‘Ke Hobe Banglar Kotipoti’ will be relaunched on Colors Bangla.
Movie star Prosenjit Chatterjee has been confirmed as the new host of Ke Hobe Banglar Kotipoti, the Bengali version of the popular game show Kaun Banega Crorepati. Television channel Colors Bangla will telecast the new season from July 16 between Mondays and Fridays at 9pm. The BIG Synergy production was originally premiered on Mahuaa Bangla in 2011, and was hosted by cricketer Saurav Ganguly.
“We are upping the ante on our content-line up this year and a marquee show like KBC is a step in that direction,” Rahul Chakravarti, the business head of Colors Bangla and Odia, said in a press release. “Bengalis are known for their wealth of knowledge and now is the time for them to showcase their talent to the world.”
Based on the British game show Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, Kaun Banega Crorepati was premiered in 2000. All nine seasons have been hosted by Amitabh Bachchan. The Tamil version, Neengalum Vellalam Oru Kodi, was hosted by Suriya, while Nagarjuna steered Meelo Evary Koteeswarudu in Telugu. Suresh Gopi anchored the Malayalam version Ningalkum Aagam Kodeeswaran.
“The end of the world war had bought America victory but not security” – this quote from Lawrence Wright’s Pulitzer-Prize winning book, ‘The Looming Tower’, gives a sense of the growing threat to America from Al Qaeda and the series of events that led to 9/11. Based on extensive interviews, including with Bin Laden’s best friend in college and the former White House counterterrorism chief, ‘The Looming Tower’ provides an intimate perspective of the 9/11 attack.
Lawrence Wright chronicles the formative years of Al Qaeda, giving an insight in to Bin Laden’s war against America. The book covers in detail, the radicalisation of Osama Bin Laden and his association with Ayman Al Zawahri, an Egyptian doctor who preached that only violence could change history. In an interview with Amazon, Wright shared, “I talked to 600-something people, but many of those people I talked to again and again for a period of five years, some of them dozens of times.” Wright’s book was selected by TIME as one of the all-time 100 best nonfiction books for its “thoroughly researched and incisively written” account of the road to 9/11 and is considered an essential read for understanding Islam’s war on the West as it developed in the Middle East.
‘The Looming Tower’ also dwells on the response of key US officials to the rising Al Qaeda threat, particularly exploring the turf wars between the FBI and the CIA. This has now been dramatized in a 10-part mini-series of the same name. Adapted by Dan Futterman (of Foxcatcher fame), the series mainly focuses on the hostilities between the FBI and the CIA. Some major characters are based on real people – such as John O’ Neill (FBI’s foul-mouthed counterterrorism chief played by Jeff Daniels) and Ali Soufan (O’ Neill’s Arabic-speaking mentee who successfully interrogated captured Islamic terrorists after 9/11, played by Tahar Rahim). Some are composite characters, such as Martin Schmidt (O’Neill’s CIA counterpart, played by Peter Sarsgaard).
The series, most crucially, captures just how close US intelligence agencies had come to foiling Al Qaeda’s plans, just to come up short due to internal turf wars. It follows the FBI and the CIA as they independently follow intelligence leads in the crises leading up to 9/11 – the US Embassy bombings in East Africa and the attack on US warship USS Cole in Yemen – but fail to update each other. The most glaring example is of how the CIA withheld critical information – Al Qaeda operatives being hunted by the FBI had entered the United States – under the misguided notion that the CIA was the only government agency authorised to deal with terrorism threats.
The depth of information in the book has translated into a realistic recreation of the pre-9/11 years on screen. The drama is even interspersed with actual footage from the 9/11 conspiracy, attack and the 2004 Commission Hearing, linking together the myriad developments leading up to 9/11 with chilling hindsight. Watch the trailer of this gripping show below.
The Looming Tower is available for streaming on Amazon Prime Video, along with a host of Amazon originals and popular movies and TV shows. To enjoy unlimited ad free streaming anytime, anywhere, subscribe to Amazon Prime Video.
This article was produced by the Scroll marketing team on behalf of Amazon Prime Video and not by the Scroll editorial team .