Custom Search

Asault on Media in Pakistan: GEO TV Forced to Close Down (UPDATE)

Posted on November 16, 2007
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Politics, TV, Movies & Theatre
142 Comments
Total Views: 67765

Share

Adil Najam

"GeoNews is that GEO Network is closing down. I hope the news is a false alarm, but I am told that this has been announced on Geo TV itself. An email making the rounds from someone at GEO itself reads:

At this moment we here at Geo are extremely SAD as Geo network is forced to shut down due to Govt pressure on UAE our base country.
Insha Allah we will fight. We are proud that the management of Jang Group never made compromise and prefer to fight till death.

I would rather wait to hear more details and to see reaction to this from the government, from the people of Pakistan and also the rest of the world before I comment in detail. But my first reaction is, yet again, one of disgust. The things that we coudl have been most proud of in recent years and months – an assertive judiciary, a free media – are being snatched away one by one. I hope it turns out not to be so. But if so, then who next?



Original Post (Nov. 4, 2007):
The emergency declared by Gen. Pervez Musharraf yesterday was not surprising. But that does not make it any less disturbing. Amongst the many unspeakable actions that have resulted from this is a clampdown on the media, especially the electronic news media. In response, GEO News has made the audio stream of its transmissions available on line.

You can listen to GEO News by clicking on image below.


Windows Media Player or VLC is required to play this live audio.


"Your

Recipes hold time in a box: Search for soup instructions leads to nostalgic trip

Chicago Sun-Times January 18, 2006 | Leslie Baldacci Where was the minestrone recipe? The family asked me to bring minestrone to Christmas dinner. It was the day before Christmas and as clearly as I could see the recipe in my mind’s eye, I could not put my hands on it flipping through the recipe box.

It was written on a raggedy piece of lined paper ripped from a spiral notebook. The ingredients were listed on the left side. Some had been crossed out, others added, along with notes (“mash potatoes somewhat to thicken,” “collards better than spinach”) as I experimented and refined it over time. Where could it be? go to site taco salad recipe

Not in the “Soups” section of the clear plastic recipe box I received as a Christmas gift more than 25 years ago. The dear old lady who gave it to me was kind enough to start me off with four salad recipes.

One was for a 24-Hour Vegetable Salad but included a pound of bacon, a cup of mayonnaise, six eggs and two cups of shredded cheese. Another was a taco salad recipe that called for Doritos and French dressing. “Makes a lot serve before soggy,” she wrote at the bottom. The ’70s. Good lord.

Flipping through the “Salad” section I found the ’80s represented with a recipe for honey mustard poppyseed dressing. Why don’t I make that any more? I loved it at the time over a bed of romaine, cilantro, Mandarin oranges, avocados and tomatoes. The minestrone recipe was not misfiled in the “Salads” section. But my best friend’s mother’s rhubarb pie recipe was.

I remember the stormy day she wrote it down for me. She was explaining how to make a lattice top when a thunderclap rattled the roof. We took one look at the greenish tint to the sky and headed for the basement. “Wait! The pie!,” someone said, and Dorothy grabbed the pie and a handful of forks. If the house had blown away, they’d have found us sitting in the rubble, eating rhubarb pie, happy as could be. A hint of cinnamon was her trademark.

I refiled the pie recipe in “Desserts” and promptly bumped into my mother’s strawberry pie, in her own round, neat handwriting. I remembered picking strawberries with her one Mother’s Day on the Eastern Shore. I re-read a friend’s great-grandmother’s sweet potato pie recipe that included a quarter cup of brandy “or more to taste.” You go, granny! The final instruction from my friend: “Never tell anyone in my family I passed this on.” Now what was I looking for? Oh, the minestrone recipe.

It wasn’t in “Dinners,” but you know what was? That stupid recipe for the chicken with the dry vermouth sauce. I tried to make it three times, and every time it came out terrible. It was delicious at Debbie’s. She must have held out an ingredient on me. And what’s with the macaroni and cheese? I have a dozen recipes, not one as good as Stouffer’s.

There were others that needed the heave-ho. The cheesecake I will never, ever make. Four different recipes for deep-dish Chicago pizza, Kahlua, peach chutney, Moctec-style mole and a couple of Thai recipes. One headline warns, “Appetizing Thai satay: Not easy, but it’s worth it.” No, it’s not. It’s worth $4.95 at any Thai restaurant. Between the satay, the peanut sauce and the cucumber salad, there were 23 ingredients! I could travel to Thailand with less stress and strain. And why would anyone make Kahlua out of vodka and instant coffee when there is all the Kahlua you need at the liquor store?

I have never made an enchilada casserole, but apparently I’ve been meaning to for a long time. I had two recipes, one dating back to a 1992 Woman’s Day magazine. And calzones, never made them, either, but there were two recipes from the mid-80s that start “mix oe cup water, yeast and sugar in a large bowl.” Yeah, right. There was a brittle 1981 recipe for summer squash soup with exhaustive instructions that took up half a page in a broadsheet newspaper. I doubt I ever had time to read it all the way through, much less make the soup.

But look! Oh joy! The whole wheat bread dough that adapts for pecan sticky buns! That’s a keeper. Why did I only bake bread when I was home with babies? Why don’t I bake bread any more? I should. It would be so good with . . .

. . . minestrone. Now where is that recipe? Not under bread and muffins.

The search meandered on. The muffaletta recipe reminded me of the Super Bowl party we had when the Bears won in New Orleans. The “heart- healthy ranch crackers” made me think of my students because we often made them in class for a snack. The boys always angled to be the chefs. I took time to neatly rewrite the Chex Mix recipe I’d furtively scrawled in the grocery aisle after seeing that Chex cost $4 a box. I copied the recipe, then bought the store-brand version of Chex for $2.50.

I realized an hour had slipped by. The messy plastic recipe box was a time capsule and a treasure chest, filled with index cards written in the hands of the cooks who so generously shared their talent. You can Google a recipe or consult a cookbook, but nothing compares to time-tested recipes lovingly passed on to you by friends and family.

As identifying as her face, my mother’s distinctive round writing announced her ginger snaps and “Bran Muffins for the Multitudes,” a quantity of buttermilk batter that you use as needed, with whatever you feel like putting in the muffins that day: blueberries, pineapple, pecans, mashed bananas, raisins, well, you get the idea.

She tried to help organize the crazy mess once. “What categories do you want?” I recall her asking, as her little granddaughters sprinted, naked and squealing, through the kitchen and out the front door. Three of “their” recipes remain: the much-used “Play Dough” and “Bubble solution” — and the once-used bath salts. tacosaladrecipenow.com taco salad recipe

The yellowest recipes are the most beloved. They are careworn. “Auntie Mae’s Vegetarian Spaghetti Sauce.” Simple. Perfect. “I like Contadina,” she informed me as she wrote it down on a large index card. And in case I forgot, the card specified: Contadina crushed tomatoes, Contadina tomato sauce and Contadina paste.

Some recipes are from people I barely remember. Some are from people I saw last week. Some are heirlooms, some are toss-offs. I created a new section, “Classics,” for such towering legends as Marian’s beef brisket and my mother-in-law’s meat loaf. Some recipes are so practiced I never consult the written version. I keep them just the same because one has a child’s drawing on the back and others were jotted on letterhead of former employers.

I never found the minestrone recipe, but I did weed out others that had outlasted their shelf life. The clippings folded into tiny squares for so long accordioned into a fluffy pile. I swept it into the trash.

Now I had a neat, orderly, organized recipe box to start the new year. I picked up a fresh card and wrote down the minestrone recipe from memory. It took a minute.

- – - MEATLESS SPAGHETTI SAUCE Makes 4 servings 1 small onion, chopped 5 cloves garlic , chopped Small handful chopped parsley 1 (28-ounce) can crushed tomatoes 1 (8-ounce) can tomato sauce 1/2 can tomato paste 1 cup water Saute in olive oil the onion, garlic and parsley until transparent. Add crushed tomatoes. Simmer 1/2 hour. Add tomato sauce. Simmer 1/2 hour. Add paste and 1 cup water. Simmer 1/2 hour. Add salt and pepper to taste.

Makes 2 1/2 quarts, enough for 2 pounds linguine.

Variations: Add 1 (28-ounce) can strained whole tomatoes and/or 1/ 2 teaspoon crushed red pepper and some basil at the very end.

Nutrition facts per serving:

95 calories, .5 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 22 g carbohydrates, 5 g protein, 958 mg sodium, 5 g fiber Leslie Baldacci

142 comments posted

Comment Pages: « 18 17 16 15 [14] 13 12 11 10 9 81 » Show All

  1. zakoota says:
    November 17th, 2007 1:06 pm

    Pejamistry,

    I wish this dream come true. Gen. Kiani is perhaps the only hope left for Pakistan. I wish he restores democracy, constitution, media and sends army back to borders to defend the country in a true sense.

  2. faraz says:
    November 17th, 2007 12:44 pm

    Ali Raja, I also dont like GEO. Dr Mushahid Hussain show was nothing more then O Reilly factor.

    But where we are heading? What about freedom of expression. How we can build a democratic society without it. Why our government can not tolorate hawkish views. Yes on LAl masjid episode, the rumor of 1000 bodies were too much anti-state propaganda, but who is going to set up limits for media? Some independent judinational comission of just few monkeys in GHQ.

  3. Rizwan says:
    November 17th, 2007 12:21 pm

    Put your trust behind Mushraf what are other choices? Bhutto who stole money from Pakistan?

  4. ali raza says:
    November 17th, 2007 11:56 am

    that demand for payment from ISI was in response to a smarty pants wondering aloud why so many commentators were supporting the imposition of emergency. And if there was one person posting similar sentiments under different names. There must be just two people on this comment section then. I ask you sir, to please step in the light.

    Independent media is an amusing term. The media has had unprecedented liberty to report. Even to comment. But it has frequently crossed all limits that a civil society imposes. In the USA for instance, the FCC has many regulations that restrict what can and what can’t be said on air. In addition there are citizen bodies that pressurize broadcasters and sponsors to change programming. Granted this is usually entertainment programming. Still, running afoul of these restrictions can mean fines of multimillion dollars per infraction.

    The americans are even harsher when the news media makes a mistake. Dan Rather, one of the most respected journalists in America with a career spanning decades got fired and lost a lifetime of respect when he unknowingly presented a forged document during a show to prove a point. He should have researched the voracity of his sources. In Pakistani media, these people are running wild with gossip and innuendo. The only one I’ll miss is Jawab Deh, but hopefully, someother channel still on air will pick him up smartly.

  5. ali raza says:
    November 17th, 2007 11:31 am

    ctrl c, ctrl p

  6. November 17th, 2007 10:53 am

    We know that our judiciary was corrupt, for over 59 years our judges bowed to the Army generals. They never gave verdicts according to the constitution. They always legitimized the rule of dictators. And then one fine morning , we found a person whom we never thought in our dreams to take up the cause of people. He went in front of the dictator , told him:
    Alright from now onwards, all the decisions will be according to the constitution of Pakistan.
    And now we find that there are 50 of his brother judges following him.

    Why can I not dream that :
    One fine morning one of our generals overthrows their boss, issue a one line statement :

  7. MQ says:
    November 17th, 2007 9:04 am

    I happen to witness a lively and vociferous protest by journalists today outside the Geo building in Blue Area, Islamabad.

    Asma Shirazi, a familiar face if you have been watching Geo or ARY, read the famous protest poem by Ahmed Faraz. This was followed by fiery speeches different anchorpersons, Hamid Mir among them, and office bearers of the union of journalists.

    What I found most interesting were the slogans. They had the rhyme and the rhythm and were also meaningful. I wish I had a pen and paper to write them down. One slogan, led by a young woman from QAU, went something like this:
    Ab ghar pe baith ke ro Musharraf
    Go Musharraf, Go Musharrf

    This is the first protest I have witnessed since I came to Pakistan a few days ago. I get the feeling that these protests are not going to die down soon.

    There is going to be one tomorrow outside the ARY office in F-7/4. (By the way, ARY has also been closed.)

  8. Rafay Kashmiri says:
    November 17th, 2007 8:39 am

    @ Now all the comments are beating what ? :

    Sanmp bhag gaya, abb app lakir peet rehay hein,

    Out of 103 comments, 98 are similar useless
    bashing against the wall.

Comment Pages: « 18 17 16 15 [14] 13 12 11 10 9 81 » Show All



Have Your Say (Bol, magar piyar say)

Please respect the ATP Comment Policy.

Keep comments on topic; no personal attacks; don't submit indecent, inflammatory, slanderous, uncivil or irrelevant comments; flamers and trolls are not welcome; inappropriate comments will be removed or edited.

If you won't say it to someone's face, then don't say it here!

Readers who want to use a URL should please use the TINY URL program.

Thanks, and keep the comments coming!