plans include theatre and movies. Coming
back to Toronto, however, isn't on her immediate priority
list.
"I
don't feel complete in Toronto anymore," she says.
"In Mumbai, once you live here, you get addicted. I'ís
a city of destiny. I was as Canadian as you could get. But
here, I'm absorbing my own culture. Living with my people.
I'm finding out more about who I really am."
"But I'm also Canadian. That's also where I am from.
There is a constant confusion. But I feel I truly am both.
And I think I'm truly lucky to have that. It's worth the
confusion."
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