these guys wanna marry rakhi for publicity or plain fun.....or it can be the other way round too...rakhi wants super super publicity coz wants more money....n then after marrying she will ditch the guy for sure...This is a copy of the english one where a girl selected a guy and they got divorced after 2-3 months...lol
So finally i caught you again . I don't know why you not replying.you not even picking the phone. Any way BEST OF LUCK and she is far better than our college girl...........
Suppose 2 or more people win with the same score, will they ALL marry RS, or will there be some kind of tie-breaker( mind boggling possibilities like T20, whoever hits the wicket most times, etc)?
Re: What if there's a tie?
by anand bisht on Jun 25, 2009 04:46 PM
The match winner is Abhishek now the other player will entertain to Rakhi and the viwere of Television and sony will earn a lot of money from this DRAMA.
They married for money -- would you? It's not just members of jet-setting society and movie stars who marry into money. It's happening all around us, all the time -- you find someone with a hefty bank balance and take your social standing up a few notches by getting hitched. All of us know of Mr X or Miss Y, who dumped a struggling partner and married the perfect spouse with a flashy job and an even flashier pay packet. They pin the blame on incompatibility, but the moot point is not only that a Veronica Lodge usually scores over a simpleton like Betty Cooper to land her man, but that love pales in light of money. And the more honest among us have no qualms admitting that. Says Ashmita Roy*, 27, from Delhi [Images], "I was dating this guy in college. We were in the same class. Yes, we were in love. But there's more to life than holding hands and walking on the beach. One needs to be practical. I love the good things in life and it would have taken years for my boyfriend to provide me with what I'm used to. And so I married the man my family chose for me. My husband took me to Europe on our honeymoon. I love my life and have no regrets!" A resident of Delhi's posh Gol Mohor Park, Nita Sabarwal*, 28, has a similar story to tell. "I used to date this guy who was studying medicine. We were of the same age. Soon I realised that it would be years before he could even start to earn a decent sum of money. He told me that he couldn't dream of getting marr