Guwahati, April 24 -- In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Indian living room underwent a weekly transformation. Before the cacophony of five hundred satellite channels and the relentless ping of smartphone notifications, there was a singular, quiet ritual. On Friday nights, households across the subcontinent tuned into the national broadcaster to watch The World This Week. For a generation growing up in a pre-liberalized India, this was more than just a news program. It was an intellectual window.
As the distinctive, rhythmic pulse of the tabla theme music began, Prannoy Roy would appear-not as a shouting head, but as a sober guide. In forty-five minutes, he would distill the complexities of global governance and international shifts ...
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इस लेख के रीप्रिंट को खरीदने या इस प्रकाशन का पूरा फ़ीड प्राप्त करने के लिए, कृपया
हमे संपर्क करें.