Hindi Gharana

Hindi Gharana Podcast

Hello, Hindi Gharana is a YouTube channel dedicated to Literature, Poetry, Music, and Films. Here, we analyse and provide a clear perspective for our Indian audience. Join us in this small Kaavish (effort) if you love art and books. - Follow us on Instagram: @hindi_gharana, @kafiro_ka_kafka, @mind_vs_mee. - Thanks for listening! For more info, visit: https://linktr.ee/hindigharana

  1. “Deshbhakti ki Polish” | Reading Harishankar Parsai’s Satire on Fake Patriotism | Hindi Gharana

    Jun 29

    “Deshbhakti ki Polish” | Reading Harishankar Parsai’s Satire on Fake Patriotism | Hindi Gharana

    In this video, I read out “Deshbhakti ki Polish” – a sharp satirical essay by Harishankar Parsai from his collection Nithalle ki Diary – and then talk about how it still applies to today’s corporate charity and “image polishing.” Parsai was one of Hindi’s greatest satirists, known for exposing corruption, hypocrisy, and hollow nationalism through humour and biting social commentary. The essay follows Kanchan Babu, a wealthy shop‑owner who starts polishing people’s shoes “for the defence of the nation” so he can donate that small income to the National Defence Fund – and, more importantly, escape big donation demands and look like a heroic patriot. Through this, Parsai shows how the rich use patriotism, charity, and public drama as a way to protect their wealth and clean up their public image. In the second half of the video, I connect this old satire to modern examples: food‑delivery apps asking you to “donate ₹1 to feed the poor”, aggressive tipping prompts, corporate “care funds” during crises, and how companies proudly market your generosity instead of using their own profits. Parsai’s essay may reference the India–Pakistan war, but the deeper point about fake patriotism and staged philanthropy feels painfully relevant in 2026 as well. Chapters 00:00 Intro 01:00 Reading “Deshbhakti ki Polish” 12:00 Ending #harishankarparsai #satire #politicalcommentary Host: Gourav & Aditya Producer & Editor: Gourav Garg Follow us on Instagram: instagram.com/hindi_gharana Thanks for listening! For more info, visit: https://linktr.ee/hindigharana.

    13 min
  2. Consequences of Globalisation of Indian Economy | Ghachar Ghochar Review | Hindi Gharana

    Jun 24

    Consequences of Globalisation of Indian Economy | Ghachar Ghochar Review | Hindi Gharana

    In this video, I talk about Ghachar Ghochar, a brilliant short novella by Vivek Shanbhag, originally written in Kannada and translated into English by Srinath Perur. The book follows a lower‑middle‑class family in Bangalore that suddenly becomes rich through a spice business, and shows how money quietly tangles their relationships, morals and sense of self “beyond repair.” I discuss what the strange title “Ghachar Ghochar” means, how the story reflects India’s shift from a closed socialist economy to liberalisation, why the narrator hides in Indian Coffee House, the role of Anita, Chikkappa, the parents, the ants, and what it means to look down on the “new rich.” I also share why the book refuses to spell out its message, why that makes it so powerful. Chapters 00:00​ Intro – why this 100‑page book hit so hard 02:00​ Book Review 13:00​ Outro Ghachar Ghochar review, Ghachar Ghochar explanation, Ghachar Ghochar meaning tangled beyond repair, Vivek Shanbhag novella, Indian family and money story, Hindi Gharana book channel, hindigharana YouTube, Hindi Gharana English review, Indian booktube creator, Indian reading vlog 2026, trending Indian novels, best Indian fiction 2026, short Indian novel recommendation, literary fiction booktube, post liberalisation India novel Host: Gourav & Aditya Producer & Editor: Gourav Garg Follow us on Instagram: instagram.com/hindi_gharana Thanks for listening! For more info, visit: https://linktr.ee/hind...​.

    14 min
  3. Your Favourite Poet's Favourite Poet: Krishna Bihari 'Noor' | Kavita Pe Charcha | Hindi Gharana |

    May 7

    Your Favourite Poet's Favourite Poet: Krishna Bihari 'Noor' | Kavita Pe Charcha | Hindi Gharana |

    Your Favourite Poet's Favourite Poet: Krishna Bihari 'Noor' | Kavita Pe Charcha | Hindi Gharana |Vikas Divyakirti’s Favourite Shayar | Krishn Bihari Noor Explained | Kavita Pe Charcha | Hindi Gharana |Krishn Bihari Noor | The Poet Behind “Zindagi Se Badi Saza Hi Nahi” |Kavita Pe Charcha Hindi GharanaIn this video, I talk about Krishn Bihari Noor, one of the most beloved Urdu poets from Lucknow, and his famous ghazal Zindagi Se Badi Saza Hi Nahi. Noor Sahib’s poetry is powerful because it speaks about pain, truth, identity, God, and the struggle of being split apart by life in a way that still feels deeply relevant today. This is not just a recitation. I also discuss the ghazal’s philosophical meaning, how the imagery works, and why these lines continue to resonate with people across languages and generations. Chapters00:00 Why this ghazal matters00:52 Who is Krishn Bihari Noor?01:54 Reading the ghazal19:00 EndKrishn Bihari Noor, Krishna Bihari Noor, Zindagi Se Badi Saza Hi Nahi, Urdu poetry 2026, Urdu ghazal meaning, Hindi poetry analysis, Javed Akhtar poetry, emotional poetry, Hindi shayari, poetry reels, viral Urdu poetry, ghazal explanation, Lucknow Urdu poet, Hindi Gharana, hindigharana, classic ghazal, shayari meaning, AI, philosophy, Indian philosophy, darshan, Vikas Divyakirti, shujaat KhanHost: Gourav & AdityaProducer & Editor: Gourav GargThumbnail by @reythestray on InstagramFollow us on Instagram: instagram.com/hindi_gharanaThanks for listening! For more info, visit: https://linktr.ee/hindigharana

    19 min
  4. Why the Poor Don’t Kill Us: What Noida Protests Reveal About India | Hindi Gharana |

    Apr 27

    Why the Poor Don’t Kill Us: What Noida Protests Reveal About India | Hindi Gharana |

    Why the Poor Don’t Kill Us: What Noida Protests Reveal About India | Hindi Gharana |Noida Protests, Minimum Wage & Why the Poor Don’t Kill Us | Hindi GharanaIndia’s recent labor unrest, including the Noida protest and the ongoing fight for minimum wage, makes Manu Joseph’s Why the Poor Don’t Kill Us feel even more urgent. The book asks a hard question about inequality, class, and survival, and in this video, I connect that question to the real exploitation happening across Indian workplaces today.From domestic workers and security guards to class privilege, caste hierarchy, and the way the upper layer of society normalizes exploitation, this book helps explain why anger does not always turn into revolt. The Noida protests are not an exception; they are part of a bigger pattern. 00:00 Intro: Why this book feels relevant now00:52 Why the Poor Don’t Kill Us02:10 Minimum wage and labor exploitation04:05 Noida protest and its meaning06:00 Class privilege, caste, and everyday inequality08:20 Why the book matters today09:30 Final thoughtsWhy the Poor Don’t Kill Us, Manu Joseph book, Noida protest, Noida labor protest, minimum wage India, labor exploitation India, class inequality India, caste and class in India, Indian society critique, Hindi book review, Hindi Gharana, hindigharana, workers protest India, labor rights India, social justice India, Indian nonfiction review, class politics bookHost: Gourav & AdityaProducer & Editor: Gourav GargFollow us on Instagram: instagram.com/hindi_gharanaThanks for listening! For more info, visit: https://linktr.ee/hindigharana.

    15 min
  5. The Great Indian Brain Rot Book Review | Indian Internet, Influencers, & Anurag Minus Verma

    Mar 24

    The Great Indian Brain Rot Book Review | Indian Internet, Influencers, & Anurag Minus Verma

    The Great Indian Brain Rot Book Review | Indian Internet, Influencers, & @AnuragMinusVermaPodcast In early 2026, I read one of the most exciting books on Indian internet culture I’ve come across: The Great Indian Brain Rot by Anurag Minus Verma, published by Bloomsbury. The book uses humour and satire to map how India’s internet has shifted from cyber cafés and Yahoo Messenger to Jio-era reels, influencers, caste pride content, conspiracy podcasts, and toxic positivity, and how that constant, unchecked consumption melts our brains instead of making us think.In this video, I share my honest thoughts after sitting with the book for a month:What “brain rot” really means in the context of TikTok, Instagram, and endless fact–list reelsHow the chapters cover loveless loners online, the influencer hustle, cringe creators, caste pride, media circus after Sushant Singh Rajput, the coaching/teaching ecosystem, podcasting bubbles, toxic positivity, and the “masala metaverse.”Why the Puneet Superstar chapter might be one of the most iconic internet-character openings in recent Indian nonfictionWhere I think the book holds back (especially around politics and IT-cell style internet operations), and what I wish it had explored moreAs someone who works full-time in content and podcast production, I also react to the chapters on influencers and podcasters from my own experience of guest hunting, desperation for views, and the strange economics of the Indian podcast scene.If you want to understand why your feed looks the way it does, why everyone suddenly wants to be a creator, and how the Indian internet has reshaped our sense of self, caste, money, “relatability” and success, this book is absolutely worth your time.This video is not sponsored.You can find The Great Indian Brain Rot on Amazon and other stores; I’ll leave the link in the comments and description.The Great Indian Brain Rot book review, Anurag Minus Verma review, Indian internet culture book, brain rot and social media, Indian influencer hustle, Indian podcast scene criticism, Puneet Superstar chapter, caste pride on social media, Sushant Singh Rajput media trial, toxic positivity online, coaching and edtech teachers internet, Bloomsbury India nonfiction, Hindi Gharana book review, hindigharana, Indian booktube, internet satire book 2026Host: Gourav & AdityaProducer & Editor: Gourav Follow us on Instagram: instagram.com/hindi_gharanaThanks for listening! For more info, visit: https://linktr.ee/hindigharana.

    25 min
  6. My Experience at Jaipur Lit. Festival 2026 | Hindi Gharana | Anurag Minus Verma

    Jan 22

    My Experience at Jaipur Lit. Festival 2026 | Hindi Gharana | Anurag Minus Verma

    My Experience at Jaipur Lit. Festival 2026 | Hindi Gharana | Anurag Minus VermaIn this episode of Hindi Gharana, Gourav shares his on-ground experience of Jaipur Literature Festival 2026 and also reflects on his visit to the Delhi World Book Fair 2026—two places that look similar from the outside, but feel completely different once you’re inside.This is not a mere “fest vs fair” comparison. It’s a deeper face-off between two expressions of literature: one shaped by conversations, sessions, and ideas—and the other driven by books, browsing, buying, and the crowd’s energy.​We also talk about the overall vibe, the people, the book culture, and the kind of literary atmosphere that gets created in both spaces—plus the creator ecosystem you spot around major names like Anurag Minus Verma.In this episode:Jaipur Lit Fest 2026: vibe, sessions, crowd, takeawaysDelhi World Book Fair 2026: book-hunting, stalls, crowd psychologyWhat changes when literature becomes “discourse” vs “marketplace”Why both experiences matter (even if they’re not the same thing)Jaipur Literature Festival 2026, Jaipur Lit Fest 2026, JLF 2026 experience, JLF 2026 vlog, Delhi World Book Fair 2026, World Book Fair 2026 Delhi, Delhi book fair experience, Jaipur vs Delhi book event, festival vs book fair India, literature festival India, book fair India, author sessions JLF, book haul Delhi, Hindi literature, book lovers India, Hindi Gharana, hindigharana, Kitaab Pe Charcha, Kavita Pe Charcha, Gourav Aditya podcast, book podcast India-----------------------------------------------------------------Host: Gourav & AdityaProducer & Editor: Gourav GargFollow us on Instagram: instagram.com/hindi_gharanaThanks for listening! For more info, visit: https://linktr.ee/hindigharana.

    18 min
  7. Acharya Prashant Books I’ll Read in 2026 | My 10-Book Reading List | Hindi Gharana |

    Jan 10

    Acharya Prashant Books I’ll Read in 2026 | My 10-Book Reading List | Hindi Gharana |

    Acharya Prashant Books I’ll Read in 2026 | My 10-Book Reading List | Hindi Gharana | Aditya is building a serious reading habit in 2026—and this is his 10-book plan. The list is heavily inspired by Acharya Prashant, but it’s not limited to him—there are a few other books too that fit the same direction: clarity, self-understanding, and real change.If you’re searching for Acharya Prashant book recommendations or want a no-fluff 2026 reading list, this video will help.In this video:Aditya’s 10 books for 2026 (mostly Acharya Prashant)Why these books made the cutHow to follow the list as a beginnerDrop your recommendations in comments: Acharya Prashant + other books that changed your life.Acharya Prashant books, Acharya Prashant book list, Acharya Prashant 2026 reading list, books to read in 2026, best Acharya Prashant books, Acharya Prashant Vedanta books, Acharya Prashant Gita, Acharya Prashant beginner books, self help books India 2026, spirituality books Hindi, Vedanta books for beginners, Acharya Prashant climate change book, Acharya Prashant fear book, Aditya reading list 2026, must read books 2026, Acharya Prashant books, Acharya Prashant book recommendations, Acharya Prashant reading list, books to read in 2026, 2026 reading list India, Vedanta books for beginners, spirituality books Hindi, Bhagavad Gita books, self improvement books 2026, must read books 2026, Hindi Gharana, @hindigharana, Kitaab Pe Charcha, Kavita Pe Charcha, Hindi literature podcast, book podcast India, Hindi book recommendations, Indian literature YouTube, Aditya Hindi Gharana, Gourav and AdityaHost: Gourav & AdityaProducer & Editor: Gourav GargFollow us on Instagram: instagram.com/hindi_gharanaThanks for listening! For more info, visit: https://linktr.ee/hindigharana.

    12 min
  8. 5 Greatest Books I read in 2025 | 5 Must-Read Books That Changed How I Think | Reading Wrap-Up 2025

    Jan 4

    5 Greatest Books I read in 2025 | 5 Must-Read Books That Changed How I Think | Reading Wrap-Up 2025

    2025 was an intense reading year for me — emotionally, politically, and intellectually. In this video, I share my top 5 favourite books of 2025, books that stayed with me long after I finished reading them. This is not a generic recommendation list. These books challenged my ideas about memory, identity, politics, violence, survival, and the human condition. 📚 Books discussed in this video: • Ret Samadhi by Geetanjali Shree • The Grudges of Gajanan Godbole • Ham on Rye • Maus • Political Violence in Ancient India In this video, I talk about: • Why Ret Samadhi is one of the most important literary works I’ve read • How Gajanan Godbole captures middle-class frustration and resentmen • Why Ham on Rye still feels brutally honest decades later • How Maus redefines what graphic novels can achieve • What Political Violence in Ancient India teaches us about power, state, and society This list includes fiction, memoir-like writing, graphic literature, and academic history, making it a well-rounded reading year. If you’re looking for serious book recommendations, thoughtful reading suggestions, or a 2025 reading wrap-up that goes beyond trends, this video is for you. best books of 2025, favorite books of 2025, books i read in 2025, top 5 books 2025, ret samadhi geetanjali shree review, gajanan godbole novel analysis, ham on rye bukowski review, maus graphic novel explained, political violence in ancient india book review, indian booktuber recommendations, serious literature recommendations, book wrap up video, reading vlog india

    13 min

About

Hello, Hindi Gharana is a YouTube channel dedicated to Literature, Poetry, Music, and Films. Here, we analyse and provide a clear perspective for our Indian audience. Join us in this small Kaavish (effort) if you love art and books. - Follow us on Instagram: @hindi_gharana, @kafiro_ka_kafka, @mind_vs_mee. - Thanks for listening! For more info, visit: https://linktr.ee/hindigharana