Bairi Piya Serial Story
Bairi Piya Serial Full Story In Hindi As per the reports, Ashwini’s name in the serial is yet to be finalized. But she will playing widow of Thakur Digvijay Singh’s elder brother. ‘Bairi Piya’ Colors New Serial Plot/ Story ‘Bairi Piya’ is the story of a widow who falls in love with a guy. Shreya Ghoshal - Bairi Piya lyrics lyrics: Ish, ish Bairi piya bada bedardi, ish ch ch ch Ho, bairi piya bada bedardi Dil ka dard na jaane. Pyaar Kii Ye Ek Kahaani (translation: This is a story of love) was an Indian supernatural television series that aired on STAR One from 18 October 2010 to 15 December. Bairi Piya Serial Story Sean Paul Full Frequency Torrent Kickass Download Game Love Chess 2 Download Lagu Joan Baez Donna Donna Mp3 Descargar El Chavo Del 8 Animado Serie Completa Mega LSB#: 180207KR03 Make: Heritage Mfg. Model: Rough Rider Serial Number: P96454 Year of Manufacture: Modern Caliber.22 Short, Long or Long Rifle Action Type.
Have you ever wondered why the fashionably turned out Komolikas and the Ramola Sikands of the world of television soap opera are being replaced by the much more real looking ammajis or dadisaas these days? Or why those ridiculously large mansions in a Kasautii Zindagi Ki or a Kasam Se are being traded for the more down to earth middle class homes in small towns or villages in a Bairi Piya or a Tere Mere Sapne?
- Bairi Piya Serial Full Story In Hindi He later thanked Ekta Kapoor, the complete creative team and also the writer of 'Bairi Piya' for this fantastic show. The end however is going to make its viewers a little emotional.
- Bairi Piya is a TV serial which is aired on Colors TV channel in India from Monday to Friday at 8:30PM. Bairi Piya TV serial is based on background of farmer suicides in Maharashtra. Bairi Piya on Colors introduces life story of farmers of Maharashtra and their exploitation. Bairi Piya is a story about Amoli who is 20 years old girl.
Suddenly, Indian television seems to have set its sights on small town and rural India. In line with the new trend, the stories and the characters of mainstream television serials are also verging on the rural and the realistic.
Take Balaji Telefilms, the purveyor of high melodrama and kitchen politics in Indian TV serials. It has chosen to come out of those plush manors peopled with ultra rich men and women and move to the farms of Vidarbha in Maharashtra to tell the tale of Amoli, the protagonist of Bairi Piya, a serial that’s running on Colors. The story is set against the backdrop of farmer suicides in Vidarbha and reveals how the poor are exploited by moneylenders and how poverty drives girls into the hands of manipulative men.
Says Bandana Tewari, a screenplay writer at Balaji Telefilms, “When soap operas began to be made in India, the urban upper middle class was the target audience. But with time, the market has evolved and now people from semi-urban and rural areas have become the new target audience.” Besides, she points out, with the greater penetration of television in rural areas, it is but natural that this segment will be aggressively wooed by the television industry.
There are hard business reasons for Indian television focusing squarely on content that appeals specifically to semi-urban and rural areas. Media reports suggest that television viewership is growing by leaps and bounds not in the big cities but in the smaller towns. In fact, data provided by TAM Media Research show that it’s the cities or towns with less than a million population that have a higher viewership percentage. For instance, viewership figures from the 39th to the 46th week of 2009 show that metros contribute 33.4 per cent of overall Hindi General Entertainment Channel (GEC) viewership, whereas towns and cities with a population of 0.1-1million contribute as much as 37.3 per cent viewership. Another set of data from TAM reveals that the viewership of serials with social messages has risen from 17 per cent in 2008 to 31 per cent this year.
Says KPMG’s head of information, communication and entertainment head Rajesh Jain, “This shift in trend, that is, making serials with a rural or semi-urban theme, is primarily because of the shift in the focus of fast moving consumer goods companies. Today, these companies are targeting people in these areas. Serials with a rural backdrop garner a greater audience from this sector and this in turn helps the broadcaster earn revenues in the form of a greater volume of advertisements from these companies.”
Bairi Piya Serial Story Episode
Producers now know that you can’t go wrong with a serial that pitches a social theme. Says Sunjoy Waddhwa of Sphere Origin, that has produced serials like Balika Vadhu (Colors), Jyoti (NDTV Imagine) and Tere Mere Sapne (Star Plus) — all of which come with a worthy social message and are set in rural or semi-rural areas, “When I produced Balika Vadhu, a story about the evils of child marriage, I knew I was taking a risk. But ever since it struck gold, serials with such realistic themes and issues are managing to grab eyeballs and that means good business for everybody.”
According to a KPMG report, the Indian television industry is currently worth Rs 241 billion, having clocked a growth rate of 14.2 per cent for 2007-08. It also predicts that the industry will grow by 14.5 per cent annually between 2009 and 2013 and reach a size of Rs 473 billion by 2013. And this will happen, says the report, by creating content for audiences in the Tier 2 and Tier 3 towns, from where the next wave of growth is likely to come.
With the numbers clearly indicating that Indian television will profit most from targeting small town and rural India, serial makers are coming up with realistic social themes and humbler settings so that their new target audience can identify with them. Says Nitin Vaidya, COO, Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd, and business head, Zee TV, “We cater to the audience demand. Such serials are getting better GECs and so we are making them.” Agrees Vivek Behl, senior creative director, Star Plus and Star One, “We will cater to those who are consuming GEC television. If the simple truth of the market is that viewers are expanding at the base, and narrowing at the top, we would be unwise to ignore that fact.”
In fact, serials with a small town or a rural bias are not even promoted in the big cities these days. Says Rajan Sahi, who was associated with the production of hit serials like Jassi Jaisi Koi Nahi, Virasat, Saat Phere, Bidaai and Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai, “When I produced Bidaai and Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai (both small town stories) last year, I was amazed to see that not a single hoarding of these serials was being displayed in the metros. The same thing happened when my new serial Swarg, also a small town story, went on air in Colors. A chat with the broadcasters revealed that the serials were being aggressively promoted only in the small towns as they were the new target audience.”
Others say that profit is not the only reason they are making serials with social themes and simple settings. Says Ashvini Yardi, programming head for Colors, a channel that almost pioneered today’s “social serial” phenomenon with Balika Vadhu, “Colors has pioneered the making of such serials and we keep looking for interesting concepts, something that we know our viewers can relate to. It is part of our effort to provide meaningful entertainment.”
And the audience too is not complaining. Says Nutan Rai of Ranchi, “I like the serials these days — they give me a slice of my life. It’s more real.” Agrees Priyanka Jain, a Calcutta homemaker, “I am from Agra, and I always found the saas-bahu sagas unrealistic and superficial. However, the serials of today not only address social issues but also reflect the life of the people from small towns.”
Small, clearly, is beautiful on Indian television today.
Shreya Ghoshal Bairi Piya
Bairi Piya: Who Should Get the Girl?For the past decade or so, the television industry has been revolutionized and dominated by the Saas Bahu kind of sagas. But, in the past couple of years, here as well as Bollywood has seen the change in the trends of exploring new horizons, mainly due to the viewers being no longer being satisfied by the same routine content being dished out to them in almost the same or similar packages. One of the contributing factors could be the globalization of the country and the entry of international channels such as star plus, mtv and such channels entering the coun
And one of such attempts to explore something new, while presenting an old formula in a new package and also pushing the envelope as to the darkness of the main male protagonist is the creation of the serial called 'Bairi Piya'. This is set against the realistic back ground of the farmer suicides in Maharashtra. It attempts to depict the exploitation of the poor by the rich and the trials and tribulations which are faced by them. With this as the backdrop, the story revolves mainly around a poor farmer's idealistic daughter called Amoli and the Thakur of the Village (Thakur Digvijay Singh), who considers the village and its people as his own, to use, manipulate, punish and reward as he pleases and who rules the village with an iron hand.
To the outside world and to his family, (he is a happily married man with a wife who dotes on him and consists of other family members) he appears as the ideal man, husband, family man and land lord. But, underneath this facade, lives a completely ruthless man, who has been born and bred in luxury, who takes everything as his birth right including the power passed to him over the poor in the village from generation to generation. He is a man who has never heard No from anyone nor met with any resistance.
Into this existence of his enters Amoli, a poor farmer's idealistic daughter and with her entrance into his life, his life changes. For the first time, in his life he meets with resistance to his overtures and rejection to fulfill his wants and desires. This throws him into the thrall of anger, frustration stubbornness and into complete obsession with the girl. And how this obsession of his takes over his whole life and that of Amoli's and ways and extents to which he goes to get control of Amoli and to bend her to his will and how Amoli tries to escape his clutches forms the content of the present track of the serial.
In the end, it was presumed to be the love story of the Thakur and Amoli, and although set against a more realistic back drop, is presumed to follow the age old formula, of the bad boy turning good for the love of a good woman formula, although the character of the Thakur, has been pushed beyond the usual acceptable standards of a 'bad boy' image to an altogether different level. This guy is portrayed to be a person who will sacrifice anything and any one in order to get possession of his obsession.
But, due to the fall in TRPs, it is rumored that the track will now be changed to that of the love story between Amoli and that of Radhe, Thakur's most loyal servant, to whom the Thakur got Amoli married by deceit in order to get access and control of her.
But still a large fraction of the fans of the show still want the Thakur and Amoli to be together, rather than Radhe and Amoli who are legally married. Something about this age old formula, still seem to hold the female viewers in the thrall and they seem to want this bad guy to get the girl in spite of everything and for him to turn good due to his love for her, even though he is a happily married man, whose wife dotes on him.
This could be due to the tall, dark and dangerous stereo type that the Thakur embodies or due to the lack luster, innocent and totally subservient, malleable character of the servant Radhe who is malleable and subservient to the Thakur to the extent he accepts the Thakur not only having full access to his wife, but also tells his wife to do everything in her power to please his Malik. (Ouch)
It is up to you, the viewers to tell us as to who of these two characters is better qualified to get Amoli in the end or should it be entirely someone else?
We would love to hear as to whom you would want to emerge the victor here. I from my side would want the victor, whoever he might be,to be the one who will love, cherish and protect Amoli as every wife/woman should be. :)
So, who do u think has the capability of reaching that height in order to be the knight in shining armor for Amoli?
Reporter: Raji K
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