Netflix has taken the keys to Indian reality television’s most notorious jail and handed them to two of Bollywood’s most bankable entertainers. The streamer on Thursday unveiled Lock Upp: Sach ya Saza, the second season of the captive reality format, with Farah Khan and Riteish Deshmukh installed as the new jailers and a premiere set for June 27.
The announcement, made through Netflix’s own newsroom and a teaser released on its India channels, confirms a six week run with fourteen celebrities locked inside a purpose built jail under what the platform calls a zero escape format. Episodes will stream Saturday through Wednesday at 8 pm, a near daily cadence that Netflix has rarely attempted with Indian unscripted programming. Ektaa Kapoor’s format returns intact; the address has changed.
The biggest change is at the top. Kangana Ranaut fronted the first season in 2022, when the show streamed on ALTBalaji and MX Player and became one of the most talked about Indian reality experiments of that year. Season two replaces her with a double act: Khan, the choreographer turned filmmaker whose interviews have made her one of the industry’s most disarming personalities, and Deshmukh, a comic leading man with two decades of goodwill.
The teaser leans on the new pairing’s chemistry, with the two jailers promising that inmates will have to own their truth on camera. Khan, speaking to The Times of India, described the show’s appeal in a single line: no filters, no retakes, just famous people attempting to reveal their true selves.
For Netflix, the acquisition fills a conspicuous gap. Reality formats are the retention engines of Indian streaming, and the biggest of them, Bigg Boss, lives on rival JioHotstar. By picking up a proven, provocation heavy property and softening its front face, Netflix gets a noisy franchise without building one from scratch, and it gets the near daily viewing habit that scripted drops cannot create.

The first season traded on confessions, with contestants revealing secrets on camera to survive eviction, and the new subtitle, Sach ya Saza, truth or punishment, signals that the mechanism stays central. What worked as a scrappy streaming experiment in 2022 will now be produced at Netflix scale, and the platform’s newsroom called it the most disruptive captive reality show it has commissioned in India.
The unknowns are the ones that will decide the season. Netflix has not named the fourteen inmates, has not said whether the audience interactivity of the first season returns, and has not explained how a format built on confrontation plays under two hosts known for warmth rather than combat. The contestant reveal, expected closer to the June 27 premiere, is the next beat to watch.

