July 02, 2001
Issue



COVER
   

The Luckies
The Labelled, Urban, Chilled, Kicked-with-life Indians are here. The most fortunate ever if only for the choices before it, this generation is glib, global, cocky and informed-and chases success with an awesome spending power.

 

 
STATES
   

Wages Of Peace
The Centre's decision to extend its cease-fire with the NSCN(I-M)
to three other north-east states leads to large-scale violence
in Manipur.


Man Of Letters
Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik's skill with the quill has the PMO busy acknowledging his missives. And on occasion agreeing to his demands.

 

 
NEIGHBOURS
 

Civil Lines
Pervez Musharraf's assuming the office of President is being seen as a bid to legitimise his position. A look at what this means in the context of his India visit.

 

 
DIPLOMACY
 

Peace In Pipeline
India wants to put on Iran the onus of ensuring safe transit of gas.

 

 
OTHER STORIES
     
 



 
  Home  
 

COVER STORY: URBAN YOUTH

The Luckies

The Labelled, Urban, Chilled, Kicked-with-life Indians are here. They are glib, global, cocky, informed — and spoilt for choice.

Arjun Vasanth, an 18-year-old from Bangalore, is on a waltz. And the lady on his arm is Luck. Passionate about both cars and horses, he drives a Ford Ikon. His motto: "Detroit, here I come."

 

Take a peek into Delhi-based Fiamma Uban's see-through D&G bag. It is a mini bunker of two credit cards, a Nokia 2180, driving licence, some handy cash, a deo, Maybelline deep tan lipstick, Body Shop hemp moisturiser-the last two items bought during last season's "to-see-my-cousins" trip to Melbourne.

Kajal Dhawan, 23, a flight attendant with an international airline, palm-pilots her entertainment schedule with battleplan exactitude-Wednesdays at Ghungaroo, Thursdays at 1911, Fridays at Float, Saturdays at Djinns ... and a yearly break with friends to favourite holiday space Kuala Lumpur. Not really an epicure-just someone who likes to "work hard in the day and to chill out at night". Preferred label is Gap, preferred colour is black and she drives a Hyundai Accent.

 

 

The first rule of the Luckies, like these in Mumbai, is style

 
Dress-hexed youngsters have coincided with a period of Indian history overswept by a surge of global culture.

These are the kids in cashmere, intaglios of the times, a new generation of the urban post-1990s consumer kids whom sociologist Radhika Chopra of the Delhi School of Economics refers to as global nomads. "They're great communicators, they can flourish in a very global, competitive market."

Enter the Luckies-Labelled, Urban, Chilled, Kicked-with-life Indians-India's luckiest generation ever. A generation that has not seen any real hardship except on television with access to a 60-channel network through which it can safely mull over such images and count its blessings. Yet a generation which is sharply focused on success, challenging the permutations of its options with Pentium ease.

Success is the star which the Luckies chase with awesome spending power.
 

 

BANGALORE
Arjun And Natasha, 25,18
He drives a Ford Icon SXL and has an expensive hobbyhorse. He carries a cell (but of course) and often goes trekking with his dad, who runs a leading ad agency. She is Miss Bangalore 2000, likes to read, and is off to the US for a degree in communication studies next session with support from her businessman dad.

"I plan to go abroad... my motto is, Detroit here I come." Arjun

Being a Lucki is all about "attitude"-an attitude that is the result of a lethal coalition of labels and lavishness. This makes the Luckies glib, cocky and knowledgeable. They know the hottest pub in London, the capital of New South Wales (their last holiday spot), maybe Hrithik Roshan's cell number, and the name of the person who invented the Singapore Sling at the Raffles Hotel in 1920 or whenever. An intelligent mixture of dazzling factoids and exclusive information. An essential corollary of impressive knowledge is an impressive accent-with the appropriate inflection, the stresses, the verbal traction. In the game of Lucki one-upmanship, it's not really what you say but how you say it. This basically means talking like a Yank-most Luckies sound suspiciously like the gang from the New York-based sitcom Friends.

Theirs is a generation which has coincided with a period in Indian history overswept not by calamity or sputtered nation-building, but by a surge of global, mostly western culture. The culture of stock exchanges, multiple credit cards, serious leisure time, off-centre job options, recycling initiatives and Oscar-outfit gazing. The culture through which Levi's Orange Tabs quickly gain corner-store legitimacy; where sandy swim-suit vacations to Phuket are quixotic realities and China is the latest "happening fun spot". A generation apprised about alternatives and fussy about selection: chopsticks are chosen over forks, satays are always dipped in peanut sauce, Absolut is preferred to Smirnoff, Samsonite rejected for Vuitton, batik swapped for animal prints, capitalism for socialism. Choices that rarely tempted their fatigued fogyish predecessors.

 

"They can flourish in a global, competitive market."
Radhika Chopra, sociologist
 

"They want expensive things but don't value them."
Monica Chib, psychiatrist

"Compared to the previous generation, we are far more indulgent towards our children," says T.P. Vasanth about his son. "I am a typical nuclear family dad. True, I have spoilt Arjun but what the heck. After all he is headed for Detroit." After three generations of aspiring to affluence, successful middle-class India sees a generation that does not need to struggle to achieve what it has. "Man, thank God I was still a toddler then," says Delhi teenager Amberdeep Singh. "I don't know what I would have done without my Samsung cell phone." For the Luckies, convenience is the first call to take.


 
 
 



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