| Tête-à-tête
with television host, actress Tania Zaetta |
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"Too
many reality shows shock merely for the sake of it and for
the ratings"
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| Posted
on 1 December 2003 |
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'The
Ultimate Aussie Girl', 'Action Girl', 'Dare Diva'. These are some
the nicknames given to television hostess and actor Tania Zaetta.
Zaetta has been a regular on screens and a media favourite around
the world for the past nine years.
In
India, Zaetta has become a known name over the past few years for
co-anchoring the reality show Who
Dares Wins
along with ex Australian cricketer Mike Whitney on AXN. Not one
to hold back, Zaetta has done quite a few stunts herself like jumping
off a 17-storey building, swimming with a Great White Shark, climbing
under flying helicopters.
Zaetta
is here again, promoting Extreme
Dhamaka,the
Indianised version of Who
Dares Wins.
It will commence airing from 3 December every Wednesday at 9 pm.
The schedule saw the vivacious beauty visit six cities along with
Whitney and the winners of AXN's Hot
'n' Wild
contest Deepica Sarma and Salil Acharya. Indiantelevision.com's
correspondent Ashwin
Pinto
caught up with the effervescent model-anchor on the sidelines of
a media briefing.
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First
off, what did you learn from hosting Extreme Dhamaka in India?
I
have been doing this show for ten years. I learnt a lot about the
Bollywood industry because we had the best working with us on the
production side. The stunt co-ordinator, director, director of photography
have all worked on some of the biggest productions ever in India.
I also learnt a lot about the people and the culture.
In
fact, I learnt more in one month of touring the country than I did
all these years travelling the globe. I must say that I also enjoyed
the variations in the food between North and South India as also
about the different religions and ways of life.
It
was also a learning experience for Deepica and Salil. I told them
"Forget whatever you have learnt about television so far. Throw
that book out of the window because this is going to be a whole
different ball game altogether. We do not have any scripted lines
because this is reality. You do not know what the participants will
say. It is ad libbed all the way."
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When
and how did your journey into television start?
Oh God! That is a really long story. Television hosting is all I
have ever done. I started modelling at age 17. By 19, I got my first
television show, which was a game show. At 20, I landed up on Who
Dares Wins. I do shows all over in London, Australia.
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| "We
never put anyone down even if they fail at something miserably.
At best, we might make a light joke about it" |
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Were
you nervous when you first appeared in front of thousands of people?
It is funny! Usually, the number one fears are those of heights
and public speaking. The latter is not a problem for me. I love
getting up in front of crowds. I don't really get nervous.
The
only time I was nervous was because the crowd was going berserk.
I hosted one of Who Dares Wins challenges at an Australian
Football League ground. The final was being played and 80,000 people
were present chanting my name. It was like being at the centre during
the Olympics.
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You
have been hosting Who Dares Wins with Mike Whitney for several
years. Is it a challenge to keep the routine fresh?
The interesting thing with a show like this is that with each
segment of the show you are working with different people. So I
cannot anticipate what they will do or say or how they are going
to act or react.
Since
it is live, there is a huge challenge for the production team. There
are no retakes. I cannot ask someone who has just finished riding
through a burning bus on a motorbike to do it all over again because
one camera was slightly out of focus. Another challenge for the
stunt co-ordinators is that they are dealing with untrained people.
Usually they interact with stunts people. So in our case they have
to make sure that the message is properly communicated to the layman
who may be a computer nerd.
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What,
in your opinion, is the single biggest reason for the success of
the show?
We don't humiliate or embarrass people. We never put anyone down
even if they fail at something miserably. At best, we might make
a light joke about it. They are still winners at the end of the
day. After all, there have been dares that I have not been able
to finish.
If
they say no to a challenge without even trying it, there is no problem.
After all, I probably would not attempt it either and I am sure
that most people at home wouldn't, especially when you have something
that involves a level of danger. It was also one of the first reality
shows to have appeared on the horizon. A lot of stuff that you see
today has replicated our format.
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What
is the most dangerous dare one can perform?
I think that anything involving animals is the most dangerous. You
cannot predict their behaviour. Hand feeding the sharks is one that
readily comes to mind. We did one where a lady was dropped into
a lion pen and she had to do some tricks with the circus trained
animal. Once a crocodile moved around unexpectedly and I have never
seen the crew run so fast in all of my life.
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"I
have been receiving a lot of interest regarding Bollywood
movies here. I love the entire colour, the sequence, the dance
routines. The offers have already been made"
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Could
you talk about some of the other shows you have hosted?
There around 25 of them. I have hosted ESPN Sports shows. ESPN had
approached me a few years ago to present a series of internationally
packaged TV specials, For The Great Outdoor Games I was based
out of New York. I also did the 2000 Summer X Games in San
Francisco. I have just finished a show in London called Loose
Women for ITV.
This
consists of a panel of women talking about topical events. It is
a big daytime show. Then I have been with Blue Planet a travel
show. I also do a sitcom called Pizza in Australia. I play
a struggling upcoming model who dreams of making it big as a film
star.
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Does
your anchoring style keep changing depending on the mood of the
show?
Absolutely!
For instance on the travel show The Blue Planet I would go
"Hi! Look I am in Paris right now". With ESPN Sports I adopt the
role of a commentator. I interview all the athletes like skate boarding's
Tony Hawke. On Who dares Wins, I am myself. I am the easygoing,
let-me-help-everybody kind of person. I help the participants get
through their dares. You also speak and dress according to the dictates
of the show.
None
of the shows I have done are straightforward. If I was hosting a
fashion show, I would be wearing the latest accessories which would
be most inappropriate for Extreme Dhamaka where I might be
trying to convince someone to roll around in the mud.
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Television
is one of the most stressful jobs one can be in. How do you manage
to sustain your level of motivation with the long hours?
The thing is that you have to love what you do. In whatever you
are doing, if you are miserable, it shows through in the outcome.
Every day is different. Every day, I am in another place filming
different shows. The variety is another huge motivating factor.
Sure,
it is hard work. I recently moved from Australia to London. This
way I can cut some of the travelling time out. I also did this to
figure out what it was like be me rather than being the me that
everybody else wanted me to be. I just wanted to go out there and
be me. In India, one of the major rewards was the crowd. In a city
like Chandigarh, where the heat was touching 40 degrees, they turned
out in thousands. That makes the 15-hour days, the sweat all worthwhile.
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"On
Who Dares Wins I am myself. I am the easygoing let
me help everybody kind of person"
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What
do you think about the general quality of reality television at the
moment?
It is going to be very contradictory for me to say this. I am not
a huge fan of a lot of reality shows. I think that too many of them
shock for the sake of it and for the ratings. Many of them promote
unhealthy values, which are not good for the kids.
Putting
people together to see who will cheat and lie (read Temptation
Island) in manipulative ways to win a prize is something I am
repelled by. A kid might watch a show and then say "Hey, it is perfectly
good for me to grow up and then cheat on my husband." That is the
reason why I will never host certain kinds of shows. People say,
"How can you talk this when you also host reality shows?" I have
had many offers over the years to host these kinds of shows once
I became a recognisable face.
However
I do not want to put my name next to them. I am not surprised that
there have been lawsuits put forth by participants. The worst part
is that the audience who are utterly fascinated and do not realise
that there is genuine anguish being felt by the participants and
television should never stoop to that level.
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So
what kind of television engages you?
24 is one of the shows I like. I do not watch too much television.
I usually catch movies while on a plane. On television, I watch
the news or sometimes just read the newspaper. I also like sitcoms
like Friends, Frasier, Sex And The City. A
half hour show that tickles the funny bone is my recipe for relaxation.
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"The
thing is that you have to love what you do. In what ever you
are doing if you are miserable it shows through in the outcome"
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What
kind of a person are you and does that reflect what the average Australian
is like?
Your questions are really making me think. I like that. I think that
in some ways I am very typically Australian. I am athletic and sporty.
I love the outdoors. Australians are very laidback in their attitude.
Like them, I get along with everybody. We treat everybody the same,
whether it is a Prime Minister or a beggar on the street. We do not
take ourselves too seriously. We don't think that we are better than
anybody else. We don't throw starry tantrums. I have never been late
for anything in my life.
There
are other qualities that I would hope make me different from the
average Australian because that is my personality. I have a genuine
love for people. I love hearing people's stories. I love talking.
I love travelling. Wherever I go, I never do anything by halves.
When I came to India, I read books about the country, tried to understand
the culture and the myriad ways of life that are prevalent.
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Is
acting something you are also pursuing along with anchoring?
Yes! I am going back to Australia this month and I will be in a
few episodes of the sitcom I work on there. I have been receiving
a lot of interest regarding Bollywood movies here. I love the entire
colour, the sequence, the dance routines. The offers have already
been made.
I prefer
hosting, though. It is my calling. It is my niche in the market
place. It comes very easy to me. I slip in front of the camera and
talk without thinking. Whereas, with acting, you are pretending
to be somebody else the whole time. I prefer to be me and that happens
when you are a presenter.
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Is
it difficult for you not to get caught up in all the media hype
with magazines and publications voting you the best on the basis
of your looks?
I do not think that it has ever gone to my head. It is lovely and
nice when magazines write wonderful things and put out nice things.
It is not pleasant though when a magazine writes nasty things. It
is a question of taking the good with the bad and I am a pretty
levelheaded person. I still have the same friends I did before I
became famous.
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You
have now come out with a kickboxing video. What is it about that sport
that holds special appeal for you?
I have been kickboxing for ten years. It was a great way for me to
keep in shape and also a way for me to know a little bit about self-defense.
I think that all women should. I have got a series of five kickboxing
videos. If anyone is having trouble with the stomach and legs, kickboxing
is a great way to workout. |
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What
does the future hold for Tania?
Hopefully, another season of Extreme Dhamaka in India. Granada
Television has just finished making a one-hour documentary about
my life, my career and the success I have had. That is very flattering.
It
is a big thing to find that a network wants to acknowledge all the
work you have done and think that you are worthy of following around
for a month with a camera crew. There are a lot of big magazine
covers, magazine spreads, swimwear, calendars coming up too...
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