[ITEM]
08.04.2020

Sansar Serial Doordarshan

73
Sansar Serial Doordarshan 4,4/5 9089 reviews

Buniyaad (literally Foundation) is an Indian television soap opera directed by Ramesh Sippy and Jyoti.The series was written by Manohar Shyam Joshi and dealt with the Partition of India in 1947 and its aftermath. It first aired in 1986 on the Indian state television channel DD National.It was re-aired on DD Metro and Sahara One.The story spans the life in India between 1916-1978. Watch Classic Doordarshan National DD Videos on India's No.1 Doordarshan video Blog. This is a One-Stop Blog to watch Doordarshan Serials, Doordarshan Programs, Doordarshan Advertisements, Doordarshan films and much more.

From Saturday 28 March, daily 2 episodes of Ramayan will be telecasted on DD National. One episode in the morning from 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM and another episode in the evening from 9:00 PM to 10:00 PM.And after completing the Ramayan episodes, from Sunday 19 April 2020 Doordarshan will telecast episodes of Uttar Ramayan which is the next part when Ram returns to Ayodhya. Uttar Ramayan serial is also known as Lav Kush Leela or Luv Kush.You can watch Uttar Ramayan everyday at 9:00 PM and it’s repeat telecast in next day morning at 9:00 AM.Now if you are interested to watch the repeat telecast of Uttar Ramayan but you don’t know the channel number of the Doordarshan channel of your Dish TV, Airtel, Tata Sky, etc. Then don’t worry and check out below for the same.

DVD cover of Chanakya with English subtitlesGenreHistorical dramaCreated byWritten byChandraprakash DwivediDirected byChandraprakash DwivediStarringChandraprakash DwivediDinesh ShakulSuraj ChaddhaPrakash DwivediJD MajethiaNarrated bySalim ArifOpening themeComposer(s)Ashit DesaiCountry of originIndiaOriginal language(s)No. Of seasons1No. Of episodes47 ProductionProducer(s)Prakash DwivediProduction location(s),CinematographyRajan KothariEditor(s)Mohan KaulRajeev KhandelwalRunning time45 minutesProduction company(s)Shagun FilmsReleaseOriginal networkOriginal release8 September 1991 ( 1991-09-08) –9 August 1992 ( 1992-08-09)Chanakya (: चाणक्य) is a 47-part epic Indian television written and directed by Dr. That was originally telecast on from 8 September 1991 to 9 August 1992. Produced by Prakash Dwivedi, the series is a fictionalized account of the life and times of 4th century BCE Indian economist, strategist and political theorist (also known as Vishnugupta) and is based on events occurring between 340 BCE and 321/20 BCE, starting with Chanakya's boyhood and culminating in the coronation of.

Welcome to Wars of the Diadochi, a diplomacy map modeled after the famed Wars of the Diadochi in which Alexander's the Great generals strived for control, take the command as one of those Diadochi and reunite Alexander's Empire! For more information about the game mechanics see HINTS! P1 - PERSIANS P2 - MAGYARS P3 - BYZANTINES P4 - MALIANS P5 - SARACENS. Welcome to Wars of the Diadochi by andi and lightingstrike97. After the conquest and death of Alexander the Great, his great empire had remained in the care of his governors, who intended to crown Alexander's unbornt child as the new King, until his eventual birth and coming of age, Perdiccas was to be the regent of the empire. Diadochi wars. The Babylonian War was a conflict fought between 311–309 BC between the Diadochi kings Antigonus I Monophthalmus and Seleucus I Nicator, ending in a victory for the latter, Seleucus I Nicator. The conflict ended any possibility of restoration of the empire of Alexander the Great, a result confirmed in the Battle of Ipsus.

Chandraprakash Dwivedi played the title role of Chanakya. I want to prove that it is not only persons in high places who have changed the course of history but seemingly ne'er do wells like Chanakya from whom there had been no expectations whatever. To present Chanakya in such a light that you or me can, on seeing the serial, exclaim even I could have done that.Dr.

To Surya India magazine.Initially, Dwivedi was associated with the project only in his capacity as writer while his brother, Prakash Dwivedi, was the producer. Dwivedi decided to direct the series after continued differences of opinion with the original director, Rajiv Singh, who later filed a case against the producers.

Dwivedi submitted his script to Doordarshan in April 1986 and shot the after receiving the approval sometime in 1988. He submitted it to the channel in December 1988 and got the final approval by the end of the year., the producer of had been interested in the series and had submitted a proposal of his own to Doordarshan. However, Doordarshan preferred Dwivedi's project to Chopra's proposal which had been 'found wanting.' Filming The pilot was shot at a cost of 1.8 million (15 million in 2009, as estimated by Dwivedi).

Doordarshan initially allotted 26 episodes for the series and an extension was promised if 'the quality was up to the mark.' In early 1992, a further 21 episodes were sanctioned as against the 26 demanded, after the extension was initially (controversially) revoked, for a total of 47 episodes.

The first 17 episodes were shot over nine months at an estimated average cost of INR 900,000 per episode. A huge cast of about 300 actors were involved with the production.The production team included well-known technicians such as art director and costume designer who had previously been involved with 's. Arif was also part of the cast, as narrator and as the character Sidhartak.

Roy remained art director for the first 25 episodes, and, who was assisting him, took over Episode 26 onwards.' Magnificent sets' were erected at, Bombay (now Mumbai) for the series and an amount of INR 7 million was budgeted to build three cities including Pataliputra and Takshashila. Chanakya was Desai's first independent project and 'he had to recreate the ancient grandeur of Pataliputra' for the series. Desai spent weeks at the and researching the period.

The university librarian even had a separate desk installed for him in the arts and culture section after noting his 'constant presence at the library, even during lunch hour, for weeks at an end.' The result was a town with '26 structures, four main lanes and six bylanes,' all part of a single set.Close attention was paid to detail when it came to costumes and weaponry, so much so that a piece of armor worn by Chandragupta was procured for over INR 8,000. According to Muneesh Sappel, associate costume designer, the costumes 'were based on books by Alkazi Raushan (costume advisor for the serial ), Dr. Moti Chandra (former director of the ), N. Joshi (author of Life in Ancient Pataliputra) and K. Krishnamurthy’s Early Indian Archaeology.' Terracotta sculptures from the 1st century CE, the museums at Sarnath, Patna and Lucknow, and the caves at the were other sources of inspiration.

In a 2009 interview, considered his work on Chanakya to be better than that on. Casting Dwivedi chose stage actors to play the parts in the series. Pramod Moutho, Suraj Chaddha, Ajay Dubey, and Himanshu Gokani were among the first to be selected. While Dwivedi played the central role of Chanakya, he faced a problem when he looked for someone to play the adolescent Vishnugupta. It was then that his friend Akshay Vyas introduced him to Mitesh Safari. 'One look at Mitesh and Dwivedi knew he had found his Chanakya. He did not even take Mitesh's screen test and told him to report directly for the shooting.'

The Indian Express. 8 September 1991.

^. Screen Weekly.

26 September 2003. ^ (2000) 1998. 'Inventing Saffron History'. John, Janaki Nair (ed.). A question of silence: the sexual economies of modern India.

This is explained in the RFSPACE documentation. But all the comments here on the FT-2000 are applicable to the FT-950 as well. But for as little as $250, you too can have most of the key features of the Flex and all the features of your FT-2000 working together! Yaesu ft-2000 panadapter install. An (almost) non-invasive Yaesu FT-2000 mod, a 20 - 30 dB preamplifier added, connecting to the 69.450 MHz IF output intended for the optional DMU-2000 unit. Optional, based on the preamp mod above, an additional in-line preamp, appr 10-15 dB, for a total of 30 - 35dB before entering my extremely lossy double balanced mixer.

The Indian Express. 9 August 1992. Indian Express. 21 August 2009. Retrieved 13 March 2013. ^ 'And Now Chanakya'. 1989.

^ Sukanya Verma (23 October 2003). Rediff.com. ^ Madhavi Irani (1 December 1991).

The Times of India. Archived from on 16 July 2011. 28 June 1992.

^ Chaya Unnikrishnan (21 August 2009). Screen Weekly. Archived from on 11 April 2010. S. Development/digression diary of India: 3D companion volume to Information India 1991–92. Concept Publishing Company.

Thomson Living Media. 1992. ^ Arjun Narayanan (20 December 2009).

The New Indian Express. Archived from on 7 January 2010. Piyus Roy (14 April 2007). Indian Express. Deepa Karmalkar (25 July 2008). Screen Weekly. Archived from on 20 August 2010.

Aruna Vasudev, ed. P. 132. Ashish Mitra (12 March 2004). Screen Weekly. Parag Maniar (7 November 2008). Mumbai Mirror. Archived from on 23 February 2012.

Singh, Suhani (31 March 2020). Retrieved 31 March 2020. News agency., ANI (31 March 2020).

Retrieved 31 March 2020. Sevanti Ninan (16 July 2000). The Hindu. Askari H. Zaidi (1 August 1992). The Times of India. Archived from on 25 July 2011.

Menka Shivdasani (2 July 2001). The Hindu Business Line. Indian Express. Express News Service.

24 February 1998. Business India. Geetha (7 December 1991). Deccan Herald.

A. Chougule (5 September 2003). Screen Weekly.

Suresh Nair (7 November 1996). The Times of India. Archived from on 16 July 2011. Claire Frachon; Marion Vargaftig (1995). P. 265. Henrietta L. Moore (1996).

The future of anthropological knowledge. P. 57.References.

1989. (2000) 1998.

'Inventing Saffron History'. John, Janaki Nair (ed.). A question of silence: the sexual economies of modern India.

Pp. 243–268.External links Wikiquote has quotations related to:. on.

[/ITEM]
[/MAIN]
08.04.2020

Sansar Serial Doordarshan

54
Sansar Serial Doordarshan 4,4/5 9089 reviews

Buniyaad (literally Foundation) is an Indian television soap opera directed by Ramesh Sippy and Jyoti.The series was written by Manohar Shyam Joshi and dealt with the Partition of India in 1947 and its aftermath. It first aired in 1986 on the Indian state television channel DD National.It was re-aired on DD Metro and Sahara One.The story spans the life in India between 1916-1978. Watch Classic Doordarshan National DD Videos on India's No.1 Doordarshan video Blog. This is a One-Stop Blog to watch Doordarshan Serials, Doordarshan Programs, Doordarshan Advertisements, Doordarshan films and much more.

From Saturday 28 March, daily 2 episodes of Ramayan will be telecasted on DD National. One episode in the morning from 9:00 AM to 10:00 AM and another episode in the evening from 9:00 PM to 10:00 PM.And after completing the Ramayan episodes, from Sunday 19 April 2020 Doordarshan will telecast episodes of Uttar Ramayan which is the next part when Ram returns to Ayodhya. Uttar Ramayan serial is also known as Lav Kush Leela or Luv Kush.You can watch Uttar Ramayan everyday at 9:00 PM and it’s repeat telecast in next day morning at 9:00 AM.Now if you are interested to watch the repeat telecast of Uttar Ramayan but you don’t know the channel number of the Doordarshan channel of your Dish TV, Airtel, Tata Sky, etc. Then don’t worry and check out below for the same.

DVD cover of Chanakya with English subtitlesGenreHistorical dramaCreated byWritten byChandraprakash DwivediDirected byChandraprakash DwivediStarringChandraprakash DwivediDinesh ShakulSuraj ChaddhaPrakash DwivediJD MajethiaNarrated bySalim ArifOpening themeComposer(s)Ashit DesaiCountry of originIndiaOriginal language(s)No. Of seasons1No. Of episodes47 ProductionProducer(s)Prakash DwivediProduction location(s),CinematographyRajan KothariEditor(s)Mohan KaulRajeev KhandelwalRunning time45 minutesProduction company(s)Shagun FilmsReleaseOriginal networkOriginal release8 September 1991 ( 1991-09-08) –9 August 1992 ( 1992-08-09)Chanakya (: चाणक्य) is a 47-part epic Indian television written and directed by Dr. That was originally telecast on from 8 September 1991 to 9 August 1992. Produced by Prakash Dwivedi, the series is a fictionalized account of the life and times of 4th century BCE Indian economist, strategist and political theorist (also known as Vishnugupta) and is based on events occurring between 340 BCE and 321/20 BCE, starting with Chanakya's boyhood and culminating in the coronation of.

Welcome to Wars of the Diadochi, a diplomacy map modeled after the famed Wars of the Diadochi in which Alexander's the Great generals strived for control, take the command as one of those Diadochi and reunite Alexander's Empire! For more information about the game mechanics see HINTS! P1 - PERSIANS P2 - MAGYARS P3 - BYZANTINES P4 - MALIANS P5 - SARACENS. Welcome to Wars of the Diadochi by andi and lightingstrike97. After the conquest and death of Alexander the Great, his great empire had remained in the care of his governors, who intended to crown Alexander's unbornt child as the new King, until his eventual birth and coming of age, Perdiccas was to be the regent of the empire. Diadochi wars. The Babylonian War was a conflict fought between 311–309 BC between the Diadochi kings Antigonus I Monophthalmus and Seleucus I Nicator, ending in a victory for the latter, Seleucus I Nicator. The conflict ended any possibility of restoration of the empire of Alexander the Great, a result confirmed in the Battle of Ipsus.

Chandraprakash Dwivedi played the title role of Chanakya. I want to prove that it is not only persons in high places who have changed the course of history but seemingly ne'er do wells like Chanakya from whom there had been no expectations whatever. To present Chanakya in such a light that you or me can, on seeing the serial, exclaim even I could have done that.Dr.

To Surya India magazine.Initially, Dwivedi was associated with the project only in his capacity as writer while his brother, Prakash Dwivedi, was the producer. Dwivedi decided to direct the series after continued differences of opinion with the original director, Rajiv Singh, who later filed a case against the producers.

Dwivedi submitted his script to Doordarshan in April 1986 and shot the after receiving the approval sometime in 1988. He submitted it to the channel in December 1988 and got the final approval by the end of the year., the producer of had been interested in the series and had submitted a proposal of his own to Doordarshan. However, Doordarshan preferred Dwivedi's project to Chopra's proposal which had been 'found wanting.' Filming The pilot was shot at a cost of 1.8 million (15 million in 2009, as estimated by Dwivedi).

Doordarshan initially allotted 26 episodes for the series and an extension was promised if 'the quality was up to the mark.' In early 1992, a further 21 episodes were sanctioned as against the 26 demanded, after the extension was initially (controversially) revoked, for a total of 47 episodes.

The first 17 episodes were shot over nine months at an estimated average cost of INR 900,000 per episode. A huge cast of about 300 actors were involved with the production.The production team included well-known technicians such as art director and costume designer who had previously been involved with 's. Arif was also part of the cast, as narrator and as the character Sidhartak.

Roy remained art director for the first 25 episodes, and, who was assisting him, took over Episode 26 onwards.' Magnificent sets' were erected at, Bombay (now Mumbai) for the series and an amount of INR 7 million was budgeted to build three cities including Pataliputra and Takshashila. Chanakya was Desai's first independent project and 'he had to recreate the ancient grandeur of Pataliputra' for the series. Desai spent weeks at the and researching the period.

The university librarian even had a separate desk installed for him in the arts and culture section after noting his 'constant presence at the library, even during lunch hour, for weeks at an end.' The result was a town with '26 structures, four main lanes and six bylanes,' all part of a single set.Close attention was paid to detail when it came to costumes and weaponry, so much so that a piece of armor worn by Chandragupta was procured for over INR 8,000. According to Muneesh Sappel, associate costume designer, the costumes 'were based on books by Alkazi Raushan (costume advisor for the serial ), Dr. Moti Chandra (former director of the ), N. Joshi (author of Life in Ancient Pataliputra) and K. Krishnamurthy’s Early Indian Archaeology.' Terracotta sculptures from the 1st century CE, the museums at Sarnath, Patna and Lucknow, and the caves at the were other sources of inspiration.

In a 2009 interview, considered his work on Chanakya to be better than that on. Casting Dwivedi chose stage actors to play the parts in the series. Pramod Moutho, Suraj Chaddha, Ajay Dubey, and Himanshu Gokani were among the first to be selected. While Dwivedi played the central role of Chanakya, he faced a problem when he looked for someone to play the adolescent Vishnugupta. It was then that his friend Akshay Vyas introduced him to Mitesh Safari. 'One look at Mitesh and Dwivedi knew he had found his Chanakya. He did not even take Mitesh's screen test and told him to report directly for the shooting.'

The Indian Express. 8 September 1991.

^. Screen Weekly.

26 September 2003. ^ (2000) 1998. 'Inventing Saffron History'. John, Janaki Nair (ed.). A question of silence: the sexual economies of modern India.

This is explained in the RFSPACE documentation. But all the comments here on the FT-2000 are applicable to the FT-950 as well. But for as little as $250, you too can have most of the key features of the Flex and all the features of your FT-2000 working together! Yaesu ft-2000 panadapter install. An (almost) non-invasive Yaesu FT-2000 mod, a 20 - 30 dB preamplifier added, connecting to the 69.450 MHz IF output intended for the optional DMU-2000 unit. Optional, based on the preamp mod above, an additional in-line preamp, appr 10-15 dB, for a total of 30 - 35dB before entering my extremely lossy double balanced mixer.

The Indian Express. 9 August 1992. Indian Express. 21 August 2009. Retrieved 13 March 2013. ^ 'And Now Chanakya'. 1989.

^ Sukanya Verma (23 October 2003). Rediff.com. ^ Madhavi Irani (1 December 1991).

The Times of India. Archived from on 16 July 2011. 28 June 1992.

^ Chaya Unnikrishnan (21 August 2009). Screen Weekly. Archived from on 11 April 2010. S. Development/digression diary of India: 3D companion volume to Information India 1991–92. Concept Publishing Company.

Thomson Living Media. 1992. ^ Arjun Narayanan (20 December 2009).

The New Indian Express. Archived from on 7 January 2010. Piyus Roy (14 April 2007). Indian Express. Deepa Karmalkar (25 July 2008). Screen Weekly. Archived from on 20 August 2010.

Aruna Vasudev, ed. P. 132. Ashish Mitra (12 March 2004). Screen Weekly. Parag Maniar (7 November 2008). Mumbai Mirror. Archived from on 23 February 2012.

Singh, Suhani (31 March 2020). Retrieved 31 March 2020. News agency., ANI (31 March 2020).

Retrieved 31 March 2020. Sevanti Ninan (16 July 2000). The Hindu. Askari H. Zaidi (1 August 1992). The Times of India. Archived from on 25 July 2011.

Menka Shivdasani (2 July 2001). The Hindu Business Line. Indian Express. Express News Service.

24 February 1998. Business India. Geetha (7 December 1991). Deccan Herald.

A. Chougule (5 September 2003). Screen Weekly.

Suresh Nair (7 November 1996). The Times of India. Archived from on 16 July 2011. Claire Frachon; Marion Vargaftig (1995). P. 265. Henrietta L. Moore (1996).

The future of anthropological knowledge. P. 57.References.

1989. (2000) 1998.

'Inventing Saffron History'. John, Janaki Nair (ed.). A question of silence: the sexual economies of modern India.

Pp. 243–268.External links Wikiquote has quotations related to:. on.