Aashram Season 1 Episode 1 [verified] ⚡ Original
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.
Meanwhile, we meet Satti, a simple young man whose mother is dying of a kidney ailment. Doctors have given up. But Satti believes Baba Nirala can perform a miracle. He sells his only buffalo—his family’s livelihood—to buy a silver throne for the Baba as an offering. The tragedy is immediate: he gives everything for a man who doesn’t even know his name. The Supernatural Business Baba Nirala’s first on-screen "miracle" is a masterclass in manipulation. A blind woman is brought before him. The crowd watches in tears. Baba places his hand on her eyes, mutters a mantra, and— poof —she claims she can see light.
It’s brutal in its simplicity. Faith is not being nurtured; it is being engineered. No cult survives without political protection. Episode 1 introduces Minister Sundar Lal (Anupriya Goenka) —a tough, pragmatic politician. She visits the ashram not to pray, but to negotiate. She needs the "Baba's" followers as a vote bank in the upcoming elections. In exchange, she offers police protection and a blind eye to the ashram’s land grabs. 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.
The episode ends with Ujagar hesitating at the door of his private quarters. The screen cuts to black on her anxious face. The music swells—a mix of devotional bhajan and ominous synth. We know she is walking into a trap. She does not. "Jai Nirala" is a slow burn that uses the first hour to build a world of systemic hypocrisy. Bobby Deol delivers a career-best performance, trading his "hero" persona for a villain who believes his own lies. The episode does not rely on jump scares or violence; the horror is in the realism. Out steps (played with chilling charisma by Bobby Deol)
Spoiler Alert: This article contains detailed plot points from Episode 1.
He calls her to his private chamber. No chanting. No incense. Just a soft voice and a piercing gaze. "You are special," he tells her. "The world will try to break you. Stay here tonight. I will bless you personally." His sunglasses are polished
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.