Short, Easy Dialogues
15 topics: 10 to 77 dialogues per topic, with audio
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February 22, 2018: "500 Short Stories for Beginner-Intermediate," Vols. 1 and 2, for only 99 cents each! Buy both e‐books (1,000 short stories, iPhone and Android) at Amazon (Volume 1) and at Amazon (Volume 2). All 1,000 stories are also right here at eslyes at Link 10.
In the landscape of Indian web series, there is before Scam 1992 and after Scam 1992. Released in the lockdown-stricken autumn of 2020 on Sony LIV, Scam 1992 – The Harshad Mehta Story did something unprecedented. It took a complex, jargon-heavy financial conspiracy involving government bonds, bank receipts, and stock manipulation, and turned it into a binge-worthy, electrifying human drama.
The final episode features Harshad walking into the BSE, not as a trader, but as a fallen king. The court scenes are riveting. His argument is simple, terrifying, and arguably true: "I didn't print the money. I just moved it. If I am a thief, then the system that allowed this loophole is the fence."
In spirit, yes. The creators launched Scam 2003: The Telgi Story (focused on the stamp paper scam) and Scam 2010: The Subrata Roy Saga . But none have captured the lightning-in-a-bottle magic of Season 1. Scam 1992 - The Harshad Mehta Story -2020- S01 ...
"Market mein teen log hote hain... Chopdi, Chopdata aur Champion. Aap kaunsa banna chaahte ho?" (There are three types of people in the market... The loser, the average, and the champion. Which one do you want to be?)
Pratik Gandhi’s Harshad is not a sneering thief. He is a salesman. He speaks in quotable mantras. He walks into a room with the swagger of a rockstar, yet weeps for his mother. He throws lavish parties, yet remembers the pain of being humiliated as a child. In the landscape of Indian web series, there
Almost five years later, when people search for , they aren't just looking for a recap. They are looking for the origin story of India’s first celebrity stockbroker, the man who took the Bombay Stock Exchange from a sleepy trading floor to a billion-dollar casino.
"The stock market is a game of perception. You don’t trade what is; you trade what people believe is." The final episode features Harshad walking into the
Here is a deep dive into why Season 1 of this masterpiece is not just a show, but a cultural milestone. To understand Harshad Mehta, you must understand the India he was born into. The 1980s were the "License Raj"—a suffocating economy where business was measured not by innovation, but by government permits. By 1990, India was on the brink of a balance of payments crisis. The country had less than three weeks of forex reserves left. Citizens had to pledge their gold to keep the nation afloat.