Updated On: 03 September, 2023 07:28 AM IST | Mumbai | Mayank Shekhar
You could see it as a crime procedural, therefore. Only that it shouldn’t take more than a few minutes to explain this process. Which is probably why, like so much of peak TV content, that are borderline decent—Scam 2003 feels like the long, first cut of a film, loosely extended into a series.

A still from the series
There is no Indian show I’ve waited as eagerly for its second instalment as Scam 1992: The Harshad Mehta Story (2020). Which is this, namely, Scam 2003: The Telgi Story. The first was a breakout series for the OTT platform SonyLIV.
Easily the best of its kind. Excitingly detailing the rise and fall of the Bombay Stock Exchange Big Bull, Harshad Mehta. Bravely naming names. Entertainingly recording events that shook up India’s stock-market and personal finance. Enough to make one realise the potential of a solid, multi-layered, long-form series as a place to store popular history.