TV SCHEMA! - Page 4

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Posted: 12 years ago
#31
Revenge
Hannibal
Breaking bad
The big bang theory
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Posted: 12 years ago
#32

Originally posted by: ruky786

Aaah the good dramas back then. I remember watching Kusum, Kutumb, even remember watching Kangan and Kora Kaagaz. Zee TV have launched a new channel called Lamhe and they actually put on Astitva, Hasratein, Amanat, Kasamh Se, Sindoor, Saat Phere. Been watching Amanat at the moment so far so good, Gracy Singh looked so young!


I loved KUTUMB that one stayed amazing till the end! Kkusum was good initially but then man o man it became a headache! Sindoor tere naam ka started of very well but got very bad only after like 2 months! very few shows sustain their USP! sad! I used to also like KUMKUM lol and also SARAA AKAASH!
Edited by Nkapoor3 - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#33
If one more person mentions Humsafar I will blow a fuse.
Humsafar is the Twilight of Pakistan. It was so auccessful mainly coz of Fawad Khan's fan base.
It's a good show, but terribly overrated compared to other Pakistani dramas.
If you wanna watch simple twilight type mush, watch Humsafar.
If you wanna watch hard hitting REALISTIC Pakistani dramas with real life complex issues, reference the list I created on page one.
Edited by desigal90 - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#34
I have watched quite a few pakistani dramas and not to be rude but I think Humsafar was one of the few shows that did not promote misogyny! I hated how DURR-E-SHEHWAR gave the idea that only a woman is able to sacrifice in a marriage! HELL NO! in SHEHR-E-ZAAT the female protagonist lives with a man who cheats on her! in ZINDAGI GULZAR HAI the man flips out on his girlfriend for wearing sleeve less t-shirt! mind u I haven't watched many! but from the ones I have watched I liked Humsafar the best!


Edited by Nkapoor3 - 12 years ago
desigal90 thumbnail
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Posted: 12 years ago
#35
Then you have not watched most pakistani shows.
Diya Jale, Quaid E Tamhi, Doraha, Yahan Pyar Nahi Hai, Rehaai and many more are all centered around women triumphing over males and becoming independent on their own two feet.

Dur E Shahwar also showed a strong working woman Shandana, who learned from her mother's experience that normally, it is women who have the patience to be able to prevent their homes from breaking and men as creatures who make mistakes and realize much later. It was a different perspective and focuses more on giving everyone tips on how they can understand their families better in order to be able to cope with stressful situations.

That much is evident from her lady line to her father, "main simbhaal loongo. Main apni Mama ki beti hoon"



Edited by desigal90 - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#36

I watched DURR-E-SHEHWAR it ended with the note 'THAT only women can sacrifice as men can't' did not like that! quite a few people criticised the show for its misogyny!


FOR INSTANCE:



Durr-e-Shahwar: Television blames working women

By Afshan Khan Published: April 14, 2012

It's time local channels stopped pandering to society's fears about working women and started projecting their achievements in a positive light. PHOTO: PUBLICITY

Last Saturday night, I sat down with my mother-in-law to watch a new television drama serial named "Durr-e-Shahwar" which has come after the much talked and blogged about "Humsafar".

She was quite eager to watch this new serial, and I decided to keep her company. However, a few minutes into the show I started feeling anger at the writer and producer. Here's why:

"Durr-e-Shahwar" portrayed a working woman who was so focused on her career that she ignored everybody around her ' her family, her husband and her in-laws. While the show is well-produced and the actors seemed to be doing a fabulous job depicting their characters, what really annoyed me was that it propagated a popular, regressive mindset ' that women exist solely to serve their husbands, provide fresh hot meals to them and chase after them, reminding them to do every little thing.

Particularly annoying was one scene where the woman had the insolence to change the curtains in her own home, with her own money, only to incur her husband's wrath because "now that she had her own money she felt like she could do anything with it."

The show depicts that financial independence and freedom of choice are definite bars tomarital happiness. Worse still was the justification that the husband gave for his chauvinistic attitude:

"Our mothers did these things for our fathers and look how happy they are."

Maybe I am taking this one character very seriously when perhaps I shouldn't, because after all, it's just television and it can't really affect me. But the problem is that, in fact, it does.

Television influences mindsets and what it projects affects millions of people across Pakistan ' "Humsafar" being a case-in-point. By projecting working women as potentially bad wives, it magnifies the fear that the average Pakistani woman from our mother's generation has.

Acting on these fears, they are unlikely to encourage their daughters in becoming productive members of the society outside of their homes; this fear might even lead them to believe that a career-oriented woman is less likely to garner good "rishtas" (marriage proposal). I myself have seen a few women who hold their daughters back from careers and bribe them with stuff like:

"Shaadi kay baad jo marzi job karni hai karo, shohar ki marzi hai na."

(You can do any job after you get married, it will be up to your husband, right?)

In short, a culture is created where women who work are stigmatised rather than lauded for their contributions and financial independence. Their will power, competence, degrees and intelligence are considered social flaws rather than strengths benefiting society as a whole.

The choice to be a career woman or a home-maker is a personal one; there should be no judgement attached to either and one definitely should not be considered better than the other.

If as a career woman I choose to support my husband as he tries to provide a better future for our children, assist him in taking care of financial responsibilities (while also contributing to the national economy) and at the same time ensure that my home is running smoothly, then how does that make me any less than a traditional home-maker?

I know dozens of dozens of women who work. Instead of focusing exclusively on their careers, they constantly try to juggle all their responsibilities. They work nine to five, look after their husbands, feed their families, pick and drop their children from school, tuitions and play dates and help them with homework. They still manage to maintain close and extended relationships with friends and family regardless of all that they do.

What's more is that they are doing this at the cost of their own time ' time that could otherwise be spent doing what other women do ' getting a manicure/pedicure, reading a book, hanging out with friends, maybe even getting a haircut, or taking a shower that is longer than seven minutes.

The question to ask here is then why do working women take on this life of hardship, self-sacrifice and perpetual guilt?

It's because we are striving for something better; to send our children to better schools, to provide them with facilities that we did not have access to ourselves, to support not only ourselves but our husbands so that they don't feel that they are solely carrying the burden of the financial future of our family, and yes, also to secure ourselves in case an unfortunate incident leaves us without any kind of support.

I have seen many women who have been either widowed or divorced. Lacking the skills and attitude to support themselves, they are ultimately helpless, at the mercy of their parents and siblings.

Keeping all these things in mind, we choose to become career women and for this we are demonised on national television. We are shown as selfish rather than selfless, and our financial freedom portrayed as a threat. Our ability to think, voice our opinions, and get things done rather than sit around and wait for "our hero on a trusty steed" is taken as a sign of our inability to adjust to marriage and make the compromises that a relationship,whether with husbands or with in-laws, requires.

Since the media plays a critical role in forming opinions and developing attitudes, isn't it time local channels stopped pandering to society's fears about working women and started projecting their achievements in a positive light?

It's time they made serials on the lives and challenges of these brilliant women, instead of creating masala dramas only. I expected the producer of "Durr-e-Shahwar", Momina Duraid to acknowledge her own strengths as a woman rather than producing dramas that marginalise working women.

Surely it's time to look at working women with compassion and acceptance, and it most definitely is time for television to be the agent of change for a progressive culture rather than be a throwback to archaic and regressive times.

Edited by Nkapoor3 - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#37
Express Tribune - Reputed Tabloid from Pakistan


Saying goodbye to "Durr-e-Shahwar"



By Hareem Ahmed Published: June

All in all, "Durr-e-Shahwar" has attempted to enlighten the viewers, asking them to reflect on their own relationships, and how they can better them.


I decided to write this post mainly in response to "Durr-e-Shahwar: Television blames working women." I was a bit surprised at the negative tone of that post, especially when it labelled "Durr-e-Shahwar" as a "masala drama." Currently, it is a top-rated drama serial on air, and is definitely about much more than just 'working women'.

"Durr-e-Shahwar" is a masterpiece in my opinion. It is directed by Haissam Hussain, written by Umera Ahmad, produced by Momina Duraid, Samina Humayun Saeed and Shahzad Nasib, and is backed by an excellent cast of actors.

The plot revolves around two couples – each with their own share of problems.

Shandana and Hyder (played by Nadia Jamil and Nauman Ejaz) seem to be leading a square perfect life. They live independently, and have little to no interference from other family members. Shandana works full time and has domestic help to compensate her absence. Both husband and wife, however, have enormous egos, major communication problems, and a tendency to talk over the other rather than listen and resolve their issues. They also have no qualms about putting each other down in public. Their constant bickering over petty issues is seen to be affecting their only daughter, Sophia (played by Sophia Syed).

On the other side of the coin, we see Shandana's parents,; her mother is Durr-e-Shahwar, who is the protagonist of the show and her father is Mansoor (played by Samina Peerzada and Qavi Khan respectively). They are seen leading a peaceful, retired life in Murree. Loving and caring towards each other, they seem to be the ideal couple – or so their daughter, Shandana, believes them to be.

The viewers are then taken back into time, and given a glimpse in to the early married life of Durr-e-Shahwar and Mansoor. This is full of various issues, beginning with a joint family system, their lack of privacy, failed understanding between the two partners, major adjustment issues for the young Durr-e-Shahwar and a young Mansoor who is clueless as to how to balance his responsibility as a husband and a son. Sanam Baloch and Mikaal Zulfiqar play the young Durr-e-Shahwar and Mansoor respectively.

It is strange to see how this peaceful, retired couple's marriage was once as much on the rocks as their daughter's.

The story does seem ordinary. Having said as much, credit should be given to the entire team for bringing this story alive in such a manner that the viewer is totally transported into the world the characters play. Literally, the sets, the ambiance of the scenes, the background music and the heart wrenching dialogues by Umera Ahmad are brilliantly in sync with the grand effort injected by the cast in their performances. The emotions that emanate from their acting boosts the brilliant chemistry they have with one another and brings in commendable intensity in each scene. It surely gives its viewers goosebumps, keeping them hooked from the first scene of the episode to the very last.

The serial has tried to highlight some of the common factors like in-laws, joint family, the wife's career, the husband's expectations and so on. Ultimately, whether or not these factors affect the quality of ones marriage depends on the partners themselves. A couple has to have the right attitude in a relationship in order to bring quality to it. If the marital relationship has strength and quality, then no problem is big enough. However, if this is not the case then even the most trivial of problems will turn out to be a mountain instead of a mole hill. What we see in the serial are two couples whose problems are equally great but their attitude and perception towards their problems and relationship is quiet different.

"Durr-e-Shahwar" is definitely a drama for all couples to watch.

It is filled with excellent pre-marital as well as post-marital counselling material. It covers the typical fears and apprehensions of a young, to-be-married girl and boy. It highlights the fact – much forgotten nowadays – that relationships need time and effort in order to thrive.

Most importantly, "Durr-e-Shahwar" has tried to lead back home the very crucial, but lost, role of the parents in their children's marriage. Durr-e-Shahwar's father, Sami (played by Muhammad Ahmed) needs an important mention here.

His conversations via letters with his daughter, advising her at every difficult turn in her life, are full of potent and heartfelt lessons. His advice enabled her to face problems patiently. Later in the serial, Durr-e-Shahwar herself decides to tell Shandana her entire story only to make her understand the ways she can save her crumbling marriage.

All in all, "Durr-e-Shahwar" has attempted to enlighten the viewers, asking them to reflect on their own relationships, and how they can better them. In a nutshell, it is the story of every couple. Many have even testified that it is akin to seeing their own life's story being played out on the screen, and therein lies its appeal.

As the series draws to an end today, I would like to give Haissam Hussain a huge round of applause for taking an age old story and depicting it so powerfully and beautifully on screen. It has, no doubt, helped the marriages of countless couples.


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Hareem Ahmed
A passionate reviewer and critic of dramas and soaps who blogs at dramapakistani.net./

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The views expressed by the writer and the reader comments do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of The Express Tribune.
Edited by desigal90 - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#38
I guess two different reporters had different opinions! I found the show to be misogynistic! it ended with the note that only women have the ability to sacrifice..and gave the fake hope that the husband can change!
Edited by Nkapoor3 - 12 years ago
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Posted: 12 years ago
#39
Where can I watch pakistani shows?
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Posted: 12 years ago
#40
I haven't watched many PAK tv serials so I might be wrong! did not like DURR-E-SHEHWAR though

@pari_rox----most of them are on YOUTUBE! just type the name of the show up!
Edited by Nkapoor3 - 12 years ago

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