‘Story of friends’: Creators of College Gate address concerns series elitist, against Pakistani culture

In this picture, posted on April 20, 2023, the star cast of the upcoming Pakistani series "College Gate" poses for a group photo in Islamabad. (Photo courtesy: Facebook/Asad Chaudhry)
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Updated 02 May 2023
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‘Story of friends’: Creators of College Gate address concerns series elitist, against Pakistani culture

  • The teen drama is scheduled to release on newly launched Pakistani TV channel Green Entertainment this month
  • Director and producer reassure viewers the show will promote family values, tackle issues of young Pakistanis

 KARACHI: When the trailer of upcoming Pakistani teen drama College Gate was released on Instagram last month, many social media users had similar concerns: was this a copy of the Netflix series Elite about an exclusive private school in Spain? How would Pakistani audiences relate to content that seemed to only depict a tiny “upper class”? And why would the producers make a show that looked like it “belonged to another culture”?

 In interviews with Arab News, the director and producer of College Gate, scheduled to release on the newly launched Pakistani TV channel Green Entertainment this month, have reassured readers that the show will appeal to Pakistani audiences, particularly young people, and promote family values as well as provide entertainment.

 As of 2022, Pakistan is currently the sixth most populous country globally, with two-thirds of its over 220 population below the age of 30, making it among the world’s youngest nations.

 “Seventy percent of our population is under 30, you cannot leave this much of the audience to be influenced by foreign content,” producer Imran Raza, who is also the brains behind Green Entertainment, told Arab News on Monday, commenting on the need to make content for young Pakistanis.

“If you don’t give them [local] content, they will watch something anyway because they need entertainment … Nobody is ready to talk about issues of the youth.”

But College Gate, which features a young and emerging cast, would tackle a number of issues important to young Pakistanis, Raza said, including not being allowed by parents to pursue careers of their choice, growing up in a single-parent home, and juggling one’s passions and dreams with the need to chart a path that would lead to financial success and independence.

“The drama also talks about puberty issues and hormonal changes that parents are usually shy to talk to their kids about,” Raza added.

Responding to comments that the series would be against Pakistani culture, director Fahim Burney clarified that College Gate was “just a story of friends.”




In this picture, posted on April 20, 2023, the star cast of the upcoming Pakistani series "College Gate" poses for a group photo in Islamabad. (Photo courtesy: Facebook/Asad Chaudhry)

 “If a girl and a guy are going to college, the purpose is not just to have a romantic relationship, they can be just friends,” Burney told Arab News on Monday.

And the friendships were “encouraging good values among each other,” Burney said, whether in its depiction of a girl supporting her father in his business, doing social work, or praying five times a day.

The teens were shown to be respectful to their parents, Burney added, saying the show gave out a “positive messages to young viewers to take inspiration from.”

Talking about his own influences, Burney said he was influenced by the popular British sitcom Mind Your Language and Pakistan’s Kollege Jeans, which revolved around campus life at an art school,

“So, I have revamped that into our Pakistani style, that there should be a uniform and a school [located] somewhere out of the city where the kids go to study,” Burney said.

TV critic and founder of Fuchsia Magazine, Rabia Mughni, said she expected College Gate “to be a fun, young program that will highlight the issues today's youth are facing.”

“I can see a glimpse of issues such as drugs, peer pressure, relationships, and communication gap with parents,” she said, commenting on the trailer.

Speaking about the drama’s comparison to foreign productions, Mughni added:

 “As you watch the trailer of the show, the content looks Pakistani, it's not unrealistic. It may not represent the masses or the lifestyle of the majority of the schools in Pakistan but if you take the upper-middle class or upper class, you will see this kind of environment in those institutions.”


Jessica Kahawaty to narrate London concert paying tribute to Arab music icons

Updated 24 February 2026
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Jessica Kahawaty to narrate London concert paying tribute to Arab music icons

DUBAI: Australian Lebanese model and entrepreneur Jessica Kahawaty this week announced that she will serve as the storyteller for “A Night With The Legends,” a one-night musical tribute celebrating iconic women of Arabic music, taking place at London’s Royal Albert Hall on March 5.

Kahawaty will portray Scheherazade and deliver spoken narration during the program.

The evening will pay tribute to the legacies of Umm Kulthum, Fairuz, Warda, Sabah, Asmahan and Layla Mourad.

Vocals will be performed by Lebanese vocalist Abeer Nehme, accompanied by the UK-based London Arab Orchestra under the direction of conductor Basel Saleh, alongside the London-based Royal Philharmonic Concert Orchestra. The program will also feature a 70-member all-female choir.

“I’m incredibly humbled,” Kahawaty wrote to her 1.8 million followers on Instagram. “As storyteller, I’ll be weaving history, memory and meaning into the musical experience in a one-night tribute celebrating the iconic women of the golden era of Arabic music.”

“I cannot wait to see you all there,” she added.

Kahawaty is also an entrepreneur. She co-founded fine jewelry label Kahawaty Jewels with her father, master jeweler Ghassan Kahawaty, launching the Dubai-based brand last year as a continuation of the family’s longstanding craftsmanship tradition.

“I grew up watching my father in his jewelry trade. I saw how happy he made people when he created these beautiful pieces,” Kahawaty previously told Arab News. “I’ve always wanted to continue my father’s legacy and my grandfather’s trade. I felt like this is the perfect time to launch Kahawaty Jewels in Dubai, which is a city I’ve been in for over 13 years.”

Kahawaty and her mother are also behind UAE-based food delivery business Mama Rita. In July last year, the pair expanded the venture with the launch of a cookbook, which featured a cover endorsement from Hollywood actress and producer Courteney Cox.

Writing on Instagram at the time, Kahawaty said: “The moment we held the Mama Rita cookbook in our hands for the very first time … after two years of pouring our hearts into it. And we’re beyond thrilled to share a special surprise on the cover — a quote from the one and only (Courteney Cox). Her iconic role as Monica in ‘Friends’ — the talented chef, perfectionist and loving control freak — mirrors so much of the dynamic between mum and me. And her true persona is even more beautiful, warm and generous.”