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          New Delhi, Nov 3 (IANS) Blurring the lines between reel and   real, Sushil Kumar lived a billion dreams when he went from being a computer   operator earning Rs.6,000 a month to a millionaire many times over by winning   Rs.5 crore ($1 million) on "Kaun Banega Crorepati". The fairytale 'slumdog   millionaire' come to life on that new harbinger of change - reality television.
 
 |  The 27-year-old from Motihari in Bihar, who went from oblivion to fame and   wealth in a matter of 13 questions on the fifth season of the quiz show, is the   latest in the many talents from far flung corners of the country who have come   to the national centrestage thanks to reality shows. 
 When the show was   going on air, KBC host, superstar Amitabh Bachchan, had said he wanted to reach   out to people in the interiors so that viewers could get to see some of the best   brains from small towns.
 
 After Sushil Kumar's spectacular win, aired   Wednesday night, Big B said: "This is what the common man is all about. This is   what KBC is all about - given an opportunity, the common man has the strength,   the ability and the acumen to prove to the world that he is the best and second   to none."
 
 Last month, The Suresh & Vernon Group won "India's Got   Talent 3". The group of 30 youngsters from Mumbai suburbs like Vasai, Virar and   Nala Sopara were from lower middle class backgrounds and danced their way to the   TRPs.
 
 Another rags to riches story was of the Prince Dance Troupe from   the backlanes of Berhampur, Orissa. The unlikely stars, including daily wage   labourers and two polio-stricken children, won an earlier season of "India's Got   Talent" and even got to perform at the opening ceremony of the Commonwealth   Games.
 
 The trend began in the late 1990s with shows such as "Meri Awaz   Suno" on Doordarshan and Zee TV's "Hero Honda Sa Re Ga Ma". Singers like Sunidhi   Chauhan and Shreya Ghosal first showcased their talent on these shows before   going on to make it big in Bollywood, the ultimate dream of every artist.
 
 Thanks to their success stories, reality shows became a rage in small   towns. More aspirational than just an entertainment show.
 
 Many talents   found their spot in the sun - Sony's "Indian Idol" turned Abhijeet Sawant into a   celebrity post his win while the second season winner Sandeep Acharya from   Bikaner in Rajasthan too became well-known. There was also Prashant Tamang from   Darjeeling, Amit Paul from Shillong, Emon Chatterjee from Kolkata and Antara   Mitra from Maslandapur in West Bengal.
 
 Debojit Saha, a struggling singer   from Silchar, Assam, got a new lease of life after winning Zee's "Sa Re Ga Ma   Pa", as did Raja Hassan, Tochi Raina and Harshit Saxena.
 
 With time,   reality shows have become bigger and better with "X-Factor", "Dance India Dance"   and "MasterChef India" vying for TRPs along with the staple prime time   soaps.
 
 Not just reality TV producers, filmmakers are also walking the   dusty hinterland paths in search of talent.
 
 "It's a huge country and   there is huge talent out there. We need to make it accessible to people who   don't have access to come to Mumbai. I feel there is so much talent in the rest   of the country which needs to explored. We want to try and do it through my film   'Chauranga'," Onir, the maker of films like "My Brother Nikhil", told IANS.
 
 Exploring the country's interiors for stories and talent is the need of   the hour for Bollywood, agreed filmmaker Dibakar Banerjee.
 
 "I think   there's so much within India, in the interiors of India. There is a large pool   of talent in the country and so many local stories waiting to be told," the man   behind acclaimed movies like "Khosla Ka Ghosla" said.
 
 But yes, it is a   treacherous path.
 
 "I think reality shows give you this opportunity and   platform. It can give you that initial visibility towards success in the   industry, but at the end of the day what sustains you is sheer talent,"   Bollywood singer Sunidhi told IANS.
 
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