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File:Bollywood nerd.jpg

What a typical Bollywood nerd will look like.


People from India portrayed as various forms of geeks and nerds, although almost always on the smart end.

American media has very little to go by in terms of Indian stereotypes. While many Indians do speak English, this was under Imperial British rule. Americans know virtually nothing about them. One possibly apocryphal story relates Ronald Reagan being asked a question about the Indian crisis and he mistakenly thought he was being asked about Indians on reservations.

So as far as Indian characters go, we really only know a few things: One, they have funny accents. Two, they drive cabs and run convenience stores. Yeah, those ain't gonna fly anymore. Three, Indians are so intelligent, they are the source of many white collar job outsourcings. So, obviously, all Indians must be geniuses. And therefore, nerds.

Note that the Bollywood Nerd is much less pronounced in nerdiness than other character types because of where the stereotype comes from — they're intelligent because they're stealing jobs from hard-working Americans. As is such, it doesn't make a whole heck of a lot of sense to show them as being lazy. Your typical Bollywood Nerd will be a scientist, doctor, or just plain normal guy who has an IQ of 153. In other words, what your mom wishes you were instead of wasting your time on this website.

According to the 2000 census Indian Americans have the highest educational qualifications of all national origin groups in the USA with about two thirds of Indian Americans have attained a Bachelor's degree or more. Around two fifths of all Indian Americans have a master's, doctorate or other professional degree, which is five times the national average. According to the 2000 U.S. Census, Indian American men had "the highest year-round, full-time median earnings". So Truth in Television to a certain extent.

This trope is not as common in Great Britian, where a higher percentage of the population is of South Asian ancestry.

Note that actual Bollywood films rarely use this character type. That's because Indians are pretty common over in India, so they don't have any trouble giving them diverse roles.

Compare Hollywood Nerd, Asian and Nerdy, Black and Nerdy, Jewish and Nerdy, and, of course, Nerd.

Examples of Bollywood Nerd include:


Anime and Manga[]

  • Dr. Rakshata Chawla from Code Geass, a Bunny Ears Hot Scientist. Also, most of China's Knightmare Frames are implied to have been designed by Indian engineers.
  • Kaolla Su from Love Hina is a mechanical genius who hails from Molmol, a Pacific island kingdom that really resembles India (and everyone thought she was Indian before).


Comicbooks[]

  • Dr. Kavita Rao in X-Men, who first appeared after having developed a serum that could cure the Homo superior mutations, and later joined them as part of the X-Club, a think tank assembled by Beast in order to try and reverse the effects of the Decimation.


Films — Live-Action[]

Cquote1

 Newton:"Where are you from, anyway?"

Ben: "Bakersfield, originally."

Newton:"No, I mean your ancestors."

Ben: "Oh, them. Pittsburgh."

Cquote2
  • Harold and Kumar attempted to avert this, but eventually ended up admitting that Indians just make good doctors for some reason. The straight use of this trope is seen in that Kumar comes off as far less nerdy than his Asian and Nerdy friend Harold (though they both smoke pot).
    • It wasn't so much that he was a good doctor by virtue of being Indian so much as by the end of the first film he (at least temporarily) decides that he should go to his medical school interview and take it seriously because he now appreciates his father more and wants to make him happy.
    • Kumar was actively trying to defy this trope. Even though he was highly intelligent and had a natural talent for medicine, he didn't want to be seen as a stereotypical Bollywood Nerd, so he dropped out of med school and spent his time getting stoned. Then he realised that being a doctor would actually be pretty cool.
  • In the live action movie adaptation of Street Fighter, Dhalsim works for Bison as a scientist, and is responsible for running (and ruining) his experiments.
    • Averted in the Anime film, however; that version is just a generically wise holy warrior.
  • Dileep Rao seems to be the go-to guy to play this kind of role in Hollywood, as evidenced by his roles in Avatar and Inception.
  • Jimi Mistry plays one in 2012.
  • Real-life Bollywood nerd Divya Narendra was portrayed by British actor Max Minghella (who is of Chinese and Italian descent), in the film The Social Network.


Literature[]

  • Anji Kapoor, from the Doctor Who Expanded Universe. She's a futures trader and damn good at it, watches documentaries about economics for fun, and occasionally reads Jane Austen, although, like many examples of this trope, she's not actually geeky.[1] Also, she was the first recurring Doctor Who character of Asian descent, though Rani from the Whoniverse series The Sarah Jane Adventures has appeared subsequently.
  • Doctor Sivasubramanian Chandrasegarampillai (also known as Dr. Chandra) from 2010: Odyssey Two.
    • Averted in the film, however, where he's played by the white and Jewish Bob Balaban and is always referred to as Dr. Chandra instead of his full name.
  • Percy Jackson and The Olympians briefly mentions a "calculus whiz" named Raj Mandali, who got picked on a lot.


Live-Action TV[]

  • Dr. Mohinder Suresh from Heroes. Now, granted, he and his father were both college professors, so it makes sense for them to be smart. But like Asian and Nerdy Hiro, the implications of this are pretty difficult to ignore when he's pretty much the only Indian in the series.
    • And he's a cab driver. And so was his father (lampshaded in the series itself, where Mohinder warns his father that Indian academics who migrate to America end up driving cabs).
  • On The Daily Show, Aasif Mandvi once insisted that Jon Stewart introduce him as "Dr. Aasif Mandvi"; claiming: "I'm an Indian American, Jon. We're all born with a certain level of graduate school medical training."
  • Raj from The Big Bang Theory. At least he's surrounded by other nerds, but is often the Chew Toy of the group. On the other hand, women do seem to find him attractive. Too bad he can't talk to them - sober.
  • Subverted in season 8 of Scrubs with new intern Ed. He's smart, but is ridiculously lazy and trendy, but because he doesn't take being a doctor seriously he gets fired.
    • Every role played by Aziz Ansari seems to subvert this role. His character in Parks and Recreation, Tom, is intelligent yet underachieving.
  • Jawaharlal on Head of the Class is a surprisingly early example. So early probably that the writers weren't so much deliberately associating India with intelligence so much as needing him to round out a Five-Token Band of kids who were all nerds anyway.
  • Averted by Lester Patel in Chuck. He knows enough about computers to scrape by working in the Buy More Nerd Herd, but when the only person below you on the Buy More totem pole is Jeff Barnes, you're not exactly a genius.
  • Mostly played straight but sometimes subverted by Kutner from House. He's a doctor whose interests include Star Wars, Harry Potter, Star Trek, etc. Thirteen describes his apartment as "man-boy heaven". During high school, however, he was a bully.
  • Averted on the American version of The Office: Kelly Kapoor is portrayed as a bit of an airhead, far too excitable and into pop culture for her own good, even if she does seem to be fairly intelligent and good at her job.
  • Dr. Mahesh Vijayaraghavensatyanaryanamurthy aka "Bug" from Crossing Jordan
  • Ranjid from the German Sketch Comedy show Was Guckst Du.
  • Dr Nayak from Fringe. A rare villainous example. Okay, anti-villainous example.


Newspaper Comics[]

  • Asok from Dilbert is so smart and his school is so good that they taught how to use psychic powers. Which the great Indian hierarchy may remove from him if he abuses them too much. The dullness of his job strains his ultra-powerful brain into near bouts of madness.
    • When he did break the rules with his powers in order to save the day, he was sentenced to go back to his cubicle at the office.
    • In Seven Years of Highly Defective People, Scott Adams admitted that he wrote Asok the way he did because he didn't think he could get away with making a minority as moronic as the rest of the cast.
    • Tiny, tiny bit of Truth in Television in this. Asok's intelligence and, more importantly, his psychic powers are more due to the fact that he attended an Indian Institute of Technology school, consistently ranked as the best in India. You gotta be real smart to get through there.
  • Andy, a one-shot Curtis character spotted by The Comics Curmudgeon here.


Videogames[]


Web Originals[]

  • Subverted with Zaboo of The Guild. He has the intelligence and computer savvy but not the work ethic.
  • Make, Overclock's Indian pal, in the Whateley Universe. The two of them are still just two more devisers in a Super-Hero School of about 600 kids.


Western Animation[]

  1. especially in contrast to the Doctor and Fitz
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