Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat Hai

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Posted: 13 years ago
 
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Edited by -Fivr- - 13 years ago

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Posted: 13 years ago

Priyamvada Kant replaces Akangsha in Srishti Arya's show..

25 March 2010 | 8:13pm    12 Comments

COLORS' upcoming afternoon band show Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat Hai has a change in the cast, as Priyamvada Kant steps in to play the role opposite Romit Raj..

Edited by -Fivr- - 13 years ago
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Posted: 13 years ago

Swarg to go off air..

20 May 2010 | 5:35pm    20 Comments

COLORS' Maat Pitaah Ke Charnon Mein Swarg will go off air around the 11th of June, and this raises thoughts about the show occupying the 7.30 pm slot on the channel..

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Posted: 13 years ago

Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat Hai finally gets its time slot..

24 May 2010 | 6:39pm    18 Comments

Rose Movies' upcoming show which was earlier designed for the afternoon slot on COLORS will now replace Swarg at the 7.30 PM slot..

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Posted: 13 years ago

Priyamvada Kant and Aditya Kapadia in a relationship..

03 June 2010 | 3:15pm    29 Comments

Priyamvada Kant and Aditya Kapadia of Just Mohabbat fame are seeing each other for the past three years..

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Posted: 13 years ago

Hemant Thatte looks forward to a great second innings..

03 June 2010 | 7:12pm    10 Comments

Hemant Thatte who will play the dutiful husband, brother and son in COLORS upcoming show Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat Hai comes back to television after a hiatus..

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Posted: 13 years ago

'I was confident of getting a lead role' - Aarti Singh

06 June 2010 | 7:07pm    16 Comments

Aarti Singh of Grihasti fame, talks about her new show on COLORS, Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat Hai...

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Posted: 13 years ago
Aarti Singh's marriage dreams
TNN, Jun 11, 2010, 12.00am IST

The bubbly young girl Aarti Singh, who plays the elder bahu Mughdha of the Kulkarni family in the new show Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat Hai, seems to have been preparing for this role for a long time now.

As a kid, when Aarti used to live in Lucknow, she would dress up in her bhabhi's wedding garb whenever she'd get a chance. "I was fascinated with the idea of getting married young. I guess that fascination has continued as I was delighted when I got this role," says Aarti, who's excited about her look in the show, where she wears the nath (nose-ring worn by married Maharashtrian women). She sometimes even ends up going home in her 'Mughdha' getup after packup! For this role, Aarti had to lose around fourteen kilos, which she did by hitting the gym. "Diets aren't for me! I can work out as much as possible, but food I just can't give up," says the foodie. "I love food. I can eat anything at anytime. Usually after work, the first thing I do is scout for food," she admits.

Watch Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat Hai, Monday to Friday, 7.30 pm on Colors.

Edited by -Fivr- - 13 years ago
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Posted: 13 years ago
 Friday, June 18, 2010, 14:27 [IST]


'Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat Hai' proved to be true to it's the name, after the opening week, as it had to be content with thodisi (little) TRPs. 'Thoda Hai..' had launched on 7th June replacing Rajan Shahi's 'Swarg' at the 7.30 pm slot.

Buzz up!
It will be totally unfair and too early to write this Rose Movies and Colors show off, but a look at the descending numbers, since its first telecast, indicates that the show will have to come up with something better in order to attract the viewers.


According to the TAM data week 24 (June 6-12), the show opened with a TVR of 1.85 – a good enough number for the channel which had obtained a rating of just 1 TVR in the final episode of 'Swarg', the preceding week. Perhaps, the viewers didn't find the first episode intriguing enough. The ratings dropped to 1.56 on Tuesday dropping further to 1.4, 1.33 on the following days touching an abysmal 0.86 finally on Friday, June 11.

Soaps with the Marathi touch normally find favour with the viewers, so why did 'Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat..' fail to impress?

Romit Raj, who plays Nishikant, says, "Before discussing the ratings, I must tell you that my family and friends have really appreciated the show. Friends like actor Dilip Joshi have also appreciated our work. I'm back after a year's break. Hearing such comments from well wishers can be very encouraging indeed!"

"As for the ratings, the 7.30 pm slot has become very competitive now. The FIFA World Cup opened with a grand ceremony. The viewers may have drifted there. We're just a week old now. I'd like to see the rating of the second week though. I'm hope it will improve by then."

Contrary to Raj's claim, the FIFA World Cup opening ceremony that was aired from 5.30 pm to 6.12 pm could only muster a TVR of 0.61 in the Hindi Belt.

Well, we wish the show and Romit all the very best. Hopefully, 'Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat' will get to score more goals, if nor TVRs in the next TAM rating.
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Posted: 13 years ago
Cultural insights

Increasingly, producers are using the cultural diversity card in many Hindi serials. Families belonging to regions from Maharashtra to Bengal are being portrayed on the small screen, writes Srabanti Chakrabarti

Here is a question for you on a lazy Sunday morning ' think of a serial that you used to watch during the nascent days of satellite television and you might come up with names like Junoon, Khandaan, Sailaab or Dastaan. Now think of the characters and the backdrop of these shows. Do you remember which part of the country the lead characters came from? Well, all these shows were based in a metro and the characters were part of the cosmopolitan crowd who made the mega city their home. Where they came from was not important and did not make much of a difference in the serial. Now fast forward time and think of the late 90s and early 2000s ' Kyun Ki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi, Kasauti Zindagi Kay, Baa Bahu aur Baby and the retinue of saas-bahu soaps where the story was largely based in Mumbai. The Viranis of Kyun Ki'were from Gujarat, the Basus of Kasauti from Bengal and so on. One could not miss the Jai Shri Krishna and the Durga Puja in the serials!

If you think, this is just a mere coincidence, you are mistaken. In the recent past, serial makers have made a conscious effort to explore the rich diversity of India and bring it to your living room. Is it a careful ploy by the makers to help you relate to the show, thereby increasing TRPs? If it is, so successful has this ploy been that producers just can't seem to have enough of it. Ekta cites the example of her latest show Tere Liye to disagree and explain the real reason, "This show is based on two families in Kolkata.

When I agreed to make this serial, I never wanted to cater to just the Bengali audience, as this niche group can always watch such shows on  regional channels. I have created Tere Liye in such a way that it can appeal to people from all over the country. I feel everyone would like to know how two culturally rich Bengali families live with each other," explains the lady, who has always expressed her fondness for the city of joy and its inhabitants.

However, if you take a look at the shows that were launched in the last few months, you will realise that increasingly, the cultural diversity card is being used as the USP of Hindi serials. Sarvgun Sampanna is based on a a Lavani dancer ' a dance form from Maharashtra, Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat Hai is based on a Maharastrian family who lives in the old Shivaji Park neighbourhood in Mumbai, in addition to Tere Liye. Ekta, the czarina of Indian television and the person who started the trend, says, "It is the story that is important and if it demands a focus on the region, we have to portray the same.

When I started Pavitra Rishta ' the story of a typical middle-class Maharastrian family ' it had a cosmopolitan feel, however, when I did Sarvgun Sampanna, the feel changed. Since the story spoke about the Lavani dance form and the struggle of dancers in rural Maharashtra, I had to bring in that element. But I do admit that of late, most of the ideas presented by my creative team have a regional background."

With physical and geographical barriers being broken by cosmopolitan lifestyles and cross-cultural marriages, the growing interest in such diverse content is partly understandable. Explains Goldie Behl, producer of Thoda Hai Bas Thode Ki Zaroorat Hai, "Though we are Punjabis, both Shrishti (his sister and co-producer) and I are married to Maharastrians. After observing our extended families for a long time and knowing them closely, we decided to make a show depicting the Maharashtrian way of life. In a way, it is a tribute to our in-laws!"  In this show, the Behls depict how relationships are nurtured in a Maharastrian family.

If the diversity and newness factor affected the producers so much, one can imagine the impact it will have on viewers. Naturally they would like to see more of what goes on elsewhere in the country. Little wonder that you find shows based in Rajasthan, Jharkhand and remote corners of Uttar Pradesh these days.

Interestingly, however, we have not seen too many successful shows based on South Indian families. Is their any particular reason? Is the language barrier acting as an obstacle? Ekta seems to agree. She says, "We do not have a very strong viewership in South India for our shows. However, once it's translated and telecast, it gets good ratings." Whatever the case may be, no one is complaining. If Mile Sur Mera Tumhara, promoted unity among diversity in the 80s, different Hindi serials have taken up the mantle now. Undoubtedly, it is a delight to get a taste of different cultures on the small screen.