Sanjay
Leela
Bhansali's
Padmavati
is
in
news
since
its
inception.
When
the
director
started
the
shooting
of
his
magnum
opus,
Rajput
Karni
Sena
members
slapped
him
in
Jaipur
and
went
on
to
destroy
the
sets
of
the
film
in
Kolhapur.
But
even
after
SLB
issued
a
statement
that
there
are
no
scenes
between
Rani
Padmani
and
Alauddin
Khilji,
Karni
Sena
burned
the
posters
of
the
film.
Now
India
Today
did
a
sting
operation
on
it
and
some
shocking
details
were
revealed.
The
Undercover
Team
Went
To
Meet...
According
to
Pinkvilla,
''The
TV
channel's
undercover
team
went
to
meet
Sukhdev
Singh
Gogamedi,
the
president
of
the
Shree
Rashtriya
Rajput
Karni
Sena.''
Recommended
Video
Padmavati:
Deepika
Padukone
UNIBROW
look
to
become
TREND;
Know
Here
|
FilmiBeat
The
Reported
Posed
As
An
Agent
''One
of
the
reporters
posed
as
an
agent
from
a
Bollywood
production
house
and
said
he
has
plans
to
make
a
film
on
the
fictitious
romance
between
Mughal
emperor
Aurangzeb
and
the
wife
of
a
Rajput
general.''
What
Happened
Next
''Gogamedi
connected
the
reporter
to
one
of
his
agents
in
Mumbai,
Umed
Singh.
"You
can
talk
to
Umed
Singh.
He
will
speak
to
me
on
the
phone
from
there.
He's
our
organisational
convener.
You
talk
to
him
or
ask
him
to
speak
to
me.
Just
note
down
his
number.''
Paid
Attacks
For
Publicity
''The
reporter
met
the
agent
in
Mumbai
who
said
that
there
will
be
STAGED
attacks
on
the
sets
of
the
film
(proposed
film
on
Aurangzeb)
done
for
publicity.''
How
The
Attacks
Will
Take
Place
"Some
people
from
outside
will
barge
in.
They'll
create
some
trouble.
The
sets
will
not
be
burned
down.
Two
to
four
people
will
be
beaten
up.
Vandalism
will
be
recorded."
You
Need
To
Pay
Rs
1.5
Crore
"That
will
be
done
throughout
India
and
across
the
world.
If
you
want
50
people
for
a
month
to
protect
(the
sets),
they
(filmmakers)
will
then
have
to
pay
Rs
1.5
crore,"
added
Singh.''
Fifty
People
Would
Be
There
''The
reporter
then
asked,
"Rs
1.5
crore
from
whom?"
"From
you,"
Singh
replied.
"Fifty
people
will
remain
there
for
you
all
the
time,"
he
added.''
On
Future
Attacks
On
Padmavati
''It's
safe
in
Mumbai.
But
it
was
burned
down
in
Kolhapur,"
said
Singh.