Baar -- Hiwebxseries.com Apr 2026

Loop 2: He fixes the pandal’s center pole. The collapse still happens—this time from the other side. Loop 5: He cancels the live band. A fire breaks out in the generator. Loop 9: He tries to call off the wedding. Meera looks at him with such quiet disappointment that the loop resets anyway.

The morning of the wedding: Rohan’s checklist has 212 items. At 7:13 PM, just as he’s about to put the mangalsutra around Meera’s neck, the pandal collapses. Not a tragedy—just a loud, humiliating crash. Meera screams. His mother faints. The caterer drops a tray of gulab jamuns.

Rohan Mehta (32) is the most sought-after wedding planner in Mumbai. He’s calm, clinical, and sees love as a well-executed spreadsheet. He’s done eleven lavish weddings—no tears, no drama, just seamless logistics.

The astrologer hands him a diary. It belonged to Rohan’s late father, a failed wedding singer. In it, one line: “A wedding isn’t a checklist. It’s a promise you keep even when everything falls apart.” Baar -- HiWEBxSERIES.com

Confused: “What?”

Meera smiles. “I want the collapse.”

He consults a quirky astrologer (a recurring comic relief) who says: “You’ve planned eleven weddings for others. Each time, you copied a formula. This is your twelfth baar—not a repetition, but a reckoning.” Loop 2: He fixes the pandal’s center pole

The loop ends. The wedding continues—messy, loud, imperfect.

Then Rohan wakes up. Same alarm. Same date. Same 7:13 PM collapse.

Rohan stops controlling. He lets the mandap be crooked. He lets the flower girl sneeze on the priest. He lets Meera laugh at his perfectly ironed sherwani getting stained by rain. A fire breaks out in the generator

A cynical wedding planner who has orchestrated the perfect “big day” for others eleven times gets stuck in a time loop on the twelfth wedding—his own. Story Outline (Web Series Pilot) Episode 1: The Checklist

Now, it’s his baar (turn). His own wedding to Meera, a free-spirited photographer who sees magic in chaos.

Groom: “I want the perfect wedding. Zero mistakes.”

He realizes: He can’t escape the 7:13 PM disaster. But why?

Loop 2: He fixes the pandal’s center pole. The collapse still happens—this time from the other side. Loop 5: He cancels the live band. A fire breaks out in the generator. Loop 9: He tries to call off the wedding. Meera looks at him with such quiet disappointment that the loop resets anyway.

The morning of the wedding: Rohan’s checklist has 212 items. At 7:13 PM, just as he’s about to put the mangalsutra around Meera’s neck, the pandal collapses. Not a tragedy—just a loud, humiliating crash. Meera screams. His mother faints. The caterer drops a tray of gulab jamuns.

Rohan Mehta (32) is the most sought-after wedding planner in Mumbai. He’s calm, clinical, and sees love as a well-executed spreadsheet. He’s done eleven lavish weddings—no tears, no drama, just seamless logistics.

The astrologer hands him a diary. It belonged to Rohan’s late father, a failed wedding singer. In it, one line: “A wedding isn’t a checklist. It’s a promise you keep even when everything falls apart.”

Confused: “What?”

Meera smiles. “I want the collapse.”

He consults a quirky astrologer (a recurring comic relief) who says: “You’ve planned eleven weddings for others. Each time, you copied a formula. This is your twelfth baar—not a repetition, but a reckoning.”

The loop ends. The wedding continues—messy, loud, imperfect.

Then Rohan wakes up. Same alarm. Same date. Same 7:13 PM collapse.

Rohan stops controlling. He lets the mandap be crooked. He lets the flower girl sneeze on the priest. He lets Meera laugh at his perfectly ironed sherwani getting stained by rain.

A cynical wedding planner who has orchestrated the perfect “big day” for others eleven times gets stuck in a time loop on the twelfth wedding—his own. Story Outline (Web Series Pilot) Episode 1: The Checklist

Now, it’s his baar (turn). His own wedding to Meera, a free-spirited photographer who sees magic in chaos.

Groom: “I want the perfect wedding. Zero mistakes.”

He realizes: He can’t escape the 7:13 PM disaster. But why?