"Mine was a very brief stopover. I went in when the show was almost 50 days old. The other participants at Bigg Boss had all become emotionally attached to one another. I expected to be out in two weeks.
I lasted three weeks. I knew everyone in there would nominate me for eviction. They were all one big family. They didn't want an outsider around."
But Baba enjoyed the experience. "I had a good time. But I'm not an actor. I wasn't acting, like they all are all the time. I was myself. I didn't bitch about anyone. I was singing all the time because there was nothing else to do. I tried to cheer the others up. But their emotions were so tightly wound and self-serving, it was impossible to penetrate the wall."
Baba was initially close to Ravi Kissan. "But then everyone was guarded about me. They're all so insecure. They're all there to win. And then every Friday they come on air and say they want to leave! What are they talking about????
Have they forgotten the contract they've signed? These things used to bother me...Suddenly they 'd start behaving in a different way on Fridays....I'd wonder yeh kya bol rahe hain. ? I detached myself from the whole environment."
Baba is honest enough to admit he had specific reasons for going on the show. "Initially they had approached me to be on the show. But at that time I was busy with my new album. I was also busy with my TV shows and gigs. But the wild-card entry was just fine. It was only for 2-3 weeks. My twenty days were like twenty years because I was completely out of the loop in there."
Baba sees Bigg Boss as good publicity for his new album Welcome To Mumbai. "I've been out of the media loop for five years. I don't want to be boastful like Ravi Kissan. But I did 20 albums, no flops. Why did I disappear?
For personal reasons I had to be in the US for five years. All the while I continued with my concerts.That kept my creativity alive. Now I'm back. I've just sung the title song for Madhur Bhandarkar's Traffic Signal. There're other songs in movies coming up."