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I'm sorry, luv, I'm in America. The rest of the world? What's that?

Shazia Mirza

Published 05 February 2007

Shilpa deserved to win because she was the best cook and the best cleaner

This week I was in San Francisco. I'm always popular in California, because they think I'm Mexican. People come up to me after my shows and speak to me in Spanish. I talk back to them in Urdu; it's a lot of fun. I performed ten shows in one week. That's what I love about Americans. They don’t mind me going over there and stealing their jobs.

One show was in Marin County, one of the richest counties in the USA. The theatre had blue velvet curtains and a Persian rug on the stage. I had to take my shoes off before getting on the carpet to do my set. The poor people in the front row were totally put off by my crusty toenails.

I informed the audience that I was not the Puerto Rican cleaner, but a comedian, there to entertain them. I get a huge thrill performing in places like these where people like me do not exist. Money cannot buy a sense of humour. There is a relationship between wealth and political correctness - the richer you are, the more overtly PC you become, because "it's not fair to laugh at people less fortunate than ourselves". They just laugh at them when they get home.

There were certain phrases the Americans had difficulty comprehending: these were "my trainers", "weight loss" and "will you please stop talking". After the show a man approached me and said: "I loved your performance." I didn't trust him, because he had no expression - he'd had so much plastic surgery, he looked like a walking Burt Reynolds convention. It is disturbing to see a town full of middle-aged men with faces scraped back into a ponytail. They don't look young, they look like aliens.

It is so easy to get sucked in to the vacuous hole that is America - country of extremes and excess. When I am in England I hardly ever go shopping or watch TV. When I am in the States, all I do is flick through 360 channels, and then complain there is nothing to watch, eat nine meals a day, and go to Victoria's Secret to buy lace G-strings that I am never going to wear and no one is ever going to see. Why? Because it's almost $2 to the pound and I feel I must.

Last Tuesday at 5am San Francisco time, I was awakened in my hotel by a tirade of phone calls telling me there had been racism in the Celebrity Big Brother house. I foolishly answered the phone in my sleep to hear: "Jade Goody is a racist." I thought I was having a bad dream. Jade Goody? This woman is haunting me.

America is a cocoon. I had no idea what was going on in the rest of the world - but I did know that Al Pacino had just had another facelift. At 11 o'clock that night I had a phone call from NewsNight in India. The woman was shouting down the phone, saying: "Shazia, you must come on our programme tonight. We need you to discuss why our girl Shilpa Shetty is being treated so badly in England." I said, "I'm sorry, luv, I'm in America. The rest of the world? What's that? Have a nice day. Goodbye."

When I returned to England a few days ago I was shocked by what I saw. I am inspired by Shilpa's calm dignity. If that was me, I would have locked those girls in the diary room with no food, then given them a medieval-style ducking in the Jacuzzi.

It's ridiculous that people are saying the result was rigged. You can always rely on the people of Britain to play fair. I voted for Shilpa because I am British and I support the underdog. There are about 500 people in my family and I know they all voted for her, too.

Shilpa deserved to win, because, like any well-brought-up Asian girl, she was the best cook and the best cleaner and never stooped to the level of those silly girls.

An Asian woman wins Big Brother? I know it's only a game show, but whatever next? Maybe we'll be driving buses and speaking in public soon.

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9 comments from readers

michael
02 February 2007 at 17:01

America is the greatest most powerful country on earth. Europe can only dream of being like us. Mexicans, Indians, Puerto Ricans you all look similar it's an easy mistake to make so what?

Vacuous hole? bet it's a hole all you English would love to be in.

alzwick13
03 February 2007 at 15:57

So, to summarize this article. “I was in California. The people were weird. My toes are crusty. I behave like a total pig when the exchange rate is in my favor, but that’s not my fault, it the fault of all Americans. Americans are loud and fat. Wealthy people may act PC, but in private they are not. Americans don’t know what is going on the world, because they are only interested in what celebrities are doing. In fact, they are so out of touch that I did not hear about a scandal on a British reality show until I went back to Britain. The way those racists treated the Asian on the show was bad. Oh and she won because she was a better person, like all other people of my ethnic group.

Any other brilliant thoughts Shazia? Maybe you could write about something really profound, like, how crime is bad, and how all (fill in any racial ort national group) act just as they are stereotyped to act. Then end with a grand finally about how wonderful your people are.

Fortunately Shazia, you disprove the stereotype that all British people are smart, and that a respectable British magazines will not publish crap, and that all English comics are funny.

PSP JEDI
03 February 2007 at 21:04

Excellent post Shazia as usual. Totally agree with the America as centre of the universe analogy! When I was last there nobody new what was going on outside of there 4 walls never mind there state or country.!

amir
04 February 2007 at 01:01

Alzwick 13 your comments are racist, and ill informed. Shazia’s week is about Shazia’s week! she is simply writing about what she experienced whilst in the US. You seem to be terribly insecure about the morals and values of our culture, if a person has some values they seem to be under attack particularly by people from another culture. Is it because you lack some of your own morals and are therefore insecure about ours? You need to take an introrespective look at yourself, to see why you have spewed so much hatred towards what is just a light hearted funny article about someone’s week. She does not say that an Asian woman won big brother because she was a better person (although it is clear that Shilpa was definitely a better person) and that all “our people are wonderful”.

What is wrong with defending your own people? and your own culture? That is what America and patriotism is all about- the Americans do that best. In our culture loyalty plays a huge part we do tend to support our own people especially when they are down, which is what Shazia is saying and it hurts me to see people like you attacking people like us. We are not saying we are “better” we are saying this is us this is the way we are, why do you find that so hard to accept? White people seem to have lost their “culture” long ago and are now attacking ours! I hope you find a way of cooling the furnace of hatred you seem to have in your heart. Start by regaining your sense of humour.

alzwick13
04 February 2007 at 22:51

Amir,

I read your comments, and I'm wondering, where did I attack your ethics and values, or culture? Also, which cultures values are you taking ownership of, Asians, British, or someone else? The only point that I mentioned the issue on the British big brother was in my summery of her comments. In other words it was my interpretation of what Shazia said. I did that to make point about her hypocrisy.

Yes, I thought her article was garbage, and that she was hypocritical. I did not apreciate her comments on Americans. I did not find it funny, but that is OK since you didn't find my attempt at humor very funny. But, my attack on her writing is just that, an attack on her writing. How that is an attack on the values of her culture, or you, I just don't get.

I will work on calming the "furnace of hatred in my heart". Should I use water, or do you think it's a chemical or grease fire, and water will only make it worse?

amir
05 February 2007 at 01:19

You are getting defensive about something that not exist! This is comedy! she is after all a comedian, and she is also an Asian woman. You attacked us by saying " Then end with a grand finally about how wonderful your people are" When did she say all Asians were wonderful? I am taking ownership of being a British Asian I come from the same culture as Shazia, and it just seems to me that because there are no people like Shazia in her position in British society, she seems to be in the firing line for all animosity, hatred, and fear that has built up in other people be it Americans or otherwise. Which makes what she says and does all the more important and all the more valid. You seem to have focused on the negative, earlier in her article she says how much she loves America- why are you not drawn to that? In previous articles she talks of performing in New York with great affection why have you over looked those? Is it because you just want to attack her anyway? An attack on her is an attack on all our people you might not understand this but why is it that when anyone speaks out against America all hell breaks loose and it gets so personal? There is truth in all stereotypes, and Shazia very cleverly veils those stereotypes with jokes and personal experience,this is a very British sense of humour. I don't Shazia is a hypocrite, I think she is very straight forward and very very honest, maybe too honest but then that is the basis for all great comedy? you seem to forget it's only comedy...

Mitch
05 February 2007 at 13:30

michael, I think your understanding of things is conspicious by its absence - greatest? most powerful? try most inward looking, myopic, hegemonic, I could go on...and as for wishing I was in the 'vacuous hole' that is the U.S, no thanks, I prefer not to have my irises scanned thanks very much, I can think of less paranoid and hysterical parts of the world I'd rather be in. And as for your pathetic comment on how 'they all look the same', that doesnt even dignify a reply...

guydenning
06 February 2007 at 10:12

Then it's a bet you'd lose sunshine.

swatantra nandanwar
06 February 2007 at 16:25

Great observational humour. Mirza is right, Asian girls know how to run a household, and do their share of domestic chores. I don't think I saw Jade, Jo or Danielle do much cooking or cleaning around the house.

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