Shahrukh Khan Reveals His Shocking Shooting Schedule For His TV Show!
News
oi-Girija
By Girija Narayan
Shah
Rukh
Khan
is
shooting
back-to-back
for
India
Poochega
Sabse
Shaana
Kaun?
and
his
upcoming
Bollywood
film
along
with
it.
His
shooting
schedule
will
shock
everyone
but,
the
superstar
says
he
is
enjoying
interacting
with
real
people
on
the
TV
show
despite
a
physically-gruelling
schedule.
"I
start
Fan
(his
upcoming
film)
by
1
pm
and
finish
by
6
am
and
then
I
come
here
by
11.30-12
am
and
shoot
till
11
pm
before
heading
back
to
'Fan'." An
Indian
adaptation
of
Israeli
game
show
Who's
Asking?,
the
program
will
start
airing
from
March
2
on
&TV,
the
newly
launched
channel
of
ZEE
Entertainment
Enterprises
Limited.
"Shooting
for
this
show
while
working
on
Fan
has
been
very
hectic
but
what
has
kept
me
going
is
meeting
real
people.
This
show
is
about
common
people
be
it
the
questions
or
the
answers.
It
is
very
tough
physically
but
mentally
I
am
on
a
break
as
I
get
to
talk
to
so
many
people.
I
am
having
fun,"
Shah
Rukh
told
in
a
telephonic
interview
from
Mumbai.
The
49-year-old
star
started
his
acting
career
with
TV
serials
like
Circus
and
Fauji
before
making
it
big
in
Bollywood.
He
later
hosted
Kaun
Banega
Crorepati
followed
by
Kya
Aap
Paanchvi
Pass
Se
Tez
Hain?.
SRK
says
he
decided
to
come
onboard
for
the
show
because
he
did
not
want
to
let
go
of
an
original
format
like
this.
"I
find
the
medium
of
TV
very
interesting
but
I
don't
know
how
to
handle
the
fiction
part
of
it.
I
like
game
shows
and
I
always
wanted
to
hit
it
right
with
a
game
show.
This
has
not
been
seen
in
India
and
is
based
on
an
interesting
concept,"
he
says.
The
show
is
produced
by
Siddhartha
Basu
of
Big
Synergy
and
SRK
says
they
have
been
trying
to
come
up
with
a
product
for
a
long
time
and
somehow
things
fell
in
place
with
Sabse
Shaana
Kaun?,
a
format
which
is
more
about
intuitiveness
than
knowledge
as
the
contestant
faces
questions
from
people
of
different
professions,
ages
and
gender.
The
actor
says
as
someone
who
came
from
a
normal
background,
he
likes
being
a
part
of
aspirational
stories.
"I
have
always
maintained
that
I
come
from
a
very
common
background
like
many
other
people
in
India.
Sometimes
some
very
special
things
happen
to
people,
you
become
popular,
famous
and
successful
but
you
don't
compartmentalise
it.
I
really
want
to
see
people
have
that
one
opportunity
which
gives
them
that
one
chance,"
he
says.