‘DAYS LIKE DESE’ Season Two to be air in September

‘DAYS LIKE DESE’ a new sitcom aired on local television channels NCN11, NTN69, Cable 26 (Berbice) and MTV69 was initially launched with a ‘pilot’ episode in May 2017.
Episodes one to six in Season One were aired from June to November 2017.

There was a red carpet event on Friday June 29 at the National Cultural Centre prior to the airing of Episode one.

Season 2 consists of 6 episodes and will begin airing from September 6 and continues until the end of November. Two episodes will be aired per month on eight channels. Each episode will enjoy two airings on each channel.

The new airtimes will be Fridays at 20:00hrs on ATLANTIC Telenetwork channel ; Saturdays at 20:00hrs on NTN69 20:30hrs TVG28; Sundays at 19:00hrs on HBTV9 and 20:30hrs on HGPTV67 and Mondays at 18:30hrs on Cable26/Ch.77(Berbice) and at 19:00hrs on MTV 69. NCN 11 airings will be effective from September 16 on Sundays at 20:30hr.s

‘DAYS LIKE DESE’ is produced by GEMS Theatre Productions, written by Randolph Critchlow and directed by Randolph Critchlow and Gem Madhoo-Nascimento.
Season Two is made possible with the sponsorship of Institute of Private Enterprise Development (IPED), Environment Protection Agency (EPA), Ansa McAl, Sankars Auto Works, Hand in Hand Fire & Life Insurance Co., Nand Persaud & Co. Rice Millers and Ministry of Social Protection

The actors in Episode One are Nuriyyih Gerrard, Mark Kazim , Simone Dowding, Kirk Jardine, Rajan Tiwari, and Simone Persaud. Joining them in subsequent episodes will be Ron Robinson, Lavonne George, Makayah Smith, Safira Abrahim-William , Mark Luke-edwards, Brian Goodman, Olivia Rodrigues, Paul Budnah and Joel Ghansham

‘Days Like Dese’ is a 30 minute sitcom that delves deep into the daily lives of a diverse ‘socially responsible’ middle class Guyanese family, the Rupauls. The sitcom inspects and highlights the intricacies of family and community interactions through blurred racial and social lens. The sitcom through its intentionally diverse and mixed casting intends to remind us of how connected we really are as Guyanese. The Rupaul family exists not only in a racial blender but a social and generational one; as we get to see how the youth and the older folks try and sometimes struggle to bridge the generational and social gaps.
Viewers will feel connected with this family as they journey with them, traversing terrains that may sometimes be considered controversial but always palatably
It is family oriented with a lot of educational information mixed with the comedy.

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