Questions
would look simple and answers too easily known when you see and judge them from
outside… that is more because your failures are not counted and your answers
are not valued… attach some value of gain or a loss to your decision then most
men would fumble often on very ordinary Qs, answers to which most people would
claim to know. That way, there should have been pulsating excitement on the set and the
expectations on air at the venue for the crew and spectators should have been
unimaginable. It is the highest prize
money ever in the history of Indian
television. The reports stated that
Sushil took more than long time in deciding on going for the last Q after
crossing the 1 crore mark. The defensive
mindset would have forced ordinary mortals to walk away with the crore prize
money; he eventually decided to go for it and after he answered and results
were known, the entire place just
exploded.
The family of
Sushil Kumar, the contestant, not prone to any kind of public jubilation ran on
to the floor of the set in uncontrollable joy and screamed in happiness, whilst the live audience were
whooping it up on their feet with the loudest scream. The episode, featuring Sushil Kumar's win, was telecast in Nov. 2011. A recent report in www.desinema.com states that after 5
years, Sushil Kumar is ‘cashless’ hinting that Income tax is too harsh. The report puts that -
“The hardest thing
to understand in the world is the income tax.”
Quoted by the great Albert Einstein.
We believe this line holds good for Kaun Banega Crorepati (KBC) season
five winner Sushil Kumar. Sushil Kumar the winner of KBC Season 5 who
ended up winning a whopping 5 crores at
the popular television reality show telecast on Sony TV in 2011, but now claims
to be cashless .
He could only get
INR 3.6 crore out of the 5 crore prize amount.
That was the first reality check
that hit him hard. The winner is quoted
as saying - “Much of the money was spent in building a house which I share with
my parents and four brothers. I have also purchased a plot of land in Motihari
in the name of my mother and some agricultural land. Another chunk of it was
spent on setting up businesses for his brothers”, he said in a conversation
with Hindustan Times.
Kumar was an
computer operator earning INR 6000 rupees in Mahatma Gandhi National Rural
Employment Guarantee Act before he won in KBC in 2011. After 5 years, his life
has come full circle and now he wants to be a School Teacher. He says with regret that he did get some endorsement offers after
winning the KBC, but nothing
materialized and he even met
Bihar CM Nitish Kumar and wished to join politics, but nothing worked out in
his favour. [http://desinema.com/kbc-winner-who-won-5-crore/
]
Not
sure of what palace he built ~ Rs.2 crore put in a Fixed deposit scheme would
earn interest @ 9% the least, which would work out to Rs.18 lakhs – which again
after tax would still fetch more than a lakh per month with capital intact. If somebody who was earning Rs.6000 p.m.
blames life - you know what is to be told !!
With regards S. Sampathkumar.
10th Mar 2015.
