A TV star Reality Afghanistan-Australia said the Taliban threatened him and his family in Australia to stop the production of their reality TV shows.
Ramiz King, 24, described himself as Afghan’s first reality TV star.
He made a name for himself on YouTube, then MTV in India, and is one of the stars of Afghashem, or Bachashem, Afghan’s first television reality event.
The king and sister based in Melbourne, Rohina, who passed with one name, was the Glamor Bintang TA east East, a TV event reality about Afghans who lived in Australia and returned to Afghanistan to work.
This show focuses on my daily lives and my brother, Rohina, when we deal with life, relationships and also understand our roots with Afghanistan,” he said.
We do adventure to understand how it feels to be related to the Afghan masses, in terms of working hard and live in a torn country war.”
Rohina said the show meant she could be in a safe country, unlike in Afghanistan where women could potentially face deaths because they spoke.
And, as you know, many Afghan women don’t have this opportunity. “
Mr. King and the four sisters came to Australia from Afghanistan as children.
West Ta East was filmed in Australia and Afghanistan, where the two siblings were last visited in 2019.
The duo has been dubbed the Afghan Kardashians for their reality show, which is a mixture of glamor, drama and comedy.
But the king said he and his production team had received a telephone call that threatened the Taliban to attract East West Ta, which contradicted the values of the fundamentalist regime based on the extremist interpretation of the Qur’an.
The family drama is intended to air on the first Afghan commercial TV station, Tolo TV, but will now run on the Tolo TV music streaming channel.
In addition, the pair is in talks to run western TA on Netflix streaming services.
After they returned to power in August, the Taliban had banned most women from going to work.
The Taliban has also forbidden women from appearing in television dramas, and women’s television journalists must wear Islamic headscarves, headscarves, under new rules for the nation’s media.
Apart from the limitation, Rohina said the aim was to empower Afghan women and women.
I want to show my life, like me in Australia, I work for Amazon, which is one of the biggest companies,” he said.