
Shows
2 credits
Veliaht
2025as Recep
Zulfukar Karsli, a fading power at the bus station, needs an heir and finds an unlikely candidate in Timur, a traveling repairman buried under his father’s debts. When Timur steps into the Karsli world as Zafer, he must also pretend to be the husband of Zafer’s wife Reyhan. What begins as a dangerous lie turns into real emotion, trapping Timur and Reyhan inside a mansion built on deception, power, and forbidden love.

Benim Hala Umudum Var
2013as Acting
A young woman is abandoned by her husband, left to raise two children in a world that offers single mothers little more than pity and closed doors. Refusing to be defined by the man who walked away, she takes a job at a bustling Istanbul café, where a colourful cast of regulars and coworkers slowly becomes the family she lost. Among them is a man carrying his own hidden pain, a gentle soul who makes her laugh for the first time in years. Yet trusting again feels like jumping off a cliff and hoping the ground has turned to feathers. As she rebuilds her life from the wreckage of broken vows, she discovers that hope is not a feeling you wait for — it’s a muscle you exercise every time you choose to believe in tomorrow. “Benim Hâlâ Umudum Var” — I still have hope — is a warm, affirming drama about second chances, the dignity of hard work, and the stubborn refusal to let the past steal your future.
Articles
2 guides
Series guide
Veliaht Turkish Series Guide, Episodes and Updates
Zulfukar Karsli, a fading power at the bus station, needs an heir and finds an unlikely candidate in Timur, a traveling repairman buried under his father’s debts. When Timur steps into the Karsli world as Zafer, he must also pretend to be the husband of Zafer’s wife Reyhan. What begins as a dangerous lie turns into real emotion, trapping Timur and Reyhan inside a mansion built on deception, power, and forbidden love.

Series guide
Benim Hala Umudum Var Turkish Series Guide, Episodes and Updates
A young woman is abandoned by her husband, left to raise two children in a world that offers single mothers little more than pity and closed doors. Refusing to be defined by the man who walked away, she takes a job at a bustling Istanbul café, where a colourful cast of regulars and coworkers slowly becomes the family she lost. Among them is a man carrying his own hidden pain, a gentle soul who makes her laugh for the first time in years. Yet trusting again feels like jumping off a cliff and hoping the ground has turned to feathers. As she rebuilds her life from the wreckage of broken vows, she discovers that hope is not a feeling you wait for — it’s a muscle you exercise every time you choose to believe in tomorrow. “Benim Hâlâ Umudum Var” — I still have hope — is a warm, affirming drama about second chances, the dignity of hard work, and the stubborn refusal to let the past steal your future.
