The B-School Universe revolves around Arbit Choudhury, the caffeine-powered second-year MBA aspirant whose life is an endless cycle of case studies, presentations, and strategic jargon deployment . Arbit oscillates between accidental insight and confident nonsense, often weaponizing management buzzwords to survive academic combat. His intellectual foil is Prof. Lingampalli Rangareddy, the analytics-obsessed professor who expects frameworks to be applied with surgical precision. Where the Professor invokes Six Sigma and Factor Analysis like sacred scripture , Arbit improvises like a jazz musician with a broken calculator.
Supporting this gladiatorial theatre are Antique Jain, the impeccably prepared class topper with McKinsey dreams , and Perplex Singh, permanently bewildered by the very jargon Arbit pretends to master . Antique represents structured excellence; Perplex embodies managerial confusion; Arbit floats between the two, half philosopher, half fraud. Anchoring him emotionally is Maya, who punctures his corporate grandiosity with grounded realism .
This universe is fundamentally about intellectual posturing versus authentic competence. It satirizes management education—its frameworks, competitive internships, networking theatrics, and the mythology of “future leaders.” Classroom debates become arenas where theory collides with ego. Group assignments morph into power struggles disguised as collaboration. Through Arbit’s lens, the MBA experience is less about learning business and more about mastering performance—knowing when to sound profound, when to nod thoughtfully, and when to Ctrl+C intellectual authority.
Arbit Choudhury | Maya | Antique Jain | Perplex Singh | Prof LR | TekNik
The B-School Universe revolves around Arbit Choudhury, the caffeine-powered second-year MBA aspirant whose life is an endless cycle of case studies, presentations, and strategic jargon deployment . Arbit oscillates between accidental insight and confident nonsense, often weaponizing management buzzwords to survive academic combat. His intellectual foil is Prof. Lingampalli Rangareddy, the analytics-obsessed professor who expects frameworks to be applied with surgical precision. Where the Professor invokes Six Sigma and Factor Analysis like sacred scripture , Arbit improvises like a jazz musician with a broken calculator.
Supporting this gladiatorial theatre are Antique Jain, the impeccably prepared class topper with McKinsey dreams , and Perplex Singh, permanently bewildered by the very jargon Arbit pretends to master . Antique represents structured excellence; Perplex embodies managerial confusion; Arbit floats between the two, half philosopher, half fraud. Anchoring him emotionally is Maya, who punctures his corporate grandiosity with grounded realism .
This universe is fundamentally about intellectual posturing versus authentic competence. It satirizes management education—its frameworks, competitive internships, networking theatrics, and the mythology of “future leaders.” Classroom debates become arenas where theory collides with ego. Group assignments morph into power struggles disguised as collaboration. Through Arbit’s lens, the MBA experience is less about learning business and more about mastering performance—knowing when to sound profound, when to nod thoughtfully, and when to Ctrl+C intellectual authority.
The humor thrives in the gap between aspiration and ability. The B-School Universe is a crucible: a place where ambition is inflated, confidence is manufactured, and adulthood is rehearsed through PowerPoint slides.
Arbit Choudhury | Maya | Antique Jain | Perplex Singh | Prof LR | TekNik

