Farvartish Rezvaniyeh
Farvartish Rezvaniyeh | |
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![]() Farvartish Rezvaniyeh in 2020 | |
Born | Tehran, Iran | 25 March 1984
Occupation | Satirist, video journalist |
Alma mater | Islamic Azad University |
Farvartish Rezvaniyeh (Persian: فَروَرتیش رِضوانیه) (born 25 March 1984, in Tehran, Iran) is an Iranian satirist and video journalist.
Life
[edit]Rezvaniyeh has studied music, cinema, and graphic design in various art schools and holds a bachelor's degree in dramatic literature.[1]
He began journalism in his teenage years, and his articles have been published in Iranian newspapers, including Shargh, Ham-Mihan, and Hamshahri. Rezvaniyeh was a member of the editorial board of Gol-Agha Weekly, the most famous satirical magazine in Iran after the 1979 revolution, which worked with the greatest Iranian satirists.
Works
[edit]
The action-comedy stories written by Farvartish and published in newspapers have been viral. He has also invented a method, named "Boomerang", in Persian fiction. In this writing style, the main character of the story is the reader, and one can imagine themselves in the settings described by the writer by reading the story.
In 2005, Farvartish published what later became the most well-known April Fool's hoax in the Persian language, which claimed that the Milad communications tower in Tehran had started leaning. Millions of Iranians believed this lie, and even a large number of people gathered at the tower's location to witness its collapse. Also, the price of real estate in the vicinity of the tower fell.[2]
Farvartish has published three books, Boomerang, Sept. 12, and Tehran Dominos.
Tehran Dominos is an action story narrating the circumstances of Tehran after a severe earthquake. An endorsement by Bahram Akasheh, an Iranian seismologist, is written on the book's back cover recommending it to everyone living in Tehran. This book is not suitable for persons with cardiovascular or neurological conditions.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ "Farvartish Rezvaniyeh's Life in His Own Language". www.asriran.com (in Persian). Retrieved 8 December 2020.
- ^ "The liar who tilted Milad Tower". www.asriran.com (in Persian). Retrieved 8 December 2020.
- ^ "Warning of the Father of Iranian Seismology: Read the Tehran Dominos". www.parsine.com (in Persian). Retrieved 8 December 2020.
External links
[edit]- 1984 births
- Living people
- 20th-century comedians
- 20th-century Iranian journalists
- 20th-century Iranian male writers
- 20th-century Iranian novelists
- 21st-century comedians
- 21st-century Iranian journalists
- 21st-century Iranian male writers
- 21st-century novelists
- Activists from Tehran
- Iranian environmentalists
- Iranian male novelists
- Iranian satirists
- Islamic Azad University alumni
- Male journalists
- Mass media people from Tehran
- Visual journalism
- Writers from Tehran