Green TV’s Do Kinaaray is messy, regressive, and full of trauma dumps. So over the top it could be mistaken for satire, Do Kinaaray is everything that’s wrong with TV — a toxic mix of outdated gender roles, forced drama, and family guilt trips.
Let’s get into it.
Portraits, Parent Trauma & the Asthmatic Alpha
The show opens with four adult siblings monologuing to a portrait of their dead parents. Leading the grief parade is Walid (played by Junaid Khan), the eldest brother who raised his step-siblings after their parents died and who has asthma, because… character depth?
Despite his obvious disinterest in marriage, the siblings pressure him to tie the knot — not because they care about his happiness, but because they want to dodge awkward family gatherings. Yes, the big plan is to offload social responsibilities onto a future bhabhi.
This “close-knit” family doesn’t care about Walid’s love life. They just want someone – anyone – to take over guest-hosting duties and social survival. Walid even suggests hiring a servant instead of a wife. He’s not wrong – all the family wants is someone else to do the emotional (and domestic) labor.

Enter Dureshehwar: Designer Labels & Delulu Energy
Momina Iqbal as Dureshehwar is dramatic, materialistic, and allergic to mediocrity. She visits designers for her friend’s wedding just to vibe — and makes it very clear she’s not about to marry someone in her own tax bracket.
The moment she expresses that she’d like a say in who she marries? Her brother calls her out for being rude and besharam. Someone call the 2000s — they want their gender roles back. Her degree is now a countdown timer to marriage. “What will she do at home after finishing education?” is an actual line from the panic-stricken mom. Ma’am. She could… get a job? Travel? Start a podcast? It’s 2025. But no — if she’s not booked for baraat by finals week, it’s a family emergency.
Dad suggests she shouldn’t rush into marriage (reasonable king behavior), and somehow he ends up being labeled weak for it. So supporting your daughter’s autonomy = weak parenting. Make it make sense.
Kainaat’s Rebellion: The Plot Twist We Deserve
Just when you think the drama peaked — boom. Kainaat, the sweet step-sister, drops a bomb:
“I won’t have a rukhstati until Walid does.”
Cue the gasps and emergency red flags. Things go off the rails when her husband is triggered by her totally rational boundary casually threatens a second nikkah to punish her. This is the kind of toxic masculinity that deserves a full-blown exposé — and maybe a restraining order.
We expected better from Green TV. They have been serving fun, intelligent content of varying degrees but this is the first one to be such a massive miss. If this was a workplace drama set, marriage would be HR’s solution to everything. We start off with a guilt-trippy family trying to offload their responsibilities and find our way to a misogynistic mama eager to push her daughter off on the first available rishta
