![viralukketha veekkam viralukketha veekkam](https://ytimg.googleusercontent.com/vi/aiKCG6epeig/hqdefault.jpg)
The story has a happy ending with the families living peacefully after. The wife earns money by working hard, while Ravi tries smuggling to get the money. The husbands are struggling to cook and take care of their children and go out to bring a dancing girl home to cook and look after the children! One day, Meena's daughter Rani falls sick and both husband and wife try to get two lakh rupees to save her life. Sekhar.Īpart from the main "Hou De Kharcha" punchline there are other humorous punch line used in memes: This was the remake of the Telugu film "Kshemamga Velli Labhamga Randi" which itself was based on Tamil film "Viralukketha Veekkam" directed by V. Raghavendra Rao starring Govinda, Juhi Chawla and Tabu. The meme's official Hou de Kharcha Facebook page has over 1,65,000 fans and receives 100+ image requests everyday as of December 2013.Īamdani Atthani Kharcha Rupaiyaa ( translation: "Salary is half a rupee and expenses are a whole rupee" ) is a 2001 Bollywood comedy film directed by K. This meme became a viral trend among the Marathi-speaking crowd around the globe through social media. The meme arose in mockery of the practice of Indian politicians erecting large numbers of hoardings (billboards) in order to announce minor or routine events.
![viralukketha veekkam viralukketha veekkam](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/OdFgSNTefqA/maxresdefault.jpg)
The meme usually consists of an image of a person appearing triumphant, with a caption congratulating them on achieving petty materialistic milestones such as "Buying Shoes", "Light Diwali Crackers With", or "Buying an Enfield Bullet by Way of a Loan". The literal translation of "Hou de kharcha" is "let there be expenditure", analogous to the American English phrase "make it rain". Its Facebook page and Google app appeared in 2013. Hou de Kharcha () is an internet meme in the Marathi language, originating in the state of Maharashtra, India. Politician like Raj Thackeray have asked his partymen to stop putting up these hoardings. Similarly, a Bharatiya Janata Party legislator had 4,000 hoardings put up across the city following his election.
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When the former revenue minister Narayan Rane celebrated his birthday in 2008, scores of hoardings were put up across the state. Indian politicians in Maharashtra use hoardings for petty things like birthday wishes for other politician of the same party or wishing holidays. The wives go to live with Jhoomri and Bhishma. When the husbands come back, they kick their wives out of the house since they got jobs. Meanwhile, their wives are struggling to pay their rents and decide to work even though their husbands told them not to. Slowly the husbands are running out of money so they trick their wives and go out for a vacation. Their immediate neighbours are three squabbling couples: Vijay and Anjali who are newly married Appu Khote and Vimla, who are married and have four children and Ravi and Meena, who are married and have one child. Jhoomri and her husband, Bhimsha, move into a new neighbourhood.