India's public broadcaster Doordarshan turns 62 today, covering a long journey that began as a modest experiment on this day in 1959.
Gradually, it grew and paved the way for the emergence of a new era in the Indian television industry. During the initial years, there were makeshift studios and voice and visuals were beamed through a small transmitter.
The experiment turned into a service in 1965 when Doordarshan reached TV sets in living rooms in and around the country's capital - Delhi. By 1972, Mumbai and Amritsar were added and then to seven other cities by 1975.
By the 90s, it had started reaching our hearts even in remote areas of the countries and people used to remain glued to their TV sets for their most-loved programmes.
It was Doordarshan that brought epics like Ramayan and Mahabharat on the silver screen for every Indian household. Its music show Chitrahaar and Rangoli won our hearts in the 80s and 90s. There were many other news and entertainment shows that made people aware of their country and the current developments around the world. It soon turned into a driver for the celebration of India's diversity and its unity.
There are several other shows that have remained close to our hearts even after the private satellite TV channels bombarded us with choices.
Malgudi Days
Based on the short stories written by RK Narayan in his book Malgudi Days, this show first aired in 1987 and had 69 episodes. It returned to Doordarshan for 15 episodes in 2006.
Byomkesh Bakshi
India's very own detective series was based on the character created by Bengali author Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay. Starring Rajit Kapur and KK Raina as Byomkesh Bakshi and Ajit Kumar Banerji, respectively, it instantly became popular and also received critical acclaim.
Chitrahaar
Who can forget Chitrahaar! Featuring songs from popular Hindi films, it was broadcast twice a week — Wednesday and Friday. For this 30-minute programme, viewers waited with anticipation as they hoped for their favourite song to be played on the show.
Surabhi
The cultural show hosted by Renuka Shahane and Siddharth Kak ran in the 90s. Surabhi traversed the length and breadth of India to showcase its heritage and cultural diversity.
Hum Log
The drama series about a lower-middle-class family and their day-to-day struggles defined family time in 1984. It was the first soap opera on Indian television and resonated with the times. Because of its social message and portrayal of real-life characters, it became a pan-India favourite.
Run Special Bulletin For Hearing, Visually Impaired Daily: Supreme Court To Centre DD Kisan to Launch Two AI Anchors on Ninth Anniversary to Read News for Farmers "Teleprompter Faded Away": TV Anchor Faints While Reading Heatwave Updates Send Sheikh Hasina Back To Dhaka, Bangladesh Writes To India Software Engineer Loses Rs 11.8 Crore To "Digital Arrest" Scam In Bengaluru "Intention To Dupe UPSC": Ex-IAS Trainee Puja Khedkar Denied Pre-Arrest Bail Amid Hoax Bomb Calls, Delhi Cops Train Teachers To Deal With Threats Kremlin Rejects Reports Of Bashar Al-Assad's Wife Seeking Divorce IIT Kanpur Graduates Secure 1,100 Job Offers In This Placement Season Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.