🗳️ Mayasabha Review: Andhra Politics as a Masala Thriller 🎬🔥
- MediaFx
- 3 days ago
- 2 min read
TL;DR:A bold web series tries to decode Andhra Pradesh’s power games 💼Mayasabha blends gossip, fiction, and political déjà vu But is it truth... or just spicy storytelling?

What Happened?🎬 The new Telugu web series Mayasabha just dropped on SonyLIV, and it's got netizens talking non-stop! Directed by Ajay Andrews Nuthakki and produced by Arka Media, the show dives deep into the power corridors of fictional Andhra Pradesh. 🏛️The plot kicks off with the mysterious murder of a Chief Minister and follows a Special Investigation Team trying to piece together the murky world of scams, betrayals, and backroom deals.
Flashback / ContextThink of it as Game of Thrones meets Andhra Pradesh Assembly Every character feels like a stand-in for someone you’ve seen on a Telugu news channel 😅Scroll.in calls it “a heavily spiced-up fictional history,” clearly hinting that truth and drama are tightly woven 👀This isn’t your usual political potboiler – it’s part courtroom drama, part psychological war
Who Gains & Who Loses? Gains:
Telugu OTT fans craving political drama
Viewers who love guessing real-life inspirations behind characters
SonyLIV, which scored an edgy, discussion-worthy series 📈
❌ Loses:
Anyone expecting facts over fiction
Die-hard fans of any particular party who may get triggered
Viewers hoping for subtlety – Mayasabha goes all in
People’s AngleSo what’s in it for the common man – the degree student, cabbie, techie, or pan shop owner? It reminds us how power plays often decide who gets jobs, roads, water – and who doesn’t A line in the show hits hard: "Power ni gelavadaniki nijam kuda set ayyedi kaadu." (Truth itself has to be tailored to win power.) It’s not just entertainment – it’s a mirror to the political circus that affects everyone’s pocket
MediaFx TakeMayasabha is juicy, loud, and unapologetically political While it stops short of naming real leaders, it’s impossible not to draw parallels with Andhra’s recent history Is it propaganda or just creative freedom? Maybe both 🤷But as a piece of storytelling, it scores for being gutsy and giving a voice – even if fictional – to how the people feel when politicians play games 🙌