A girl living in a jungle near a village possesses some psychic power. He established some sort of telekinetic communication with a village boy who starts calling her 'mother'. A professor from the capital came to know about her and tries to understand her power. One of his relative who has higher degrees on psychology from abroad tried but failed miserably.
It is about a family that moves from the city to the countryside for some reason, and their change in lifestyle will be the main theme of the story. The father of the family has his money stolen by his partner and is about to go to prison. He asks his daughter to go to the north and the countryside with her siblings and their aunt after many years to be safe before his house is confiscated.
Ethen Vance is a prodigious young inventor at the Aethelgard School whose mind is a maze of worldbchanging concepts. Yet, Ethen is his own greatest enemy, crippling self doubt compels him to tear down every brilliant project he starts. Known as a shadow of his potential, his lonely cycle of genius and destruction is finally broken by the arrival of Lyra Bellwether. She is his opposite confident, curious, and unwavering. When Lyra accidentally discovers Ethen's hidden blueprints, she becomes the catalyst that begins to reignite his dimmed passion, forcing the reluctant prodigy to confront his fears and finally rebuild a dream.
Let's Pretend was a 1980s children's television series aimed at preschool ages. It was shown across the ITV Network at 12.10 on Tuesdays, then later Mondays, replacing the popular Pipkins which had been cancelled at the end of 1981. Like its predecessor, each edition was fifteen minutes long, and the programme was produced using many of Pipkins' personnel such as puppeteer Nigel Plaskitt and producer Michael Jeans.
Each week the presenters would find a number of ordinary household items and contrive to produce a short story featuring them all. The first programme, "The Story Of The Broken Puppet", was shown on Tuesday 5 January 1982 by Central Television. The show aired weekly until 1988.
The show's original opening titles featured items moving along a conveyor belt into the mouth of a large plastic whale, and later a puppet caterpillar moving along the screen.
It depicted the children's relationship to the war 1940-1945. Rolf Riktor's father was arrested and sent to the prison camp Grini and his mother travel to Oslo to look for him and get the opportunity to visit him at Grini. The children however do not get an opportunity to visit the prisoners.