A platform that churns out 5 episodes in a week so that a home viewer has something new every single day is already working at maximum speed but this platform has recently seen some competition from the ‘new TV’, the OTT platforms. The tastes have changed, and so has the business of television.
#TODAR MAL BHARAT EK KHOJ TV#
The audience’s expectations from what they watch on TV has certainly changed from the late 1980s to now. The audience’s attention span is much lower than before and instead of trying to learn history, they want something more from their TV viewing experience. It has to be taken into account that Jodha Akbar came at a time when, unlike Bharat Ek Khoj, we had tonnes of options that we could switch to so the show had to be on its A-game to retain its viewers, and so it did at the time. Dramatic exaggerations, flaring background music, heightened acting and even plot points that feel a little too far-fetched, even if you want to call it historical ‘fiction’. For anyone who has ever seen primetime Hindi television, they can spot this soap style when they see it.
#TODAR MAL BHARAT EK KHOJ SERIES#
ZEE TV’s Jodha Akbar, that aired from 2013-2015 made waves and is still remembered as one of the most popular historical fiction shows to have aired on TV in the last decade but does it still hold up? After watching a couple of episodes of Bharat Ek Khoj, I realised I could revisit the entire series on a weekend but the same does not translate for Jodha Akbar and that is mainly because the ZEE TV show was structured in a daily soap format. With Shyam Benegal at its helm, who was already a National Award winning filmmaker at the time, the show also saw some of the finest actors at work here, which elevated a simple exchange between two characters to a marvellous scene. The non-complicated nature of its storytelling worked in its favour as it was quite straight forward, yet it maintained the charm of dramatically re-enacting historical events from the country’s past.
This was before the private channels entered the market so on a day when Bharat Ek Khoj aired, it hardly saw any competition. ZEE TV’s Jodha Akbar enjoyed a huge fan following during its run.īharat Ek Khoj comes from an era when television viewing was still seen as an event. Both shows were termed highly successful in their respective eras so they had the potential of giving a sense as to how the genre has moved on in the last few decades. Even Sanjay Khan’s popular show The Sword of Tipu Sultan, that left the audience in awe with its massive production scale, was based on a book by Bhagwan Gidwani, thus never claiming to be true to history.īut what was it about shows from the late 1980s and early 1990s Doordarshan era that made us believe in their authenticity a bit more than what we see on the entertainment channels today?įor the purposes of this article, I revisited a few episodes of DD’s Bharat Ek Khoj and ZEE TV’s Jodhaa Akbar to find what sets them apart. After all, interpretation is key when it comes to narrating history. Of course, the events were true but the interpretation was seen through the eyes of Nehru, and later Benegal. Bharat Ek Khoj was based on Jawaharlal Nehru’s book Discovery of India which had him explaining the evolution of India over the ages. The Shyam Benegal directed series, which was first broadcast on Doordarshan in 1988, turned out to be a much needed history lesson for many of its viewers but the show never claimed itself to be historically accurate. Makers often rely upon a piece of text or literature for their shows that gives them a chance to tailor certain historical events to their storytelling.Ī still from Doordarshan’s Bharat EK Khoj.įor instance, take a show like Bharat Ek Khoj. Disclaimers give them a little liberty to dramatise events that may not have taken place in the exact same way, but it also gives them an exit while creating love stories for the sake of TRPs. To save them from some dire consequences incited by a possibly angry mob, television shows have always relied on the humble old disclaimer that gives them some legal coverage, and some moral coverage too.