Set in Kolkata, the story focuses on Anurag and Prerna who study in the same university. Fate keeps pulling them towards each other and as they get to know one another, they slowly form a bond of trust, understanding and friendship. Prerna starts falling for Anurag.
Komolika Chaubey is an arrogant, selfish, evil and narcissistic woman. While Anurag realizes his feelings for Prerna, Komolika starts getting obsessed with him. Anurag and Prerna confess their feelings, consummate their relationship, and plan to marry. Seeing them plan a future together, Komolika creates misunderstandings between them. She asks Anurag to marry her in order to save Prerna's house. Compelled and helpless, Anurag agrees. Unaware of the truth, Prerna is left shocked. Dazed, she gets hit by a car and is taken to the hospital, where she is revealed to be pregnant.
Rishabh Bajaj is a successful, powerful and selfish businessman. He falsely frames Anurag and gets him jailed. Further, he asks Prerna to marry him in exchange for Anurag's freedom. Helpless, she agrees. Heartbroken, Anurag questions Prerna. She lies to him, hoping he moves on but Anurag remains adamant and refuses to give up on their love. Rishabh starts falling for Prerna. Aware of the fact that Prerna loves Anurag, Rishabh tries to kill him. When his daughter Kukki ends up getting hurt while trying to stop Rishabh, he steps back. Anurag and Prerna reunite again.
On 19 March 2020, the shoot of the series was indefinitely halted due to the coronavirus outbreak the airing halted on 23 March 2020 when the remaining episodes were broadcast.[citation needed] After more than three months, the filming of the series was resumed on 27 June 2020.[55][56] New episodes started airing from 13 July 2020 on Star Plus.[citation needed]
Judging the participants on their dancing capabilities and harmonies are television actors Ronit Roy, Shweta Tiwari and Apara Mehta while Jo Jeeta Wohi Superstar winner Rahul Vaidya and Vineet Singh host the show.
THE bird flu-scare has turned India's culinary preferences on its head. It has also broken the myth about Indians not taking life seriously. Of course, they do. That is why they have stopped eating chicken. But life without tandoori chicken or butter chicken or drum sticks is like water without whiskey. Yo ho ho, it is not worth the breath without the most popular bird and bottle on the table for some. Fish and mutton make poor substitutes. How can love bloom in young hearts on Valentine's Day without a dressed bird making a sizzling entry to whet their appetite for the next course?The Arabs take their post-meal burps seriously. The scare has revealed that the Indians take their meat as seriously. They ignore the warning about AIDS and population explosion. Amitabh Bachchan has turned grey rooting for pulse polio for infants. But a false alarm has made them avoid the bird they could not chew without. The scare has also proved that love and loyalty are fickle. When the Japanese Quail was introduced, the region rejected it in favour of the more robust bird. It was their way of showing their love for and loyalty to the tandoori chicken. The gourmet's are now running for cover to avoid the flu that never came. The poultry business has suffered because the people who ate the bird have chickened out. Like most bad jokes, the bird flu started from China. It entered Pakistan presumably via Aksai Chin. Neither the CBMs nor the thousands of kilometres of barbed wire across the LoC could stop it from entering India as a wild rumour and then spreading across the country like a real flu. If Miss Marple were to investigate the case, she would begin by questioning the local butcher and the fish-monger. And why not? The poultry business' loss has been their gain.