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Aasmanon Pay Likha (2013, Geo TV) Aatish (2018, Hum TV) Ab Dekh Khuda Kya Karta Hai (2018, Geo Entertainment) Adhi Gawahi (2017, Hum TV) Adhoora Bandhan (Geo Entertainment) Adhoori Aurat (2013, Geo TV) Adan (2023) Ahmed Habib Ki Betiyan (2011, Hum TV) Aik Nayee Cinderella (2012, Geo TV) Aik Thi Raniya (Geo Entertainment) Aik Thi Misaal (2015 ...
Pages in category "Urdu-language television shows" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 639 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Ishq E Laa (Urdu: عشقِ لا, lit. 'Inevitable Love') is a Pakistani television drama series produced by Momina Duraid under her banner productions, written by Qaisra Hayat and directed by Amin Iqbal.
This is a list of notable original programs broadcast by ARY Digital (Urdu: ARY ڈیجیٹل), a Pakistani television network. The channel line-up include dramas, sitcoms, comedy, feature films, teleplay, educational shows, series, game shows and talk shows. The channel also broadcast religious shows during Islamic events.
Humsafar (Urdu: ہم سفر, lit. 'Companion or Life Partner') [1] is a 2011 Pakistani television series based on the novel of the same name by Farhat Ishtiaq (who also wrote the screenplay) and directed by Sarmad Sultan Khoosat.
Sang-e-Mah (Urdu: سنگِ ماہ, transl. Moonstone) is a Pakistani television series, and second series in the trilogy preceded by Sang-e-Mar Mar.Having central plot line inspired from William Shakespeare's Hamlet, it is written by Mustafa Afridi, directed by Saife Hassan and produced by Momina Duraid under her banner production MD Productions.
[54] [23] Despite the series' anthology format, the writers conceived a story device for the first season that allowed them to have some connectivity between the episodes; [31] this begins to be revealed in the first season's eighth episode before the finale in the ninth, [55] which saw the formation of the Guardians of the Multiverse, whose ...
Pakistani feminists are usually concerned about depiction of women in Pakistani drama TV serials, they receive many of those with skepticism & reservation. [11] [12] UK based Pakistani feminist Tasneem Ahmar, whose research institute focuses on the women-media relationships, complaints 99.99% of TV drama in Pakistan is misogynist, patriarchal medieval in its depiction and treatment of women ...