Entertainer Rajesh Kumar, most popular for assuming the part of Rosesh Sarabhai in the famous TV series Sarabhai versus Sarabhai, in a new meeting with Rajshri Turned off, opened up on beginning cultivating, his acting profession and the sky is the limit from there. The entertainer said during the meeting, said, “In 2017, I returned to my town from where I began – Gaya. Aur wahan standard humari zameen thi toh maine pitahji ko bola (we had land there so I told my dad I needed to turn into a rancher). He thought 2-3 mahine ka bhoot hai however it went on. Also, I totally surrendered,” the entertainer added.
Rajesh Kumar added that his family upheld him. He momentarily talked about his show Sarabhai versus Sarabhai. He said that the subsequent season didn’t work. “This occurs with Sarabhai, It won’t ever work. Its far somewhat radical,” he said.
Discussing his cultivating experience, Rajesh added, “With cultivating I felt like, it is an unfilled material. You can be a decent painter and paint it well. What’s more, that is the manner by which I began. I labored for quite some time constantly on cultivating. A ton of failures occurred, A confronted a ton of misfortunes. Regarding less information… I’d established 15,000 trees on 20 sections of land of land. I got to gain some useful knowledge. There was a great deal of shift that was occurring with me. There were no floods around there over the most recent 30 years however the flood came when I had established trees and it had barely grown one feet. My ranch got overflowed. I trusted that the downpours will stop and again began planting, then lockdown occurred.”
Rajesh Kumar added that he was “in a real sense bankrupt” at a certain point. “There were a few reserve funds certainly however by then I was losing on to a great deal of stuff and monetarily, it was a slide. I think post crown, I was in a real sense bankrupt. That I had nothing in my pocket. also, I was having tension of advance too. So there was a stage.” The entertainer likewise opened up on his undertaking “Mera Family Rancher” that he began later.