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The fund makes up 45% of the investments at Sarmayeh Bank, Iran’s sixth largest private bank. The Teachers Reserve Fund was established in 1995 in an effort to promote the welfare of employees at Iran’s Ministry of Education.
#SHAHRZAD SERIES PART 15 TV#
The "No to Shahrzad" campaign asked everyone involved in the production of the TV series to stop their involvement with the show until the ties between the show’s investors and the corruption case at the Teachers Reserve Fund had been clarified. In an interview with Al-Monitor, Fatourechi said the reason for launching this campaign was to practice accountability and civil liberty. "I wanted to show that if we can’t deal with a small corruption case, then we definitely can’t approach the bigger fish,” he said. Such discussions soon led to the creation of a campaign called “No to Shahrzad” on social media networks. Responding to Alidoosti, Iranian journalist and writer Nader Fatourechi took to Facebook and asked the actress to explain the funding sources for "Shahrzad" and whether there were any ties to the financial corruption case at the Teachers Reserve Fund. Alidoosti responded to all the speculation in an Instagram post Oct. 25, writing, “Filming of Shahrzad season two has been underway for a month now. Fans demanded that the producers explain the funding sources for the show. On social media networks, hashtags such as No to Shahrzad and Question Shahrzad Producers began popping up. Although the news was never officially denied or confirmed, it created doubts about the production of the second season. In October, media outlets reported the arrest of Mohammad Emami, one of the show’s two producers, in connection with a financial scandal involving the Teachers Reserve Fund. Directed by Hassan Fathi, it features Taraneh Alidoosti in the title role and Shahab Hosseini as the man who loves her. The role of corrupt bureaucrat Bozorg Agha, the head of a powerful mafia syndicate that had a strong role in the 1953 coup, is played by Ali Nassirian.ĭespite criticisms about the accuracy and honesty of its historical-political narration, “Shahrzad” was successful from the start, but the second season has been marred by controversy. The historical and romantic drama series takes place in the wake of the 1953 coup d'etat, when Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh was overthrown, and focuses on a family saga that becomes even more complicated with power struggles, corruption, jealousy and mafia links. With an estimated cost of about 120 billion rials ($3.7 million), "Shahrzad" is viewed as one of the “ largest and most expensive” in the history of Iran’s private cinema and television.
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But real-life intrigues and allegations of corruption that dog the series, whose second season launched June 19, is just as exciting. 7, in the Plaza for Art after Dark.The Iranian TV series “ Shahrzad,” which has gripped the attention of Iranians since it was first broadcast two years ago, has been high in drama. The city said SHAHRZAD will be attending an opening celebration for the installation on Saturday, Aug. “We are so grateful to have supported five cultural nonprofits and to have worked with the talent at local company, Karson Butler Events, to create unique installations for the community to enjoy all summer long." “This Plaza Pop-Up series has exceeded all expectations,” said Molly Cano, City of SLO Tourism Manager.
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The SLO County Arts Council tapped SHAHRZAD to create the display as part of the city-sponsored featured cultural nonprofit. "Untitled VI" is the final installation of the Plaza Pop-Up Series. “But as community members share space with the installation, I hope our energies meld and for a moment, we can live like children, curiously together.“ “Before a person enters the space, these structures are just symbols of my artistry - defined by a Persian-ness, a Zoroastrian superstition, and an obsession with the internet,” said SHAHRZAD.
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SHAHRZAD said the pieces are meant to express the collective contradiction of emotions experienced over the past year and a half of the pandemic. All of the pieces range from four to six feet high and are made up of industrial materials like 600 pounds of hydrocal and 1,000 feet of quarter-inch steel rod. The six sculptures include a hand, flame, "evil eye", squiggle, rainbow and smiley face.