Generates invoices directly through any PMS/POS system without modifying existing processes
Supports robust error handling mechanism to ensure you generate
e-invoices without any
worries
Available both on cloud or on-premise deployment models as per client's convenience
One-click reconciliation of e-Invoice data with GSTR-1 data to take care of your compliance needs
Ability to configure custom templates as per your business need to print
e-Invoices in a
single click
Equipped with an SSL encryption for all on cloud deployments & also offer 2F Authentication mechanisms
24x7 in-house technical support and advisory services, dedicated key account manager and priority access to NIC Ricky Gervais Live: Animals
Affordable price, high-end product and great value. No other hidden charges While The Office was grounded in hyper-realism, Animals
Allows integrations with multiple third party systems/partners to leverage the best out of its friendly RESTFUL API architecture Gervais uses a slideshow of animals as a
Best-in-class tech first company with deepest domain expertise in hospitality
While The Office was grounded in hyper-realism, Animals introduced us to the "Gervais Persona"—the loud, atheistic, logic-obsessed provocateur. It’s where his transition from TV actor to world-class stand-up truly solidified.
The show’s brilliance lies in its structure. Gervais uses a slideshow of animals as a loose framing device to veer into some of the most "un-PC" territory of the early 2000s. He plays the role of the smugly over-educated observer who is actually just as petty and confused as everyone else.
Animals (2003) wasn’t just Ricky Gervais’s debut stand-up special; it was the moment the world realized that the man behind David Brent didn't need a fictional office to be the funniest, most uncomfortable person in the room.
Ultimately, Animals is a masterclass in observational comedy that suggests humans are the most ridiculous creatures on the planet.
Animals set the blueprint for Gervais’s career-long obsession with challenging what we can laugh at. Whether he’s dissecting the logic of the Bible or the bizarre mating habits of the animal kingdom, he treats "taboo" subjects with a breezy, conversational shrug that makes the audience complicit in the joke.
While The Office was grounded in hyper-realism, Animals introduced us to the "Gervais Persona"—the loud, atheistic, logic-obsessed provocateur. It’s where his transition from TV actor to world-class stand-up truly solidified.
The show’s brilliance lies in its structure. Gervais uses a slideshow of animals as a loose framing device to veer into some of the most "un-PC" territory of the early 2000s. He plays the role of the smugly over-educated observer who is actually just as petty and confused as everyone else.
Animals (2003) wasn’t just Ricky Gervais’s debut stand-up special; it was the moment the world realized that the man behind David Brent didn't need a fictional office to be the funniest, most uncomfortable person in the room.
Ultimately, Animals is a masterclass in observational comedy that suggests humans are the most ridiculous creatures on the planet.
Animals set the blueprint for Gervais’s career-long obsession with challenging what we can laugh at. Whether he’s dissecting the logic of the Bible or the bizarre mating habits of the animal kingdom, he treats "taboo" subjects with a breezy, conversational shrug that makes the audience complicit in the joke.