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The drama Meri Bahuein stirred debate by introducing a shocking new plot device. The mother-in-law of one character becomes pregnant. Her daughter-in-law, Fabiha, panics because she fears losing attention and status in the family. The show treats this twist with exaggerated drama, leading many viewers to call it “cringe content”.
In many homes, a mother-in-law having a baby after her daughter-in-law is married is rare and already socially complicated. The drama amplifies the situation with too much melodrama. Fabiha’s reactions feel staged. Many viewers feel the show takes a delicate issue and turns it into an over-the-top spectacle.

One user wrote, “This is a halal child. What kind of reaction is this?” Such scenes force the audience to ask: Why treat a natural event—pregnancy—as scandalous in a modern family set-up? The exaggeration breaks the sense of realism.
As soon as the episode aired, social media lit up. Some viewers said the show reflects real tensions in joint families—competition, jealousy, and power struggles. Others rejected the scene as absurd and insulting. One comment read: “I was caught watching this by my family. Smoking corn would be easier to explain than this drama.”
At Six Screen Entertainment, we see how the reaction shows the fine line dramas tread between entertainment and genuine depiction. Many viewers want stories they can relate to, not moments that make them cringe.

Family dramas in Pakistan often use mother-in-law versus daughter-in-law storylines. They attract high ratings when conflict rises. But when shows lean too far into exaggeration, they risk losing trust. Meri Bahuein’s new pregnancy plot might bring buzz now—but it could wear thin if it doesn’t treat its characters with care.
’Meri Bahuein’ shows how drama can spark discussion about power, family dynamics, and respect. However, the recent storyline feels forced and overcooked. At Six Screen Entertainment, we believe good dramas ask questions rather than just shock. Audiences today want reality-based stories with meaning, not stories that give them shocks. Let’s hope the next twist delivers more substance and less spectacle.

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