This is the most authentic way a show is done: Tanmay Bhat
Amazon Prime Video’s Comicstaan brings together seven of India’s best comedians featuring Tanmay Bhat, Kenny Sebastian, Sapan Verma, Naveen Richard, Kaneez Surkha,…
SNS | New Delhi | July 9, 2018 1:07 pm
Tanmay Bhat (Photo Credits: Instagram)
Amazon Prime Video’s Comicstaan brings together seven of India’s best comedians featuring Tanmay Bhat, Kenny Sebastian, Sapan Verma, Naveen Richard, Kaneez Surkha, Kanan Gill and Biswa Kalyan Rath.
Tanmay Bhat, who is one of the seven judges on the show, feels that the format adopted by the makers of Comicstaan is the most authentic way a show is done.
Advertisement
Talking about the same, Tanmay Bhat shared, ” This is the most authentic way a show is done in India”.
Advertisement
The trailer of Comicstaan, which received more than seven million views in a week, has been loved by the audience and critics, thanks to the uniqueness and freshness of the show. The show has already built up an excitement amongst the audience for the series to get streamed online.
The show will be an episodic series and will not be available in binge watch format, thus keeping the audience eager for new episodes to get streamed.
All the judges will be seen guiding, mentoring, and judging the budding talent, as they compete each week to win the coveted title.
Comicstaan is laugh-out-loud funny with carefully plotted jokes, quick-witted dialogue and hilarious memorable moments that are relevant in pop culture today. The first four episodes are available to stream on July 13, followed by new episodes weekly.
Comicstaan will be available exclusively to Prime members across 200 countries and territories starting July 13.
The show will have multiple episodes which will get streamed every week on a scheduled day and time.
Samay Raina and Ranveer Allahbadia face legal trouble over a controversial joke on India’s Got Latent, leading to multiple FIRs. The Supreme Court has intervened.
The AIB Knockout roast, featuring Bollywood celebrities, faced widespread backlash in 2015 for its offensive content, leading to its removal from YouTube.