Aashram Season - 1 Episode 1

But the camera pulls back. We see the ashram’s back office. A computer monitor shows the woman’s medical history. A doctor (secretly on the payroll) whispers to the head priest, "She had a reversible cataract. We scheduled the surgery last week. The Baba will 'heal' her today."

Out steps (played with chilling charisma by Bobby Deol). He is not a monk in rags; he is a celebrity in white linen. His hair flows. His sunglasses are polished. His smile is calibrated. aashram season 1 episode 1

We meet Pammi, a state-level hockey player whose real name is Ujagar Singh. She is fierce, athletic, and hungry for a national title. But the system is corrupt. Her coach demands a bribe of ₹2 lakhs (approx. $2,600) to "recommend" her for the camp. Her father, a struggling farmer, can’t afford it. Desperate, Ujagar visits the ashram, hoping Baba’s blessings will change her luck. She is talented, but talent without money is worthless in Kashipur. But the camera pulls back

If you enjoyed the slow-burn tension of "Sacred Games" or the political cynicism of "Narcos," Episode 1 of Aashram is your next addiction. Jai Nirala? More like Jai Manipulation. MX Player Episode Runtime: 48 minutes Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5) – A gripping, uncomfortable start. A doctor (secretly on the payroll) whispers to

The scene is quiet, almost corporate. They drink tea and shake hands. The sacred and the profane become business partners. The final act focuses on Ujagar. She returns to the ashram after failing to secure her hockey bribe. Baba Nirala notices her. He sees not a devotee, but an asset—a young, strong, beautiful athlete who could be the ashram’s new "face."

Within the first ten minutes, the show establishes its central question: Is this a story about God, or about the business of God? The episode opens with a montage that feels almost tranquil. Sunlight filters through the windows of a sprawling, ashram complex. Thousands of devotees, mostly poor and desperate, sleep shoulder-to-shoulder. The serenity is shattered by the sound of a helicopter.

When Prakash Jha’s Aashram premiered on MX Player in 2020, it didn’t just arrive—it erupted. Set against the dust-choked, color-drenched landscapes of a fictional town called Kashipur, the very first episode, serves a potent cocktail of blind faith, political muscle, and raw exploitation.