Gangavathi Pranesh

Gangavathi Pranesh, also known as Gangavathi Beechi and Junior Beechi is an artist from Gangavathi, Karnataka, India who is a stand-up comedian who primarily performs in Kannada, often sharing his life experiences through his humorous speeches . He is very popular among Kannada speaking population and has traveled to 11 countries such as USA, Australia, Dubai, Singapore,England to give lectures on humour. He has also given around 3500 programs in 400 places in State of Karnataka.

Gangavathi Pranesh
Gangavathi Pranesh
Born8 September 1960
OccupationStand up Comedian, Motivation Speaker and Writer

He appeared as popular face in Kannada talk show Harate (ಹರಟೆ) which is aired on Udaya TV and also in various Kannada TV reality shows as Guest Speaker. Has Won around 30 awards and been honoured by Hundreds of Organisations.

Humour festivals

Gangavathi Pranesh along with other artists like Basvaraj Mahamani, Narshimha Joshi started giving stand-up comedy performances, which came to be known as Hasya Utsava, Hasya Sanje or Humour Festival in Karnataka.[1] His speeches are mainly based on humour and contains social awareness. Pranesh has been praised by audiences and critics alike for his unique style and content, inspired by Beechi.

Appeared in several Kannada TV programs as a Guest Speaker.[2] Pranesh appeared in Talk show Weekend With Ramesh season 3. He has been judge in TV reality shows like Comedy Kiladigalu and Kannadada Kanmani.

Pranesh made his acting debut in Kannada film Mussanjemaatu in 2008 Starting Sudeep and Ramya.

Pranesh has also been admired for his art of literature. He has written over 5 books: Nagisuvavana Novugalu, Vaghbanagalu, Pranesh Payana , Pranesh Punch and Nakkava Geddava. And he writes for a Column in Kannada news paper Vishwavani every Wednesday.

gollark: For lots of points, if they don't all fit neatly on a line, you want... linear regression?
gollark: For two points there is only one straight line going through both of them, so it's easy.
gollark: Right, yes, my way is for *two* points.
gollark: `y_1` is the `y` of the first point, I'm sure you can infer the rest.
gollark: `m = y_1-y_2/x_1-x_2`, `c = y_1 - mx_1`, I think.

References

  1. "Some laughter, some drama". The Hindu. Chennai, India. 15 November 2012. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  2. "Indian medicine systems need to be popularised". The Hindu. Chennai, India. 20 September 2013. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
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