THISAIGALUM' MALAIMUGADUM... NATHIGALUM MANALVELIYUM.. NAALUM INGU UN VASAME' YAAVUM INGU UN VASAME' UN VASAME.
ANBAANA SEVAKIYAI... ENNAALUM VAAZHUGIRAAL...
NILAI MAARUM BOOMIYILE NIJAMAGA VAAZHUGIRAL
ADUKALAIYAI NESIKKIRAAL... ANUTHINAMUM SAATHIKKIRAL VIZHIYIL VIZHIYIL NEERTHULIGAL PEN VAAZHVAI PESUGAIYIL
STANZA 2
VEDANGAL NAANGU ILLAI' UNNAALE AINTHAAGUM..
SUVAI AARENDRU PESUVATHU' UNNAI SERTHU EEZHAGUM.
PORUMAIYIN THAAYAGAME
PANIPURIYUM NAAYAGIYE
SUMAIYAI SUGAMAAY SOOTIGIRAAL
SORGATHAI MEETUGIRAAL
SOORIYANE CHANDIRANE..THONDRIDUME PENNE UNNAAL
VANAGAMAE VAIYAGAME VAAZHNDIDUME PENNE UNNAAL.
'Soap opera' is a phrase first coined in the 1930s in the USA. It was used to describe radio series that were sponsored by the manufacturers of soap powder; hence 'soap'. The 'opera' part came from the fact that they were about dilemmas and other dramatic or melodramatic situations.
By the 1950s, these serials had made the transition to TV. They spread across the world and grew and grew in popularity.
Many people watch soaps because it pleases us to see and hear other people's problems, which in turn distracts us from our own. However, a soap opera has no real victims as the characters, of course, are fictional. However, we like to make guesses about their actions and reactions based on our knowledge of them. We like to see them develop as we get to know them and we enjoy learning about the complex relationships between characters. We become semi-experts on our favourite soaps, and our encyclopaedic knowledge of them, fuelled by the above points, gives us great pleasure. In a voyeuristic manner, we like to watch other people's lives, as, in the case of soap operas, they are just like ours, but more interesting.
JJ, a small change in "soap operas" - they are "soap oppaaris" in the Indian Television Viewers dictionaries π
Latest Romance Song in TMS
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