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Aashram
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| Aashram | |
|---|---|
Updated official poster | |
| Genre | |
| Screenplay by |
|
| Story by | Habib Faisal |
| Directed by | Prakash Jha |
| Starring | Bobby Deol |
| Voices of | Sanjay Masoom |
| Composer | Sunny Inder - Songs Advait Nemlekar - Background Score |
| Country of origin | India |
| Original language | Hindi |
| No. of seasons | 4 |
| No. of episodes | 33 |
| Production | |
| Producer | Prakash Jha |
| Production location | India |
| Cinematography | Chandan Kowli |
| Editor | Santosh Mandal |
| Camera setup | Multi-camera |
| Production company | Prakash Jha Productions |
| Original release | |
| Network | MX Player |
| Release | 28 August 2020 – present |
Aashram (English: Hermitage) or Ek Badnaam Aashram (English: An infamous hermitage) is an Indian Hindi-language crime drama web series directed by Prakash Jha for MX Player original.[1] It is produced by Prakash Jha under Prakash Jha Productions.[2] The series stars Bobby Deol along with Aaditi Pohankar, Darshan Kumar, Chandan Roy Sanyal, Tushar Pandey, Anupriya Goenka, Adhyayan Suman, Vikram Kochhar, Esha Gupta, Tridha Choudhury, Rajeev Siddhartha, Sachin Shroff, Anurita Jha, Parinitaa Seth, Jahangir Khan, Kanupriya Gupta, Preeti Sood, Navdeep Tomar and Ayaan Aditya, in key roles.[3][4] It is written by Madhvi Bhatt, Avinash Kumar, Sanjay Masoomm, Tejpal Singh Rawat and Kuldeep Ruhil.[5] Its first season was made available for streaming on the OTT platform MX Player for free from 28 August 2020.[6]
The second season of the series was released on MX Player on 11 November 2020,[7] with the third season following in June 2022, respectively. The series has been renewed for a fourth season in 2023.[8]
Summary
[edit]The story revolves around a godman, Baba Nirala (Bobby Deol), whose followers (mostly from the disadvantaged sections of society) have blind faith in him and will do anything that he asks of them. In reality, he is a conman who ensures that his devotees devote their wealth to him and stay attached to his ashram for life. Politicians Hukum Singh (Sachin Shroff) and incumbent CM Sundar Lal (Anil Rastogi) vie for Baba Nirala's support in the upcoming State Legislative Assembly Elections owing to his large number of followers for their vote bank politics, which only increases after a pop singer, Tinka Singh (Adhyayan Suman) decides to conduct tours with Baba Nirala to promote his new song.
Meanwhile, SI Ujagar Singh (Darshan Kumar) is a police officer who has little interest in his job and simply follows his seniors' orders, until he meets Dr. Natasha (Anupriya Goenka) in a case related to a skeleton found on the property of an industrial group which has good ties with Sundar Lal. Her constant pestering, along with the stubbornness of a small-time journalist Akhivendra Rathi alias Akki (Rajeev Siddhartha) encourages him to take up this case, along with his assistant senior constable Sadhu Sharma (Vikram Kocchar).
Cast
[edit]- Bobby Deol as Kashipur Waale Baba Nirala / Monty Singh
- Chandan Roy Sanyal as Bhupendra “Bhopa Swami” Singh
- Aaditi Pohankar as Parminder “Pammi” Lochan
- Tushar Pandey as Satwinder “Satti” Lochan
- Darshan Kumar as Sub-Inspector Ujagar Singh
- Anupriya Goenka as Dr. Natasha Katariya
- Tridha Choudhury as Babita Lochan
- Vikram Kochhar as Senior Constable Sadhu Sharma
- Rupesh Kumar Charan Pahari as Nonny, pammi Cousin
- Anil Rastogi as Ex - CM Sundar Lal
- Sachin Shroff as Chief Minister Hukum Singh
- Anurita Jha as Kavita
- Kanupriya Gupta as Mohini and Sohini, twin sisters
- Rajeev Siddhartha as Akhivendra “Akki” Rathi
- Jahangir Khan as Michael Rathi, Monty's henchman
- Adhyayan Suman as Tinka Singh, a famous pop singer
- Keshav Pandit as Kavita's father
- Mala Sinha as Kavita's mother
- Navdeep Tomar as Sunny, Monty's henchman
- Subrato Roy as Goyal, Ashram Head administrator
- Preeti Singh as Sangeeta
- Ayaan Aditya as Ravindra Rawat alias RR
- Esha Gupta as Sonia, Hukum Singh's Beau and international brand building expert
- Hemant Choudhary as I.G. Sumit Chauhan
- Akash Singh Rajput as Rocky
Series overview
[edit]| Season | Episodes | Originally released | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 9 | August 28, 2020 | ||
| 2 | 9 | November 11, 2020 | ||
| 3 | 15 | 10 | June 3, 2022 | |
| 5 | February 28, 2025 | |||
Episodes
[edit]Season 1 (2020)
[edit]| No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Pran Pratishtha(amar)" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 28 August 2020 |
| 2 | "Grih Pravesh" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 28 August 2020 |
| 3 | "Duh Swapna" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 28 August 2020 |
| 4 | "Sewa Daar" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 28 August 2020 |
| 5 | "Amrit Sudha" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 28 August 2020 |
| 6 | "Vish Haran" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 28 August 2020 |
| 7 | "Gati Rodh" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 28 August 2020 |
| 8 | "Shuddhi Karan" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 28 August 2020 |
| 9 | "Maha Prasad" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 28 August 2020 |
Season 2 (2020)
[edit]| No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Triya - Charitra" | amarnath | Habib Faisal | 11 November 2020 |
| 2 | "Chhadma - Vesh" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 11 November 2020 |
| 3 | "Naag - Paash" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 11 November 2020 |
| 4 | "Mrig - Trishna" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 11 November 2020 |
| 5 | "Kaliya - Mardan" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 11 November 2020 |
| 6 | "Chhadma - Yudhha" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 11 November 2020 |
| 7 | "Moh - Bhang" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 11 November 2020 |
| 8 | "Koot - Neeti" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 11 November 2020 |
| 9 | "Chakra - Vaat" | Prakash Jha | Habib Faisal | 11 November 2020 |
Season 3 (Part 1 - 2022 and Part 2 - 2025)
[edit]| No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Indra - Prastha" | Prakash Jha | Hassam Tariq | 3 June 2022 |
| 2 | "Chakravyu" | Prakash Jha | Hassam Tariq | 3 June 2022 |
| 3 | "Charan - Kamal" | Prakash Jha | Hassam Tariq | 3 June 2022 |
| 4 | "Guru - Dakshina" | Prakash Jha | Hassam Tariq | 3 June 2022 |
| 5 | "Kaam - Vatika" | Prakash Jha | Hassam Tariq | 3 June 2022 |
| 6 | "Swarg - Lok" | Prakash Jha | Hassam Tariq | 3 June 2022 |
| 7 | "Halahal" | Prakash Jha | Hassam Tariq | 3 June 2022 |
| 8 | "Kuchakra" | Prakash Jha | Hassam Tariq | 3 June 2022 |
| 9 | "Shankh - Naad" | Prakash Jha | Hassam Tariq | 3 June 2022 |
| 10 | "Mahabhiyog" | Prakash Jha | Hassam Tariq | 3 June 2022 |
| 11 | "Kopa - Bhavan" | Prakash Jha | TBD | 28 February 2025 |
| 12 | "Prayashchit" | Prakash Jha | TBD | 28 February 2025 |
| 13 | "Prem - Paash" | Prakash Jha | TBD | 28 February 2025 |
| 14 | "Kaala - Sach" | Prakash Jha | TBD | 28 February 2025 |
| 15 | "Agni - Pareeksha" | Prakash Jha | TBD | 28 February 2025 |
Marketing and release
[edit]Promotion
[edit]The official trailer of the two seasons of this web series was launched on August 16, 2020[9] and October 29, 2020 respectively by MX Player on YouTube.[10]
Release
[edit]Season 1 and Season 2 was made available for streaming from August 28, 2020 and November 11, 2020 respectively on OTT Platform MX Player.[11] The series made its TV debut through The Q on October 11, 2021.
Critical reception
[edit]Writing for NDTV, Saibal Chatterjee rated the series 3 out of 5 adding that “Prakash Jha's digital debut is ambitious, provocative and action-packed.” He praised the performances of actors and concept handling from the director Prakash Jha.[12] Rohan Nahaar of Hindustan Times wrote that Aashram is “a show that doesn't have the courage of its convictions. The self-censorship of sex scenes is emblematic of the trepidation with which Jha approaches the story. As it turns out, that ridiculous disclaimer was utterly unnecessary.”[13]
Controversies
[edit]In December 2020, Jodhpur Court had served a legal notice to Bobby Deol and director Prakash Jha after Karni Sena filed a case on the actor and the director for hurting their sentiments and stated that the show "is an attempt to discredit Hinduism and Ashrams".[14][15] In October 2021, the Bajrang Dal group targeted Aashram web series sets and Prakash Jha for defaming Hindus and the entire aashram system, through his web series, whereas the sets were vandalised by the group.[16] Director Prakash Jha stated that "They will voice their concerns, but I think about the thousands who see my project in the correct manner. It is no joke that 1.5 billion people watched it. If we say there will be no objection, it is not right. "[17] Later, Bobby Deol supported Jha and stated that the show is not about defaming anyone and as an actor nothing else matters.[18]
References
[edit]- ^ "MX Player drops the trailer of 'Aashram'". National Herald. 18 August 2020.
- ^ "Bobby Deol's Aashram, The Gone Game, Malayalam flick Veyil: Trailers released this week". Firstpost. 18 August 2020.
- ^ "'Aashram' trailer unveiled: Bobby Deol-Prakash Jha shed light on politics in spiritual world". DNA India. 17 August 2020.
- ^ "Aashram Trailer: Bobby Deol Steps Into The Digital World as Spiritual Leader in Prakash Jha's New Series". www.india.com. 17 August 2020.
- ^ "Aashram Trailer: Bobby Deol blends into a new character in a show that questions its morality". mid-day. 17 August 2020.
- ^ "Watch | Bobby Deol's 'Aashram' trailer out now". The Statesman. 17 August 2020.
- ^ "Bobby Deol-starrer Aashram season 2 to premiere on 11th November 2020". The Daily Voice (India). 11 November 2020.
- ^ Llewellyn, Tom (3 June 2022). "Aashram season 4 confirmed". HITC.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "The trailer of Prakash Jha's upcoming webseries Aashram was released today - The Thinkera". 17 August 2020. Archived from the original on 13 April 2021. Retrieved 9 March 2021.
- ^ "Aashram trailer Bobby Deol plays a spiritual leader who veers between 'aastha' and 'apraadh' in Prakash Jha's new series". Hindustan Times. 17 August 2020.
- ^ "The trailer of Prakash Jha's Aashram starring Bobby Deol looks promising". www.indulgexpress.com. 16 August 2020.
- ^ "Aashram Review: With Bobby Deol's Solid Presence, Prakash Jha's Digital Debut Is Nothing If Not Bingeworthy". NDTV.com. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
- ^ "Aashram review: Bobby Deol's show has a bark that's worse than its bite". Hindustan Times. 28 August 2020. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
- ^ "'Aashram': Jodhpur Court Serves Notice To Bobby Deol And Director Prakash Jha". ABP News. 14 December 2020.
- ^ "'Controversial depiction of Hindu saints in Aashram': Plea filed against Prakash Jha, Bobby Deol". Daily News and Analysis. 16 December 2020.
- ^ "Ashram 3 Sets in Bhopal Vandalised". Hindustan Times. 24 October 2021.
- ^ "Prakash Jha on Aashram 3 controversies: 'For each one who objects, there will be thousands who support your vision'". Hindustan Times. 3 June 2022.
- ^ "Actor Bobby Deol Comes in Defence of 'Ek Badnaam….Ashram 3'". The Statesman. 9 June 2022.
External links
[edit]Aashram
View on GrokipediaThe series premiered on MX Player—later rebranded under Amazon MX Player—on August 28, 2020, and has since expanded to multiple seasons, chronicling Baba Nirala's maneuvers to maintain power amid investigations and internal betrayals.[1][2]
Renowned for its unflinching portrayal of blind devotion and institutional corruption, Aashram achieved record-breaking viewership, surpassing 250 million viewers across India and revitalizing Bobby Deol's career through his critically acclaimed performance as the enigmatic antagonist.[3][1]
However, the production has encountered substantial backlash, including court notices from groups like Karni Sena alleging homophobia and defamation, physical attacks on sets by Bajrang Dal activists, and broader criticisms of maligning Hindu spiritual traditions.[4][5][6]
Premise and Production
Plot Overview
Aashram is a Hindi-language crime drama series that follows Baba Nirala (Bobby Deol), a self-proclaimed spiritual leader who heads the Kashipur Ashram in rural Uttar Pradesh, drawing devoted followers primarily from disadvantaged communities through promises of salvation and social upliftment.[7] The narrative examines his expansive influence, which intertwines spirituality with political maneuvering and criminal enterprises, including drug trafficking, murders, and exploitation masked as divine acts.[1][8] Central to the plot is Pammi (Aaditi Pohankar), a talented female wrestler from a lower-caste background facing societal discrimination, who seeks refuge in the ashram after Baba Nirala intervenes in her life, elevating her status among devotees while drawing her into the organization's opaque power dynamics.[8][9] As suspicions mount—triggered by discoveries like buried skeletons and missing persons—the story delves into investigations challenging the godman's sanctity, pitting institutional probes against the ashram's loyalists and revealing layers of coercion, vote-bank politics, and unholy alliances.[8][1] The overarching arc critiques blind faith and the godman phenomenon, portraying Baba Nirala's ascent from obscurity to regional dominance through charisma and manipulation, while subplots involve rival factions, including police officers and political figures, attempting to dismantle his empire amid escalating violence and scandals.[10][7] Across seasons, the plot evolves to confront the ashram's systemic abuses, with devotees like Pammi navigating loyalty, betrayal, and personal agency in the face of exposed hypocrisies.[8][1]Development and Real-Life Inspirations
The development of Aashram involved in-depth research by screenwriter Kuldeep Ruhil, who in 2018 spent seventeen days visiting eleven ashrams and deras across North India. Posing as a businessman disillusioned with material life, Ruhil observed the operational intricacies, including fortified security protocols, provision of amenities such as schools and hospitals to attract devotees, and the psychological mechanisms drawing followers from diverse socioeconomic strata to self-proclaimed spiritual leaders.[11] This fieldwork shaped the screenplay and dialogues, emphasizing the internal ecosystems of these institutions and the motivations of their adherents, with Ruhil noting the magnetic appeal of babas offering perceived solutions to personal and societal woes.[12] Under the direction and production of Prakash Jha through Prakash Jha Productions, in partnership with MX Player and Gen-K Studios, the series progressed to its first season announcement on July 31, 2020, via a teaser revealing the August 28, 2020 premiere date.[13] Jha conceptualized the narrative around a godman's ascent through a blend of charisma, political alliances, and exploitation, framing it as a critique of unchecked faith rather than a targeted exposé.[14] While Aashram is fictional, its portrayal of Baba Nirala's empire—marked by crimes, political patronage, and devotee manipulation—mirrors documented patterns in Indian godman scandals, including financial malfeasance, sexual abuse, and ties to power brokers, as uncovered in Ruhil's ashram immersions.[11] Prakash Jha has denied direct basis on specific figures like Asaram Bapu, convicted in 2018 for rape, or Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh, sentenced in 2017 for rape and murder, despite public and media comparisons citing parallels in their operations and downfalls.[15] The series' initial sequence, depicting violence against a low-caste youth aspiring to ride a horse, draws from real events like the 2016 Gujarat assault on a Dalit groom for similar caste transgression.[16] Jha positions the work as an examination of societal vulnerability to "common men" posing as saviors, underscoring causal links between blind devotion, institutional opacity, and elite complicity without indicting religion broadly.[14]Filming and Technical Aspects
The principal filming for Seasons 1 and 2 of Aashram occurred across multiple sites in Uttar Pradesh's Purvanchal region, including Ayodhya, Gonda, and Lucknow, with the entire production schedule for Season 1 completed in two months prior to its August 2020 release.[17][18] Director Prakash Jha oversaw these shoots, emphasizing efficient location-based authenticity to depict the godman's influence in rural and semi-urban settings.[18] Season 3's production shifted to Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, where the team filmed for two months starting in late 2021, incorporating local landmarks and a opulent heritage residence as the central ashram set for Baba Nirala's domain, at a reported total rental cost of 48 lakhs to the producers.[19][20] On October 24, 2021, during this phase, Bajrang Dal activists vandalized sets in Bhopal and threw ink at Jha, protesting perceived religious insensitivity, though shooting resumed shortly thereafter.[21][22] Cinematography for the series, spanning 29 episodes across seasons, was led by Chandan Kowli as director of photography, employing grounded visual techniques to capture the stark contrasts between the ashram's facade of piety and underlying criminality, with a focus on natural lighting in outdoor rural sequences.[23] Production was handled by Prakash Jha Productions in collaboration with Gen-K Studios and MX Player, prioritizing on-location realism over extensive studio work to enhance the narrative's socio-political edge.[1]Cast and Characters
Lead Roles and Performances
Bobby Deol stars as Kashipur waale Baba Nirala, the central figure of the series, depicted as a self-proclaimed godman who builds a vast empire through charisma, manipulation, and criminal undertakings while maintaining a facade of spirituality.[23] Deol's performance across all three seasons has been commended for its depth, capturing the character's duality of benevolence and ruthlessness, with director Prakash Jha highlighting Deol's immersion into the role from the outset, including adopting the godman's mannerisms and dialect.[24] Critics and viewers noted Deol's ability to convey subtle shifts in Baba Nirala's psyche, particularly in Season 3 where the character faces escalating threats, marking a career resurgence for the actor through this transformative portrayal.[25][26] Chandan Roy Sanyal portrays Bhopa Swami, Baba Nirala's steadfast deputy who executes the ashram's enforcements and schemes with unwavering loyalty and brutality.[23] Sanyal's depiction has garnered significant acclaim for its raw intensity, evolving from a shadowy enforcer in Season 1 to a more unpredictable figure in later installments, with audiences frequently recognizing and addressing him by the character's name in public.[27] Reviews praised Sanyal's handling of Bhopa's moral compromises and explosive confrontations, especially in Season 3 Part 2, where the role's romantic and vulnerable facets added layers to the otherwise menacing persona.[26][6] Aaditi Pohankar plays Parminder "Pammi" Lochan, a pivotal devotee entangled in the ashram's intrigues, whose arc intersects crucially with Baba Nirala's domain.[23] Though not the singular lead, Pohankar's fierce and nuanced performance as the athletic yet ensnared Pammi has been highlighted for balancing vulnerability with defiance across seasons.[28]Supporting Cast
Chandan Roy Sanyal portrays Bhopa Swami (also referred to as Satti or Bhopa), the fiercely loyal aide to Baba Nirala who manages the ashram's day-to-day affairs, enforces discipline among followers, and executes the godman's directives with unwavering devotion across all three seasons.[23] His character evolves from a simple enforcer in Season 1 to a key strategist amid escalating threats in Seasons 2 and 3, appearing in 33 episodes.[23] Sanyal's performance has been noted for its intensity, particularly in scenes depicting Bhopa's ruthless protection of the ashram's secrets.[29] Darshan Kumar plays Ujagar Singh, a determined sub-inspector tasked with investigating crimes linked to the Kashipur ashram, serving as a primary antagonist to Baba Nirala's empire from Season 1 onward.[1] Singh's arc involves persistent probes into corruption, murders, and fraud, facing obstacles from political influence and ashram loyalists, with Kumar appearing prominently in investigative sequences across 20+ episodes.[23] The role highlights Kumar's portrayal of moral resolve against systemic barriers.[2] Aditi Pohankar embodies Pammi (full name Parminder), a talented long-distance runner who joins the ashram after personal setbacks, becoming a devoted disciple and unwitting pawn in Baba's schemes starting in Season 1.[1] Her character grapples with indoctrination and internal conflict, featuring in athletic training depictions and ashram rituals through Seasons 1 and 2.[23] Pohankar's athletic background adds authenticity to Pammi's physical prowess and vulnerability.[30] Tridha Choudhury depicts Babita, a journalist and associate who navigates alliances with the ashram in Seasons 2 and 3, often mediating between external pressures and internal loyalties.[23] Introduced amid rising scrutiny, Babita's role involves uncovering discrepancies while maintaining access to Baba's circle, appearing in key plotlines involving media and politics.[31] Choudhury's character underscores the series' exploration of complicity in power structures.[32] Esha Gupta appears as Amma Ji in Seasons 3 Parts 1 and 2, portraying a maternal figure within the ashram hierarchy who influences follower dynamics and covers operations.[23] Her limited but pivotal episodes focus on familial manipulations tied to Baba's persona.[33] Gupta joined later, contributing to the intensified familial and protective layers in the narrative.[34] Other notable supporting performers include Anupriya Goenka as Dr. Natasha, a medical professional entangled in ashram cover-ups; Adhyayan Suman as Tinka Singh, a celebrity devotee whose fame bolsters Baba's influence; Vikram Kochhar as Sadhu Sharma, an ashram functionary; and Tushar Pandey in recurring roles aiding operational facets.[23] These characters collectively amplify the series' depiction of the ashram's ecosystem, with appearances spanning investigative, devotional, and administrative threads.[30]Release and Distribution
Marketing Strategies
The marketing campaigns for Aashram utilized a comprehensive 360-degree approach, integrating television advertisements, digital promotions, outdoor displays, and social media activations to generate widespread buzz across urban and non-metro audiences in India.[35] This multi-channel strategy was particularly evident in promotions for later seasons, where trailers achieved sustained visibility, such as trending on YouTube for 23 consecutive days ahead of key releases.[36] Hyperlocal experiential activations played a central role in the series' initial OTT launch, targeting regions like Delhi NCR, Indore, and Rohtak through on-ground engagements at everyday locales including chai stalls, sweet shops, and sutta parlours.[37] Tactics included deploying posters with provocative one-liners, highway hoardings and city panels mimicking Baba Nirala's aashram aesthetic, and vehicle wraps on buses and cabs, alongside local influencers dressed as characters to re-enact scenes and create social media content like memes and reels.[37] These efforts, executed in partnership with agencies like CupShup and conceptualized by WLDD for MX Player and Amazon Prime, yielded over 5 crore impressions and more than 1 lakh organic conversations, surpassing typical OTT recall benchmarks in targeted areas.[37] Digital and influencer-led campaigns further amplified youth engagement, notably the #BabajiKaMakeover initiative for season 3, which aimed to reframe the central character for audiences aged 18-30.[38] Featuring influencers such as Harsh Beniwal, BeYouNick, Viraj Ghelani, and Saloni Gaur alongside Bobby Deol, the Instagram-focused drive ran from late May to early June 2022 and generated a reach exceeding 5 million with a budget surpassing ₹40 lakh.[38] Additional online tactics included high-anticipation stunts, such as Amazon MX Player clearing its entire Instagram feed prior to the season 3 part 2 trailer launch on February 21, 2025, to heighten suspense.[39] Creative outdoor elements, like interactive billboards transforming public spaces into promotional conversation starters, complemented these efforts by fostering deeper audience interaction beyond traditional advertising.[40] Sponsorship integrations bolstered the campaigns' financial and visibility aspects, with season 3 securing five key partners: Vimal Elaichi as title sponsor, Goldiee as co-powered by sponsor, and special partners Kent Mineral RO, Royal Green, and Crax.[41] These brands leveraged the series' broad demographic appeal—spanning metro and non-metro viewers—to enhance exposure during the June 3, 2022, premiere.[41] Cast-led promotions, including interviews, social media pushes, and public events featuring Bobby Deol, further drove momentum, aligning with the narrative's themes of power and deception to sustain franchise hype across seasons.[42]Platform Release Timeline
Aashram Season 1 premiered exclusively on MX Player on August 28, 2020, available for free streaming with advertisements.[1][43] Season 2 followed on the same platform on November 11, 2020.[44][45] Season 3 was divided into two parts due to production delays and narrative structure. Part 1 released on MX Player on June 3, 2022.[46] Part 2, titled Ek Badnaam Aashram Season 3 Part 2, launched on Amazon MX Player—following Amazon's acquisition of MX Player—on February 27, 2025, also free with ads and accessible via Prime Video in select regions.[47][48]| Season | Part | Release Date | Platform |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | - | August 28, 2020 | MX Player[1] |
| 2 | - | November 11, 2020 | MX Player[45] |
| 3 | 1 | June 3, 2022 | MX Player[46] |
| 3 | 2 | February 27, 2025 | Amazon MX Player[47] |
