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Before marriages in India families sit together, horoscope charts ✨⭐️ and kundalis are compared, and futures are predicted and decided.But rarely do we ask a far more tangible question: What do our health reports say?What does the cell reveal about our fate?If your father has hair fall or diabetes, is it coincidence or inheritance? What does it mean when one says it “runs in the family”?The answer lies in DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid), the biological blueprint that quietly shapes who we are. It influences whether we are tall or short, our eye color, our metabolism, our athletic potential, and even our susceptibility to conditions such as diabetes, cancer, and certain neurodevelopmental disorders like autism.In this episode, we move the conversation from astrology to biology.We sit down with Sudhakar Kancharla, founder of Yoda Diagnostics, one of India's largest DNA diagnostics laboratories, to understand what our genes really reveal, and what they do not.From the realities of at-home blood sample collection to the science behind genetic compatibility and inter-caste marriages, from Yoda's DNA Decoder tests to the role of AI in predicting and preventing disease this conversation explores how data, diagnostics, and technology are reshaping healthcare in India.
NEE JEEVITHAM – NEE NIRNAYAM (Your Life. Your Decision.)This is not a motivational speech. This is a reality check. In this POV episode, we talk directly to you — about self-respect, personal value, boundaries, and the quiet power of taking responsibility for your own life.Respect is never asked for. It is earned through decisions, discipline, and self-control.This series is about: • Increasing your personal value • Building self-respect without arrogance • Learning to say no • Taking responsibility for your choices • Becoming someone people naturally respectEach episode is designed to give you a daily dose of clarity — short, honest, and directly applicable to real life.If these words made you uncomfortable, that's where growth begins.
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“Yogi, bhogi,roghi,” that is the life mantra of actor Jagapathi Babu. In this Telugu podcast episode of Raw Talks With VK we take you outside of our studios and into Jagapathi Babu's farmhouse for a raw and reflective conversation.In this chat Jagapathi Babu reflects on his journey from a romantic hero to powerful antagonist, from stardom to setbacks, from indulgence to introspection. He speaks honestly and candidly about the entourage culture in the film industry, the emotional and financial setbacks he faced, rejection of his unique voice, and the importance of fitness and spirituality. He also shares about his experience working with legends Rajinikanth and Amitabh Bachchan and unpacks the idea of stardom in Indian cinema. We discuss the making of his iconic films like Kabadi Kabadi, Pravarakyudu, and Anukokunda Oka Rojju.The actor shares his thoughts on family, friends, goodbyes and grief, feminism, caste, superstition and his tumultuous bout with gambling and smoking addiction. For him life is a design and manifestation is about focus, discipline, and relentless hard work toward one's purpose.
NEE JEEVITHAM – NEE NIRNAYAMThis is your daily POV reminder.----Respect is not given. It's earned through choices.One thought. One decision. Every day.If this hit you — save it. If it challenged you — that's the point.Follow for daily POV motivation.Support "They said it" on Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/theysaidit---Follow us on:Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/theysaiditInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/theysaidit22/LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/they-said-it/Become a sponsor for a good cause - https://app.redcircle.com/shows/9a910f6c-b675-4815-a0cb-8fc6f9c6e425/sponsor---Listen to more episodes onRedCircle - https://redcircle.com/shows/they-said-it-telugu-podcastGaana - https://bit.ly/3MVWPoLSpotify - https://spoti.fi/3dpzFszApple podcast - https://apple.co/37pL47IGoogle podcast - https://bit.ly/2OGC5ZqAmazon Music - https://amzn.to/3kxKGxRYouTube - https://bit.ly/3aBAtaI---Credits:Album art: CanvaMusic: MixKitPictures: Pexels---#theysaidittelugu #telugupodcast #focus #softskills #selfbelief #telugucontentcreators #lifestyle #productivity #wellbeing #selfhelp#POV #DailyMotivation #SelfWorth #RespectYourself #MindsetShiftSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/they-said-it-telugu-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
In this Telugu episode of Raw Talks with VK, we sit down with Arjun Sarja—actor, producer, and director. Widely celebrated for his iconic action sequences, Sarja is fondly known as the “Action King” and the “Bruce Lee of India.”This candid conversation takes us beyond the glamour of the film industry, opening up about the financial struggles of filmmaking, the realities of an actor's life, and the pressures and joys that come with entertaining audiences.Sarja also reflects on the role of fitness and discipline in his life, his expansive filmography across multiple languages, and his deep devotion to Lord Hanuman. He shares memories of working with legends like Mani Ratnam and actors such as Soundarya.We also discuss the making of some of his most popular films like Roja, Sri Manjunatha, Sri Anjaneyam, and Suyamvaram, which holds the record for being the fastest-produced feature film, shot in just 23 hours and 58 minutes.
Dr. AV Gurava Reddy returns for an absolute wholesome conversation that goes far beyond orthopaedics and hospitals, touching life, love, discipline, empathy, ethics, and what it truly means to live well in today's fast, convenience-driven world.In this Telugu podcast episode, we get to see the human being behind the surgeon. From how he became an orthopaedic doctor to defining moments from his early life and his years working in the UK, Dr. Reddy reflects on the experiences that shaped not just his medical practice, but his outlook on life. Personal stories flow naturally —his love story, marriage, parenting, and the constant balancing act between family and an intense medical career, filled with joy, pressure, regret, and gratitude.The conversation moves into themes that resonate deeply with today's generation: anxiety, burnout, work-life balance, and the pressure to constantly perform. He explains why happiness is not an act but a habit, how counting blessings is an art, and why liking what you do changes everything. From music and favourite songs to celebrity encounters and simple everyday joys, he reminds us why life should feel like a celebration.We also dive into the realities of modern healthcare; time with patients, critical care decisions, empathy versus sympathy, ICU ethics, allegations against doctors, consumer court pressures, and moral conflicts in corporate hospitals. With clarity and honesty, he explains how doctors make decisions under pressure and why ethics must stand firm even when the system pushes otherwise.Beyond medicine, the episode highlights his work through the Sarvejana Foundation, road safety awareness, free knee replacements, accident prevention, insurance education, and mentoring young doctors. He speaks passionately about responsibility, parenting, family bonding, lifestyle diseases, digital detox, physical activity, hobbies, aging well, and the importance of slowing down.Warm, reflective, and grounded, this conversation is for anyone who sees life as a celebration, and for those who are still trying to understand how.Because sometimes, life is not about fixing everything… It's about living. Just living.
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In this episode, to share the much-needed knowledge of the hour, we have Krishna Sastry Pendyala, one of India's senior-most cyber security and digital forensics experts, with over 25 years of experience working with the Ministry of Home Affairs and leading national institutions. We entered the real world of cyber crime investigations, digital fraud, and cyber warfare as it unfolded on the ground, not in theory.The conversation traces the evolution of cyber crime across generations. From early certificate frauds using scanners and computers, to e-governance scams, banking frauds, phishing, QR code scams, ransomware, and today's AI-driven cyber attacks, Krishna Sastry explains how cyber crime moved from individuals to organised networks, state actors, and crime-as-a-service models. He explains why his famous line, “Distance is dead and identity is a doubt,” perfectly describes the modern digital world.We break down how social engineering, malware, RAT Trojans, keyloggers, zero-click exploits, Pegasus-style surveillance, steganography, homoglyph attacks, vishing, smishing, fake QR codes, and personalised fraud mails actually work. The episode explains how one click, one message, or one panic moment is enough to trigger massive damage.The discussion includes real landmark cases such as the Cosmos Bank cyber heist, ATM skimming, shimmer attacks, jackpoting, man-in-the-middle attacks, and how fraud risk management, user behaviour analytics, and RBI safeguards protect Indian banks today. Krishna Sastry also shares rare cases where crimes were solved using electronic evidence from unexpected devices like smart water meters, gaming consoles, and embedded systems.A major part of the episode focuses on digital forensics. How deleted messages are recovered, why police never switch on seized systems, how metadata can expose the truth, what cross-examination in courts looks like, and why electronic evidence is time-sensitive, repeatable, and reproducible. He also explains his role as an expert witness, handling cases that resurface even decades later.We dive into the dark web ecosystem including TOR networks, marketplaces, ransomware gangs, virtual currencies, mule accounts, mixers, tumblers, and cyber slavery rings. The episode also addresses elder frauds, sextortion, digital arrests, cyber insurance, ethical hacking, OSINT, social media risks, and why both individuals and organisations must rethink cyber safety.The conversation also offers insights on the future of cyber forensics, AI and cyber security, and practical advice for everyday digital life.If you want to understand how cyber crimes actually happen, how investigations really work, and how to stay safer in a connected world, this episode is for you.
In this Telugu podcast episode with Jagadish Vasudev, popularly known as Sadhguru, an Indian spiritual leader and the founder of the Isha Foundation, headquartered in Coimbatore, India; we explore the life, philosophy, influence, and contradictions surrounding Sadhguru, one of the most widely discussed spiritual figures of our time. From his formative years and the defining experience at Chamundi Hills to the scale and functioning of the Isha Foundation, this conversation attempts to understand the man beyond labels, opinions, and surface narratives.The discussion moves through Sadhguru's early life, his views on learning, intelligence, and enlightenment, and what he believes is the true potential of human beings. He speaks about the difference between knowing through belief and knowing through experience, and why explanation alone cannot replace inner clarity. The episode also touches upon how spirituality is often misunderstood, oversimplified, or reduced to ideology in the modern world.Addressing controversies and criticism, Sadhguru responds to allegations, missing case narratives, land encroachment claims, and the resistance commonly faced by large spiritual institutions. He shares his perspective on why such challenges arise, how institutions like Isha function structurally, and the balance between expansion, responsibility, and transparency. We also discuss his recent brain surgery, how it altered his outlook temporarily, and the public debates he has engaged in within the digital and intellectual space, including exchanges with voices like Javed Akhtar.The conversation further explores mental health and how the term is increasingly used as a label rather than understood as a deeper psychological condition. Sadhguru shares his views on emotional well-being, inner stability, and the difference between medical intervention and inner discipline. Topics such as spirituality versus religion, the Adiyogi statue controversy, spiritual tourism, civilizational symbols, and national recognition including the Padma Vibhushan are discussed in a broader cultural context.If you're looking for a conversation that doesn't push conclusions but encourages reflection on life, consciousness, and how to live consciously in today's world, this episode might be for you.
In this Telugu podcast episode, prominent Indian naturopath and wellness advocate, Manthena Satyanarayana Raju, breaks down how modern food habits, lifestyle choices, and over-medicalisation are silently affecting our health, and what actually helps in reversing the damage. In a calm, practical, and deeply insightful conversation, he explains why listening to your body matters more than blindly following diet trends, and how age-appropriate eating, rest, and discipline shape long-term wellbeing.The discussion explores what to eat, how much to eat, and when to eat, along with much-needed clarity on health checkups. From understanding which blood tests truly matter, when to start them, how often they should be done, and how to read reports beyond just numbers, he explains everything using ICMR-backed data and real-world observation. He also highlights why frequent testing without lifestyle correction doesn't lead to real health, and how mindful assessments every 4–5 months can make a meaningful difference.We dive into *intermittent fasting Vs traditional fasting*, the importance of giving the body one rest day every week, and the spiritual and biological reasoning behind practices like Shivarathri fasting and Kedarnath journeys. He explains the difference between discipline built into daily life versus relying on special occasions, and why consistency always works better than extremes.The episode also unpacks modern health traps such as tablet culture,drug-resistance, packaged foods entering Indian homes, social media-driven food influence, and fast food normalisation. From Swiggy fruit bowls and the illusion of freshness to contradictory celebrity advice online, he explains why enjoyment and self-care are often confused. Using powerful analogies from animals, fever response, sunlight, hormones, and natural recovery, he tells why humans break down early while natural systems don't.Touching upon naturopathy, yoga, ashram life, and preventive living, he reflects on the philosophies of Mahatma Gandhi and Morarji Desa. He shares personal principles, experiences during floods in Krishna river, his role as a yoga and naturopathy advisor, and why true detox is not a product or shortcut, but a long-term process.This episode doesn't preach. It gently helps you rethink food, medicine, discipline, and rest, making it especially relevant for parents, working professionals, and anyone trying to stay healthy in a fast, noisy world.
link - https://www.anaganagapodcast.com/shhh/edf5a4b1-c210-488d-80aa-87d76685d20dshhhh WhatsApp channel - https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbBiTLj0Vyc7WKcQu32KWhatsApp channel - https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va5b4mq2phHPXPNTLN0E
In this Telugu podcast episode, Prof. K. Nageshwar Rao, senior journalist, political analyst, and former MLC, shares rare insights from a career that spans journalism, politics, academia, and legislative responsibility. From witnessing India's media evolution since the early days of Doordarshan and The Indian Express to being part of the first 24-hour Telugu news ecosystem with TV9, he reflects on how news, narratives, and political theatre have reshaped public discourse.The conversation explores how parliamentary discussions should ideally function, the gap between democratic intent and political drama, and why voters today are often ill-informed or misinformed, echoing Jayaprakash Narayan's warning from 1997. Prof. Nageshwar breaks down the deep nexus between media, business, and politics, the systematic delegitimisation of independent journalists, and why intellectual debate has been replaced by noise-driven television formats. Drawing from ancient references like Krishna, Sita, and Buddha, he places modern democracy in a broader civilisational context.He speaks candidly about money in politics, daily expenses of MLAs and MPs, manifesto design, welfare schemes like Dalit Bandhu, and how policies are crafted more for optics than outcomes. The discussion covers voter responsibility, opposition as a democratic asset, warning signals of institutional collapse, and why a healthy opposition and free media are essential checks on unlimited power.Prof. Nageshwar also reflects on student politics, Osmania University, the limits of funding without intellectual leadership, and how some of India's finest leaders emerged from campus movements. He shares personal experiences from the time of Indira Gandhi's assassination, his transition from journalism to politics, his eight years as an MLC, achievements, regrets, and the challenge of staying intellectually honest in public life.The episode touches on threats, ideological labelling, public perception, media pressure, AI in journalism, currency performance, global awareness, and the discipline required to stay informed. With calm reasoning and sharp clarity, he explains why neutrality is not the absence of values, but the courage to speak truth without fear.If you are interested in Telugu politics, Indian democracy, journalism ethics, media influence, voter awareness, student politics, and political analysis without theatrics, this conversation offers depth, context, and perspective that cuts through the chaos.
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In this Telugu podcast episode, social activist Sunitha Krishnan; a Padma Shri awardee, co-founder of Prajwala Foundation, one of world's largest anti-trafficking shelters that rescues, rehabilitates and reintegrates victims into society, speaks about one of the darkest yet most urgent realities of our time, preventing child sexual abuse, human trafficking, and cyber-enabled exploitation.What happens when child sexual abuse and human trafficking move online, demand creates supply, and society looks away? This conversation with Sunitha Krishnan forces us to confront what most choose not to see.She takes us through the journey behind a landmark legal fight that contributed to the creation of India's National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal, and explains why the correct term is not child pornography but CSAM (Child Sexual Abuse Material). Sunitha breaks down how language matters, how misnaming the crime hides accountability, and why recognizing CSAM is crucial to protecting children.The conversation exposes how trafficking and abuse have shifted into digital spaces, from social media and dating apps to encrypted platforms like Telegram, where organized networks trade thousands of child abuse videos for small amounts of money. She explains how demand fuels supply, how coded language operates in brothels and online markets, and how technology has silently enabled trafficking networks to scale and globalize abuse. Drawing from her findings in India, the United States, and Europe, she reveals how content produced in India circulates worldwide.The episode dives deep into secondary victimization, where survivors are blamed, silenced, or retraumatized by legal procedures, institutional failures, and social attitudes. Sunitha discusses brutal cases involving children, the psychology of sexual violence, abuse that goes beyond sexual intent, and how unresolved trauma can perpetuate cycles of harm. She also speaks about the abuse of boys, shifting societal tolerance levels, and the dangers of normalizing exploitation.Sunitha shares personal experiences of threats, attacks, and backlash for challenging powerful systems, including her advocacy in the Supreme Court, her anger during critical hearings, and campaigns such as #ShameTheRapist. She reflects on her book I Am What I Am, including the chapter that begins with questioning God, and the resilience required to continue despite stigma and labels imposed by society.The episode also sheds light on survivor rehabilitation through the Prajwala Foundation, children born in red-light areas, transition centers, education, dignity-based recovery, and long-term reintegration. From missing-child golden hour drills and funding realities to why men must speak against demand and why we must invest in boys as much as we protect girls, this conversation asks deeply uncomfortable but necessary questions.Intense, honest, and deeply human, this episode is not meant to shock, it is meant to wake us up.This episode stands as a powerful reminder of why child safety, women's rights, cyber crime prevention, and social justice demand our attention on urgent notice.
postal address: Sai Kiran Challa Siva sai sadan, Raghu Ram Nagar , Nagaram palem main road, near YSR statue, Guntur , 522004Ph - 8074997318whatsapp channel https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaowxpd4inoqfe5uIO2lhttps://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va5b4mq2phHPXPNTLN0E
"A solo trip will change your life." Is it true, or is it a philosophy for those who have everything?Introducing "Kaani..", a new fictional audio series from Samvedh Sagas. Meet Kesava, a man at his lowest, who listens to this very podcast... and gets angry. He's on a journey not for inspiration, but to prove that the "Samvedh Sagas" ideology is wrong.Voiced by Samvedh https://www.instagram.com/travelwithsamvedhWritten by Jayanth Surisettihttps://www.instagram.com/musings_of_an_idiot_Edited by Meghan Yellapuhttps://www.instagram.com/meghanyellapu
postal address: Sai Kiran Challa Siva sai sadan, Raghu Ram Nagar , Nagaram palem main road, near YSR statue, Guntur , 522004Ph - 8074997318whatsapp channel https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaowxpd4inoqfe5uIO2lhttps://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va5b4mq2phHPXPNTLN0Ehttps://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbBiTLj0Vyc7WKcQu32K
In this Telugu podcast, we explore the fascinating world of the human brain with Dr. Sri Ram Chandra Damaraju, one of the most respected and leading neurosurgeons with over 30 years of experience. This conversation beautifully connects science, spirituality, and real-life experiences; from his recent Mt. Kailash Yatra and the mystical Manasarovar Lake to the intense precision of awake brain surgeries. Dr. Damaraju explains what happens inside an operation theatre, how patients stay conscious during surgery, why the brain feels no pain, and how neuro-anesthesia makes these extraordinary procedures possible.We discuss real and unbelievable medical cases, like a skull being stored inside the abdomen during swelling, a child living with only one brain hemisphere, and the rare brain-eating amoeba seen in Kerala. He simplifies complex ideas like how our brain controls speech and memory, why some people can sing but not speak, and how smoking and lifestyle choices affect brain function. He also breaks down the contralateral system, the importance of the golden hour after accidents, and the emotional weight doctors carry while saving lives.The conversation moves into the psychological and spiritual side of the brain exploring lucid dreaming, déjà vu, sleep paralysis, hypnosis, and memory. Dr. Damaraju explains what happens in the brain during these states, how fits feel to a patient, and why concentration is declining in today's smartphone-driven world. He also shares practical insights on sleep cycles, afternoon naps, and how digital detox can restore clarity and focus.There are deeply human moments too, where he reflects on loss, near-death experiences, and the healing power of gratitude, laughter, and mindfulness. He explains how emotions like joy and kindness can reshape the brain, how sugar harms both heart and mind, and how nutrients like omega-3 fatty acids support brain health. He touches on the role of breathing patterns, visualization, and muscle memory in extending life and improving focus, and shares why he personally uses visualization before every surgery.The episode also covers important topics like child development, late pregnancies, Down syndrome, prion diseases, and the financial and insurance challenges around neurological treatments in India. Dr. Damaraju closes with reflections on his inspirations; from his hardworking mother to his disciplined father and how their values shaped his approach to life and medicine.This episode is a rare mix of knowledge, compassion, and real stories that make you appreciate the miracle of the brain and the depth of human resilience. If you've ever wondered how your brain truly works, why we dream, forget, or feel, and how science and spirituality connect inside us, this conversation will leave you with awe and clarity about the most powerful organ we all carry within.
you can subscribe and listen to next episodes right now,website - https://www.anaganagapodcast.com/and also can purchase poster cards . postal address: Sai Kiran Challa Siva sai sadan, Raghu Ram Nagar , Nagaram palem main road, near YSR statue, Guntur , 522004Ph - 8074997318whatsapp channel https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaowxpd4inoqfe5uIO2lhttps://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va5b4mq2phHPXPNTLN0E
In this Telugu podcast episode, we sit down for an eye-opening conversation about sales psychology, insurance fraud, consumer behavior, and financial literacy, uncovering the truths behind how insurance is sold, why people fall for mis-selling, and how trust can be rebuilt in a world driven by short-term gains.Sales. Insurance. Trust. Three words that shape how we earn, spend, and protect our money, yet remain some of the most misunderstood in India. We begin with the negative reputation of sales, including pushy mall offers, credit card traps, and the “forceful persuasion” mindset, and explore how Ditto trains its advisors to sell with empathy rather than pressure. From insurance frauds and hospital scams to the patterns in how Indians buy insurance, this episode breaks down why our money mindset is tuned toward instant gratification, the “Marshmallow Test” of finance, and why most people insure everything except their own lives.You'll hear stories about how IRDAI's complaint system works, how unethical agents mis-sell policies, and why understanding your policy coverage, claim ratio, and nominee details can make or break your family's future. We discuss why trust in India's financial ecosystem is fragile, why even educated buyers fall for Ponzi schemes, and what habits can build true financial discipline.From term vs health insurance, to inflation impact, anchoring bias, and dependency factors, we decode the full roadmap for making smarter financial choices. You'll learn when to buy a term plan, how to calculate ideal coverage, and why being honest during your insurance declaration is the single biggest favor you can do for your loved ones.The episode also goes behind the scenes of Finshots and Ditto's journey from rejecting crypto ads and avoiding greed-based marketing to raising ₹4 crore from Nikhil Kamath without ever running paid ads. We explore what it's like working alongside him, the philosophy of saying no to unethical money, and the next 18-month vision for making insurance simpler and more transparent.Packed with real-life examples, from family disputes over unclaimed FDs to shocking claim investigation stories, this episode bridges financial awareness, psychology, and ethics. Whether you're a young earner, a new parent, or just someone trying to understand how money, trust, and insurance really work, this conversation will change how you look at financial protection.Listen now to decode the world of sales, insurance, and financial truth, because in a society built on mistrust, clarity is the best policy.
you can subscribe and listen to next episodes right now,website - https://www.anaganagapodcast.com/and also can purchase poster cards . postal address: Sai Kiran Challa Siva sai sadan, Raghu Ram Nagar , Nagaram palem main road, near YSR statue, Guntur , 522004Ph - 8074997318whatsapp channel https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vaowxpd4inoqfe5uIO2lhttps://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va5b4mq2phHPXPNTLN0E
In this Telugu podcast episode, we sit down with Vijay Arisetty — Shaurya Chakra awardee, former IAF helicopter pilot, ex-Goldman Sachs Vice President, and the founder of MyGate and Arum, to hear a remarkable story of service, crisis leadership, corporate learning, and product-driven problem solving. Vijay's journey runs from Air Force service and rescue missions to ISB, Goldman Sachs, and startups that now secure millions of homes.He explains why helicopters matter: their three-dimensional agility, strict pre-flight protocols for VVIPs, and the pilot's role in immediate response and covert logistics. He revisited 26 December 2004 in Car Nicobar, when the shoreline vanished and a tsunami struck. Vijay led evacuation sorties, rescued nearly 300 people, witnessed mass casualties, and later briefed Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam; those missions earned him the Shaurya Chakra and left lasting psychological marks.A shoulder injury ended his flying career and nudged him to ISB and Goldman Sachs, where he learned organisational thinking, reproducible processes, and the power of consistent culture. Corporate rigor became the backbone of his entrepreneurial approach.MyGate began as hands-on research: months working with security guards, mapping friction in gated communities, and prototyping resilient workflows. When Chennai's internet faltered in 2017, MyGate proved its resilience and product fit. Vijay recalls Chennai 2017, when homes faced outages and MyGate kept communities connected, and he explains how small product details built lasting user trust. Today the platform protects millions of households and modernises visitor access and community management.Arum arose from another need; insured, tamper-resistant vaults for homes where traditional lockers failed. Named after gold's element symbol to signal trust, Arum blends hardware, insurance partnerships, and tamper-evident design to create insurable household vaults. Vijay describes field research: interviewing police, analysing theft patterns, and speaking with people who had lost valuables to build practical countermeasures. He explains why traditional bank lockers could not be insured due to opaque failure modes and mysterious disappearances, and how Arum negotiated insurance partnerships and applied tamper-evident engineering to make household vaults insurable.On privacy and ethics, Vijay is blunt: early GDPR compliance mattered for consumer trust. He explains how access logs and photo captures were implemented to protect residents while minimising intrusion, and why transparency matters more than opaque convenience. He also points out that early GDPR compliance became a competitive advantage when onboarding cautious customers.The episode mixes entrepreneurial gyaan with human reflection: how to spot problems users cannot name, why live research beats theorising, and how operational discipline scales products. Vijay reflects on the psychological cost of rescue work, leadership under pressure, and civic obligations from ambulance coordination to urban security design. He also discusses growth trade-offs, investor expectations, and ethical boundaries for founders. In a rapid-fire segment he names overrated industry jargon, three disciplines everyone could learn from armed forces training, and the personal inspirations that kept him moving forward.This conversation blends defence experience, humane product thinking, and offers clear, practical takeaways for builders, policymakers, and citizens alike., organisational design, startup From serving in the armed forces to strategy, or the ethics of technology in homes, Vijay Arisetty's story is a masterclass in resilience, curiosity, and practical innovation. Tune in for actionable frameworks on crisis leadership, product instincts and civic tech lessons.
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Don't forget to hit the bell icon on Spotify, Show us your support - UPI ID: phanitej18@okiciciFor more such interesting content follow us on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/msktelugupodcast/
In this Telugu podcast episode, we sit down with Niharika NM, one of India's most loved digital creators turned actors, for an honest and entertaining conversation about life, fame, and everything in between. From creating viral sketches in her bedroom to acting alongside legends in mainstream cinema, her story is one of courage, self-discovery, and creative evolution. We trace the story behind “NM” in her name, how an unexpected YouTube upload in 2015 changed her life, and the early Facebook days that set the stage for her rise. Niharika shares how Tanmay Bhat's early recognition pushed her forward and how she became a household name through Instagram Reels and relatable storytelling.She reflects on the shift from the creator world to the movie industry and how both spaces differ in pressure, pay, and creative control. While the move to films has been exciting, she admits it came with challenges: unpredictable schedules, sudden fame, and finding balance between authenticity and attention. With her signature wit, Niharika discusses how creators are often used to promote films or brands and why she believes audiences connect more to honesty than to virality.The conversation gets personal as she talks about being bullied in school, dealing with performative kindness, and using humor as a defense mechanism. Niharika opens up about body image issues, unrealistic beauty standards, and the extra scrutiny women face online. She shares how she learned to stay confident through authenticity, not perfection, and how she handles online hate, self-doubt, and imposter syndrome when numbers drop or criticism rises.Niharika also dives into the economics of both worlds, comparing pay scales between creators and actors. She believes creator-led brands are the future because of their personal connection with audiences, though she admits the career is unstable and brutally competitive. She recalls working with Yash, A.R. Rahman, and Mahesh Babu, sharing how each collaboration shaped her understanding of professionalism and presence.From gender bias and misplaced anger online to brand ethics and controversies, Niharika's take on the influencer space is refreshingly real. She talks about the kind of deals she avoids, why transparency matters, and how the internet can both build and break an image overnight. Her thoughts on Gen Z humor, changing audience behavior, and how creators build influence rather than just reach offer valuable insight into today's digital world.As the episode unfolds, she discusses how she picks movie scripts, her process for shaping characters, and why executing comedy on screen is harder than writing it. She shares stories about Brahmanandam garu and Ravi Teja, her content towards Little Hearts movie success, and what it takes to stand out in a world that constantly wants more.Candid, self-aware, and full of laughter, this episode captures the real Niharika NM beyond the screen. Whether you're a young creator, a film enthusiast, or just curious about how social media fame blends with cinema, this conversation is filled with lessons, humor, and heart. It's a reminder that behind every viral video is a person learning, evolving, and trying to stay grounded in a fast-changing digital world.
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In this Telugu podcast episode, we step into the world of law with Pavan Kumar Duvva, Advocate and Partner at The Law Chambers as he reveals the realities behind one of India's most respected yet misunderstood professions. From his first courtroom experiences to the truth about how much young lawyers actually earn, he explains why law is both rewarding and punishingly difficult. A fresh graduate may begin with a modest salary, but with skill and persistence some go on to command astronomical fees. That gap between promise and struggle sets the stage for a raw conversation about the profession.He reflects on how society's view of lawyers has changed. Once dismissed with suspicion and stereotypes, lawyers are now regaining respect as people see their importance in disputes, contracts, and daily life. But Pavan was candid about the flaws too...nepotism, corruption, and why casual judgments from the outside rarely capture courtroom depth. Asked whether he ever wanted to be a judge, he notes that it means sacrificing almost 80% of social life and income, requiring a completely different mindset.The discussion dives into advocacy's dilemmas: what if you know your client is guilty, how intention matters in crime, and why every case is a unique puzzle. Referencing Ram Jethmalani interviews and high-profile cases like Sahara and Agri Gold, Pavan explains how loopholes are exploited, how backend manoeuvres unfold, and why advocacy is never simple logic. He also shares how lawyers face client conflicts, threats, and even strange requests from people seeking advice on fraud.From the famous Disha case to everyday tenancy disputes and corporate law for entrepreneurs, Pavan brings ground realities alive. He highlights jurisdiction errors, with nearly 10% of cases lost at the very first step and the crushing burden of pending cases. For him, “justice delayed is justice denied” is not a slogan but a daily battle. He also compares cinema with reality, pointing out what *Jolly LLB* gets right about courtroom strategy and what it dramatizes.The episode brims with anecdotes: how lawyers prepare for multiple cases in a day, why voice and body language matter as much as statutes. He shares candid views on the Nirbhaya case, the juvenile sentence, the police's investigative role, and why cooperation between police and advocates is essential.Beyond litigation, he offers practical advice for businesses: why valuation matters, common fundraising mistakes, and traps every founder should avoid. He critiques sensational media trials, showing how narratives form before facts are proven, often harming both justice and society. His reform wishlist includes better infrastructure for heritage courts, stronger police manpower, and law education in schools so citizens know their rights and duties.Through it all, his passion shines. He admits he draws inspiration not from one figure but from the craft itself , its challenges, unpredictability, and social impact. What excites him is that advocacy is intellectually demanding and never repetitive; what frustrates him are endless delays and adjournments. With humour, seriousness, and clarity, he paints law as it really is; difficult, messy, and deeply human.If you've ever thought law is irrelevant unless you're in trouble, this episode will change your mind. By the end, you'll see how law shapes every aspect of life, why lawyers matter far more than stereotypes suggest, and why knowing even the basics can empower us all.
In this Telugu podcast episode, we sit down with Siddhu Jonnalagadda, one of the most versatile actors and writers in the Telugu film industry, to uncover the real man behind the cult one-liners, witty characters, and bold career choices. From his most expensive regrets to the punchlines that made him a fan favorite, Siddhu opens up about the highs, lows, and lessons of his journey so far.He reflects on nearly 15 years in cinema—moments when budgets spiraled, projects tested his patience, and expectations weighed heavy. Yet not once did he think of quitting. Being self-made, he says, leaves no space for the luxury of flops—financially, mentally, or emotionally. With refreshing honesty, Siddhu compares the ease and difficulty of acting versus writing, and how switching between the two keeps him grounded.From DJ Tillu to his latest ventures, he shares fan-favorite dialogues, the prep rituals that keep him sharp, and how meeting with friends every fortnight keeps characters alive. He laughs at how social media paints travel as glamorous, contrasting it with the reality of family trips, airport chaos, and food experiments—from sushi to Chinese platters. He even unpacks the FOMO culture around food and lifestyle, balancing it with the humor of his middle-class upbringing.The conversation dives into his bond with Jr. NTR, filled with brotherhood, gym promises, and stories that reveal Tarak's ability to talk about anything under the sun. Siddhu also addresses the heavier side of the industry—caste allegations in promotions, sensationalism in interviews designed to go viral, and the overwhelming pressure of standing out in a world drowning in content. With his film Telusu Kada, he believes he's redefining a genre, while stepping into one of the darkest roles attempted in Telugu cinema with his another cinema.Beyond films, Siddhu speaks about spirituality, survival mode, and the middle-class dinner-table conversations that shaped him. He reflects on humor born from pain, the unfairness of men's everyday struggles, and who he turns to when the lows hit hardest. He candidly decodes unforgettable roles like Bunny in Ala Vaikunthapuram and the raw energy of Pushpa, while questioning how audience perceptions shape an actor's image. He doesn't skip over the hidden costs of “hero maintenance,” the brand obsession after DJ Tillu 1, and what it really takes to keep up in the industry.From childhood experiences with his mother, his earliest roles in web series, and roasting sessions at home, to his views on luck, opportunity, and the fear of missing great scripts, this episode is as raw as it gets. Siddhu reveals his inspirations, the advice that shaped him, and why happiness, to him, can mean both ten rupees and crores.Unfiltered, witty, and deeply relatable, Siddhu Jonnalagadda speaks about life, cinema, and survival with rare honesty. Whether you're a fan of his films, a dreamer chasing your own path, or simply someone curious about what it takes to thrive in today's content-heavy world, this conversation will leave you inspired, entertained, and thinking differently about success.