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Pocket FM offers content in various genres including romance, horror, fantasy, sci-fi, mythology, suspense and thriller. Each episode usually lasts between 10 and 30 minutes. [9] Pocket FM offers content in a variety of languages including Hindi, English, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi and Bengali. [10]
Raktomukhi Neela (Bengali: রক্তমুখী নীলা, romanized: Raktamukhī Nīlā, lit. 'The Bloody Sapphire'), is a detective story written by Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay featuring the Bengali detective Byomkesh Bakshi and his friend, assistant, and narrator Ajit Bandyopadhyay and several other story-related characters.
Guddada Bhootha (1991) is a thriller, Indian television mini-series which has a suspense storyline based on a Tulu drama shows the country life of Tulu Nadu region of India. [1] The art and technical direction of the series was done by popular Kannada filmmaker Girish Kasaravalli. It had Prakash Raj as the lead actor.
Pocket FM, a fast-growing audio entertainment startup based in India, said it banked $103 million in Series D funding as it looks to boost its presence in the U.S. and expand into Europe and Latin ...
Another of his stories for Mystery Theater, "Goodbye, Karl Erich" from the 1975 season, was also turned into a novel by the same name, first published in 1985. In 1976, a paperback anthology with three short stories adapted from the series' radio scripts was published by Pocket Library, Strange Tales from the CBS Radio Mystery Theater , edited ...
The plot is presented as a "story within a story", framed by a meeting between detective Sam (played by Howard Duff) and a friend who has discovered a manuscript regarding the titular house. After a brief introduction, the narrative shifts to the story presented in the manuscript. The story begins a few days before Christmas.
Pocket FM transmitter. Pocket FM is a small, low-powered radio transmitter designed for use in areas with tightly controlled or undeveloped communications infrastructure. The devices are portable and have the appearance of a receiver rather than a transmitter, making them more practical for citizen use and harder for authorities to detect when used subversively in pirate radio networks.
The publisher Gale described "Contents of the Dead Man's Pocket" as "one of Finney's best". [2] Jack Seabrook described it as an "outstanding suspense tale". [1] David Murdock interpreted the story as "a warning about maintaining what we call today a good 'work-life balance'."