First Day First Show

Kuch Kuch Ho Gaya (Part 1)

46 min · 30 de oct de 202046 min
portada del episodio Kuch Kuch Ho Gaya (Part 1)

Descripción

Kuch Kuch Hota Hai exploded on the scene in 1998 with bubblegum colours, product placement, and a surprise guest star. It  was a heady brew of catchy Bollywood tunes set in an impossibly hep fictional Indian college, and a love triangle with echoes of Archie, Betty, and Veronica. It attempted to bridge modernity and tradition, gender roles, love, marriage, and children—with different degrees of success.  Or failure? Relive it with us and decide. Rani Mukerji's NRI character singing "Jai Jagadeesh Hare" to prove Indianness, Kajol's "tomboy" look vis-a-vis attractiveness and suitability for matrimony, and the (impossible?) ideals set for love and marriage, and the role a young daughter has to shoulder. These are some of the talking points for which our boys are joined by FDFS' first guest, Ishani. Enjoy the show.

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7 episodios

episode Kuch Kuch Ho Gaya (Part 1) artwork

Kuch Kuch Ho Gaya (Part 1)

Kuch Kuch Hota Hai exploded on the scene in 1998 with bubblegum colours, product placement, and a surprise guest star. It  was a heady brew of catchy Bollywood tunes set in an impossibly hep fictional Indian college, and a love triangle with echoes of Archie, Betty, and Veronica. It attempted to bridge modernity and tradition, gender roles, love, marriage, and children—with different degrees of success.  Or failure? Relive it with us and decide. Rani Mukerji's NRI character singing "Jai Jagadeesh Hare" to prove Indianness, Kajol's "tomboy" look vis-a-vis attractiveness and suitability for matrimony, and the (impossible?) ideals set for love and marriage, and the role a young daughter has to shoulder. These are some of the talking points for which our boys are joined by FDFS' first guest, Ishani. Enjoy the show.

30 de oct de 202046 min
episode Aashiqui ke liye artwork

Aashiqui ke liye

Who picks rank outsiders to debut as the lead pair in a musical? Who risks a movie poster in which the protagonists' faces are hidden? Who takes a chance on a failed music director duo for scoring the songs? Mahesh Bhatt, that's who. His film Aashiqui, the game-changing musical sensation of 1990, is on the anvil with Pat, Bugs, and Srini weighing in on its feminist themes, relationship politics, and music. Always the music. It blasted away the awkward blurb ("Love makes life live") and the bad acting from the lead pair, and brought in a new era. Aashiqui was Nadeem-Shravan's 20th gritty outing, redeeming what must have been a long period of struggle and failure. They finally tasted success, and how! Kumar Sanu seemed to have been in the right place at the right time, having entered the Hindi film industry only a year before. Aashiqui's lilting melodies, Sanuda's powerful voice (supported by Anuradha Paudwal), and the socially aware storyline, all combined to make history. Enjoy the show.

3 de oct de 202055 min