![]() We don’t want to objectify or stereotype people,” he says. These days content is being taken for granted, but we don’t want to do that. “We try to focus on socially conscious topics and not use radio flippantly. Since then the show has gained immense popularity as Misra, in his deep baritone, narrates stories about an imaginary city called ‘Yaad Sheher’ where characters battle everyday chaos, face love issues, deal with jealousy and mourn loss, but in the end, overcome challenges. “Even blind people followed the show and said how they were transported to a different world when they heard the stories,” he adds. Reflected the impact it had on their lives,” recollects the 42-year-old. But once I started doing this show, the kind of feedback I received from people from different age groups, like students, cancer patients and even people suffering from depression “It was supposed to be a three month show. ![]() A journalist, lyricist and an author, he was happily shifting artistic gears in these creative territories when by sheer accident, an opportunity to host radio show Yaadon Ka Idiot Box came his way in 2011. ![]() Neelesh Misra candidly admits he never wanted to do radio.
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