Logo

Film industry has become disciplined: Madhuri

IANS |

Madhuri Dixit, who ruled the silver screen in the late '80s and '90s, has said the film industry has become more "disciplined" over the years.

"Today films are being made on time and everyone has become punctual. There is discipline. Also, different kinds (concept) of films are being made and are doing well. It is not just about song and dance, they have started focusing on the story too.

"Today women (actress) are coming in the forefront and producing films which is wonderful. You get a bound script, you are aware about your role, your look and actors just have to focus on their performance. The industry is moving in the right direction," Madhuri said.

Madhuri, 49, who was present at FICCI Frames 2017 along with her husband Sriram Nene, spoke about her online dance academy and life after marriage and motherhoood.

The dancing diva noted more writers are taking interest in writing women-centric roles.

"Change doesn't happen overnight. I see more roles are being written with actresses in mind. Today women are not just a mother, they take care of the home, kids and everything and people are taking cognisance of this," she said.

Madhuri, who was last seen in Gulaab Gang, will return to the big screen provided there is a good role for her. 

Niti Taylor surprised by her parents

IANS |

Actress Niti Taylor, who is currently shooting for TV show Ghulaam in Mumbai, got a surprise from her parents when they came to meet her from Delhi.

Niti, who plays the role of Shivani in the Life OK show, is now planning to spend most of the time with her family.

"I seriously can't express my feelings, I hardly get to meet my parents as I don't stay with them. The little time I spent with them means the world to me," Niti said in a statement.

"My parents gave me a surprise visit. I was totally speechless and amazed on seeing my parents. Being alone in Mumbai makes me home-sick and I often feel low. Seeing their happy faces, I felt happy and rejuvenated," she added.

Ghulaam also features Param Singh and Vikkas Manaktala.

NASA detects supermassive black hole in distant galaxy

IANS | Washington |

NASA's Hubble space telescope has detected a supermassive black hole that has been kicked out of the centre of a distant galaxy by what could be the awesome power of gravitational waves.

Weighing more than one billion suns, the rogue black hole is the most massive black hole ever detected to have been kicked out of its central home.

Researchers estimate that it took the equivalent energy of 100 million supernovas exploding simultaneously to jettison the black hole. 

The most plausible explanation for this propulsive energy is that the monster object was given a kick by gravitational waves unleashed by the merger of two hefty black holes at the centre of the host galaxy, according to the scientists.

Hubble's observations of the wayward black hole surprised the research team. 

"When I first saw this, I thought we were seeing something very peculiar," said team leader Marco Chiaberge of the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) and Johns Hopkins University, in Baltimore, Maryland, US. 

"When we combined observations from Hubble, the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, it all pointed towards the same scenario," Chiaberge added in a statement released by NASA on Thursday.

Hubble images taken in visible and near-infrared light provided the first clue that the galaxy was unusual. 

The images revealed a bright quasar, the energetic signature of a black hole, residing far from the galactic core. 

"Black holes reside in the centre of galaxies, so it's unusual to see a quasar not in the centre," Chiaberge added.

The team calculated the black hole's distance from the core by comparing the distribution of starlight in the host galaxy with that of a normal elliptical galaxy from a computer model. 

The black hole had travelled more than 35,000 light-years from the centre, which is more than the distance between the sun and the centre of the Milky Way, according to the study.

"To our surprise, we discovered that the gas around the black hole was flying away from the galaxy's centre at 4.7 million miles an hour," said team member Justin Ely of Space Telescope Science Institute.

This measurement is also a gauge of the black hole's velocity, because the gas is gravitationally locked to the monster object.

The astronomers calculated that the black hole is moving so fast it would travel from Earth to the moon in three minutes. That's fast enough for the black hole to escape the galaxy in 20 million years and roam through the universe forever.

First predicted by Albert Einstein, gravitational waves are ripples in space that are created when two massive objects collide. 

The ripples are similar to the concentric circles produced when a hefty rock is thrown into a pond. 

Last year, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) in the US helped astronomers prove that gravitational waves exist by detecting them emanating from the union of two stellar-mass black holes, which are several times more massive than the Sun.
 

Supreme Court to go paperless soon: CJI

Statesman News Service | New Delhi |

The Supreme Court will go "paperless" within six to seven months, Chief Justice J S Khehar said on Thursday.  The observation on the issue of digitisation of the top court was made when senior advocate Indira Jaising, who has filed a PIL seeking uniform guidelines on designating lawyers as senior, sought expeditious disposal of her plea by a larger bench. 

"Within six to seven months you will not file any paper. We will electronically pick up trial court and high court records and there will be no need of case records being filed afresh in SC," the bench of the CJI and Justices D Y Chandrachud and S K Kaul said. Justice Khehar said the court will soon dispense with the need for filing voluminous documents and paperbooks as it is in the process of digitising court records across the country.

Beyonce FaceTimes with teen cancer patient

IANS |

Singer Beyonce Knowles used video calling app FaceTime to connect with young cancer patient Ebony Banks, after a social media campaign under the hashtag #EbobmeetsBeyonce grabbed her attention.

Beyonce surprised the teenager, who has been battling with a rare form of the disease, with a video call on Wednesday, because it has always been her lifelong dream to meet her "idol", reports usmagazine.com.

Speaking to KHOU channel about her last wish, Banks, who is also known as Ebob, said: "She's (Beyonce) like my everything and my idol. And if I ever met her, I would probably pass out."

Knowles, who has five-year-old daughter Blue Ivy with her husband Jay Z and is pregnant with twins, learnt about Banks's dream to meet her through her school friends, who started the campaign on social media.
 

FIA bars Shiv Sena MP Ravindra Gaikwad from flying

PTI | New Delhi |

Shiv Sena MP Ravindra Gaikwad was on Friday barred from flying by four private Indian carriers after his brazen assault on an Air India officer.

The Federation of Indian Airlines, which has Jet Airways, IndiGo, SpiceJet and GoAir as its members, has taken a "strong view of the incident and accordingly taken a decision to bar Gaikwad from flying", an FIA source said.

The FIA will not allow the Sena MP to fly on its member carriers, the source said.

It is likely to come out with a detailed statement on the issue soon.

Meanwhile, Air India on Friday blacklisted "unruly" Shiv Sena MP Ravindra Gaikwad who admitted to assaulting an airline staffer "25 times" with his shoes and attempted to throw him out of the aircraft on Thursday.

Budget carrier IndiGo on Friday also said it will support any move which bars unruly passengers from flying, a day after Air India said it was mulling preparing a no-fly list for such people.

"We will support a no-fly list," IndiGo President and Whole Time Director Aditya Ghosh said.

Yesterday Gaikwad had repeatedly hit a 60-year-old Air India officer with sandal over being unable to travel business class despite having insisted on boarding an all-economy flight.

The national carrier has filed two FIRs against the MP, while the Shiv Sena has sought an explanation from him.

Lovato visited Disneyland to celebrate sobriety

IANS |

Singer-actress Demi Lovato says that she celebrated her five years of sobriety by visiting Disneyland.

The 24-year-old reached the milestone last week. 

"I didn't really do much. I went to Disneyland which was cool but it's something that's getting more and more comfortable to me now. So, it's kinda like your birthday," Lovato told eonline.com.

"When you're a kid you go all out and then as you get older, you just learn to be more appreciative of it," she added.

Brazil ride Paulinho hattrick to thrash Uruguay in World Cup qualifier

The 'Samba Boys' have effectively qualified for 2018's showpiece event now!

SNS | New Delhi |

Brazil recovered from an early setback to thump Uruguay 4-1 in their 2018 FIFA World Cup qualifier on Thursday, stretching their lead at the top of the South American group to seven points in the process.

Paulinho, plying his trade in the cash-rich Chinese Super League for Guangzhou Evergrande, scored a screamer in the 19th minute to equaliser after Edinson Cavani had won and converted a penalty to give the hosts the lead.

Brazil’s starting XI had quality all over it, with Neymar, Roberto Firmino and Philippe Coutinho the front three in a 4-3-3 formation that has become standard for coach Tite.

The hosts, were missing the services of Luis Suarez and it was up to Cavani to lead the line in his absence, but as is often the case with the PSG forward, after a blistering start he started to fade away.

Brazil started to grow into the game as half-time approached but Uruguay managed to hold on till the interval with the score reading 1-1.

Post the break, Brazil’s intense pressure was rewarded in the 52nd minute when Firmino spun on the edge of the box which could only be parried into Paulinho’s path by Martin Silva to give the visitors the lead.

The hosts were stung into action and began to press Brazil as they searched for an equaliser but left themselves susceptible to an counter-attack which Neymar took full advantage of in the 74th minute to effectively seal the result.

A speculative clearance found the Barcelona forward clear on goal and he deftly chipped Silva in goal to put Brazil 3-1 up on the night.

And Paulinho added gloss to the scoreline deep into injury-time, chesting home a Dani Alves cross from close range to get the Samba party started.

Brazil remain in 1st place with 30 points from 13 games, seven ahead of second-placed Uruguay and barring an unprecedented collapse, have effectively qualified for next year’s World Cup in Russia.
 

Akshay Kumar’s cute workout session with pugs

PTI |

Fitness freak Akshay Kumar takes his workout routine to another level as he practices a few boxing punches with cute pugs.

The 49-year-old star shared a clip on social media where he can be seen 'boxing' with four adorable pugs.

"Today's workout: boxing with these cute little goons #PugLifeThugLife," Akshay wrote alongside the video.

Akshay has been a fitness idol for youth from a long time.

The actor always maintained that he follows a disciplined lifestyle and sticks to some simple directives when it comes to exercise.

On the work front, Akshay will next be seen with Bhumi Pednekar in Toilet: Ek Prem Katha.

He is currently shooting for Pad Man, which also stars Sonam Kapoor and Radhika Apte.

Taiwan court hears landmark same-sex marriage case

IANS | Taipei |

A panel of judges at Taiwan's top court began hearing a landmark case on Friday that could make the island the first in Asia to introduce same-sex marriage.

The case has been brought by a gay activist as well as municipal authorities from the capital, Taipei, the BBC reported.

Taiwan's parliament has also been debating whether to pass laws that would allow same-sex marriage.

A panel of 14 justices are hearing arguments and will debate whether a line in Taiwan's civil code, which states that marriage is between a man and a woman, is unconstitutional.

Veteran gay activist Chi Chia-wei, whose attempt at registering marriage with his partner in 2013 was rejected, had petitioned for the case to be heard.

Gay rights campaigners carrying rainbow flags, have turned up in front of the court in Taipei, as have anti-gay marriage protesters.

In December Taiwan's parliament had approved the first draft of a bill to legalise gay marriage, with a second reading due in months, the BBC reported.

President Tsai Ing-wen has previously said she would support marriage equality. Taiwan is known for its progressive values and energetic LGBTQ — lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer — movement.

‘Anaarkali Of Aarah’: Swara Bhaskar at her best

IANS |

Film: "Anaarkali Of Aarah"

Director: Avinash Das; Starring: Swara Bhaskar, Sanjai Mishra, Pankaj Tripathi, Ishteyak Khan

Nothing in this unexpected storm-trooper of a film has prepared you for its high-velocity energy and fervent statement on female sexuality. Without exaggeration "Anaarkali Of Aarah" (AOA) is the surprise of the season.
It is stunning in thought, spellbinding in plot and utterly gripping in the way the story of a small-town dancer-singer's adventures in lecher-land unfolds.

AOA is many things at the same time. It is a shimmering sun-soaked mirror of smalltown values wherein every sneeze or fart is noted and evaluated across the communities. And yet the story of Anaarkali (Swara Bhaskar, spectacular) is also the story of Everywoman urban or rural.

Lady, you may belong to Aarah or Arizonaa there will always be men who feel they've the birthright to own your body as and when they wish.

So here's the simmering provocative scenario. Anaarkali, the smalltown hottie who makes every guy in town horny, is on stage giving robust voice and body to her raunchy songs — yes, she does dirty dancing for a living and enjoys her job as much as Swara enjoys acting and I enjoy writing — when the town's prime educational institution's Vice Chancellor (Sanjai Mishra) decides to take the 'Vice' too seriously.

He jumps on stage to molest the dancer, as her performing partner (played with poignant panache by Pankaj Tripathi) watches in muted horror. All hell breaks loose thereafter. While the lechs of Aarah seethe in anti-climactic rage, Anaarkali gives them a long rope to hang themselves with.

In one sequence Swara strides looking crushed into the vice-ridden chancellor's den only to make him look ridiculous at the end of it. And at the end her dance of defiance and exposure is so volatile and so deliciously over-the-top I found myself jumping out of my seat to congratulate Swara.

No walkover, our Anaarkali she takes on the academic lout with such vigour and strength that you will find yourself cheering and clapping for this female hero of these times of sexual ambivalence when men in positions of power misuse their strength to subjugate women in workplaces.

This is a sublime film about the dignity of labour narrated with a raunchy rigour that is often appealing at times exasperating.

Swara Bhaskar hits all the right notes in the shrillest of scenes, bringing out the feisty Bihari woman's inner strength and an extremely appealing moral grounding even when confronted by the demons of her disreputable profession. There are scenes where Swara is required to push aside all her inhibitions, even her innate feminine grace to appear predatory in her aggression. To her credit Swara sidesteps sleaziness even when she is required to sing and shake her booty to lyrics that would make Yo Yo Honey Singh blush.

But there is a certain grace and dignity to the double meaning thrown out of the erotic dancer's pelvis thrusts, like fire leaping into the sky. Swara dances to these ribald lyrics with such familiarity and trust, you won't notice the sexuality in her thrust. You will see the thirst and dare I say, the innocence, the determination to remain an artiste even when pushed so much against the wall that her body is stiffened and stymied by social order where men have the right to ‘own' women's physicality.

In this nimbly-written ode to feminine grace a cheesy dancer who probably moonlights as prostitute tells the predatory man where to get off. It kicks where it hurts the most and its does so without the flourish of schisms. It is a terrific premise for a post-feminist film. Writer-Director Avinash Das doesn't focus on remaining fashionable about women's empowerment.

After a point his heroine's tale has a will of its own. You suspect neither the writer-director nor the actress playing Anaarkali can control her destiny. They, like us, can only move back and gawk in amazement as this astounding female hero takes on the empowered goons co-powered by the louts LaLu Land.

The smell, the feel, the flavour and the emotions of the stiflingly patriarchal small-town is so palpable, you are swept into the vortex of the film's vibrant vista. Full marks to the film's cinematographer Arvind Kannabiran for making Aarah and Anarkali seem wedded to one another, and of course Rohit Kumar's authentic folk songs… they add so much value to the proceedings!… It's hard to imagine the film without its true-to-life songs and music, and its compelling and credible characterisations that impel the gripping plot into areas of exposition where sexual exploitation is turned inside-out, upside-down.

A dizzying, combative explosive expose of smaltown hooliganism and a spunky girl's determination to survive all odds, "Anaarkali Of Aarah" has a memorable gallery of actors giving the goings-on a sterling push and a bracing vigour with their performances.

I have to single out Sanjai Mishra as the sleazeball academician, Vijay Kumar as his murky cop in crime, Pankaj Tripathi as Anaarkali's partner on stage, Mayor More as her callow infatuated utterly devoted lover-boy. Nitin Arora as back-alley music baron and last but certainly not the least Ishteyak Khan as a smalltown man who knows how to respect a woman.

These are not just performances. They are classrooms of impeccable characterisations. But above all there is Sawara Bhaskar giving what history will record as one of the bravest and most important performances by a female actor in post-modernist Bollywood.

This week, don't even think about seeing any other film. With this towering achievement around the others don't stand a ‘ghost' of a chance.

Gimme the spunk queen of Arrah anyday rather than the bhoot of Phillauri.
 

World TB Day: India urges to research for multi-drug resistant TB

IANS | New Delh |

As India continues to have 24 per cent of the world's total Tuberculosis (TB) burden, the Indian Society for Clinical Research (ISCR) on Thursday called for a comprehensive research in multi-drug resistant Tuberculosis, citing that resistance to antimicrobials is growing at a faster rate than discovery of newer and more potent drugs.

As per data in WHO's Global Tuberculosis Report 2016, India accounts for 24 per cent of all TB cases in the world, and the spread of TB in India is larger than previously projected.

Stating that drug delivery is a lengthy process needing lot of investment, ISCR President Suneela Thatte said: "Unite for TB calls on all healthcare stakeholders, including research and development professionals, to work together in addressing the big scourge of TB."

"Resistance to antimicrobials is growing at a faster rate than discovery of newer, more potent drugs to overcome that resistance. Therefore, it is crucial that India focuses its research efforts on developing solutions for drug-resistant TB," she said.

According to WHO reports, the last time a drug was introduced specifically for the treatment of TB was in the late 1960s.

While India has been engaged in TB control efforts for decades now, the disease continues to remain one of our greatest public health challenges. 

It is estimated to kill 480,000 Indians every year although it is now believed that these numbers are under represented and the mortality could be 500,000 a year.

Adding to the challenges to combat TB is the rampant rise in drug-resistant tuberculosis. Government data reveals that there had been a 35 per cent rise in the drug resistant TB case notifications in 2016.

ISCR said that research for better TB drugs will lead to the development of innovative treatment for drug-resistant TB, thereby reducing India's TB burden, bring down healthcare costs, save lives and accelerate India's progress towards its goal of becoming TB-free by 2025.

Sundeep Salvi, Director of the Chest Research Foundation, said that though India's control over TB has improved largely due to government TB programmes, the resurgence of drug-resistant TB is something the country needs to start worrying about. 

"We do have access to some potential new drugs and treatments, but we need to undertake research to study their effects. For instance, one of the clinical trials proposed by Indian Council of Medical Research for TB includes assessing the safety and efficacy of using metformin, a diabetes medication, as an adjunct therapy for TB. Should the study show positive results, it would transform TB therapy for a long time. These are truly exciting times," said Salvi.

The WHO's global report on TB further states that the treatment success rate of multi-drug resistant Tuberculosis cases was less than 50 per cent in countries with the largest cohorts, including India. 

Most drug resistant TB cases emerge because of ineffective and mismanaged treatment, and low adherence. Because of the adverse side-effects of TB medications, patients tend to leave treatment midway and risk developing drug resistant TB. Drug-resistant TB is much harder to treat and entails a higher risk of mortality.
 

Jammu-Srinagar highway partially opened

IANS | Jammu |

Only one-way traffic was allowed to move on the Jammu-Srinagar highway on Friday due to bottle-necks at many places, a traffic department official said.

Traffic was allowed to move from Srinagar to Jammu.

"No traffic movement will be permitted from the opposite direction. This restriction will also apply to Army and paramilitary convoys using the highway," the official added.

For the last 10 days after the over 300-km long highway was restored for traffic, authorities have been allowing only one-way traffic alternately between the two cities.

There has been severe narrowing of the highway at a number of places especially in the Ramban district during this winter, the official added.

Landslide debris and caving-in of the road were cited as its main reasons.

Meanwhile, after completion of its successful test-run, authorities have closed the 9.2-km long Nashri-Chenani tunnel for its formal inauguration by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on April 2.

Built at a cost of Rs 7,350 crore, the state-of-the-art tunnel has facilities for allowing mobile phones connectivity and others while passing through it.

It has special vents to keep the air inside fresh and smoke-free.

The commissioning of the tunnel that connects the Ramban and Udhampur districts of the Jammu region will save over two hours of travel time between Jammu and Srinagar as it by-passes the 41-km long Nashri-Patnitop-Kund stretch of the road.
 

220,000 more birds culled in Japan

IANS | Tokyo |

Japanese authorities announced on Friday that some 220,000 more poultry were culled due to an outbreak of bird flu that has reappeared since the end of 2016.

The latest outbreak was detected on a farm in Miyagi prefecture after hundreds of dead chickens were analysed throughout the week and were subsequently found that they were infected with the highly pathogenic avian influenza H5, Efe news reported.

Regional authorities on Friday began slaughtering all the birds on the farm with help from the Japan Self-Defence Forces, a process that will continue until Sunday.

In addition, the transport of birds and eggs within a radius of 10 km around the three affected farms has been prohibited.

According to state broadcaster NHK, Miyagi Governor Yoshihiro Murai said at a press conference that this is the first outbreak of bird flu detected on a farm in this prefecture.

The number of poultry slaughtered in Japan has reached around 1.39 million so far since the bird flu was again detected in the country in November 2016 after the 2014 outbreak, prompting the Environment Ministry to raise the alert to the highest level. 

US turns down Russia invitation to Afghan peace conference

AP | Washington |

A State Department official says the United States won't attend a multinational peace conference on Afghanistan next month in Russia.

The reasons: The US wasn't consulted before receiving the invitation and doesn't know Russia's objectives for the gathering.

The official wasn't authorized to speak publicly on the matter and demanded anonymity.

The official said on Friday that Washington wants to work with Moscow on regional efforts to end the 16-year war, and that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson would bring up the matter when he visits Russia in April.

Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, India and several Central Asian nations are among the invitees to the Moscow conference.

Afghan and US officials say the Taliban aren't invited.

The State Department hasn't publicly announced its position on the planned conference.

Zayn Malik hid in sheets to escape fans

IANS |

Former One Direction singer Zayn Malik reportedly hid among dirty bedsheets to escape his fans outside a hotel.

According to a source, Zayn had to hide in a "laundry cart which was wheeled over to a van that took him to the studio", reports mirror.co.uk.

Malik has been busy working on his second solo album over recent months. Earlier this week Malik hinted that his fans can soon expect to hear his new track "Still got time", which features rap star PARTYNEXTDOOR. 

Sushma Swaraj exposes concocted story of ‘kidnapped’ Indian in Serbia

IANS | New Delhi |

External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Thursday exposed a concocted story of an Indian "kidnapped" in the central European nation of Serbia, saying it was a stage-managed act.

Responding to a tweet by a person named Rajeev Sharma that his brother Vinay Mahajan had been kidnapped in Serbia and the kidnappers were threatening to kill him unless paid money, Sushma Swaraj said that Mahajan had been found and was in safe custody of Serbian authorities.

However, later on Thursday evening, Sushma Swaraj tweeted that the abduction was stage-managed and she knew the whole truth of the matter.

"Rajiv – I have all the facts before me. Your brother was not abducted," she tweeted.

"He stage-managed his own abduction and the video is fake," she said.

"However, @Indiainserbia intervened and your brother has been released by Serbian Police. He is returning on 25 March."

Sushma Swaraj also retweeted a video by Sharma sent on Wednesday showing the said Mahajan allegedly being ill-treated by the so-called kidnappers.

In confusing tweets, Sharma first claimed that his brother was kidnapped in Serbia and the kidnappers were asking for money or else they would kill him.

The minister responded that Indian Ambassador to Serbia Sanjay Verma said that Mahajan had been found and was in the safe custody of Serbian authorities.

Sharma later tweeted that Mahajan had entered a refugee camp in Serbia, as guided by an agent.

Formerly a part of Yugoslavia, Serbia became an independent republic in 2006 when the Balkan country crumbled.

According to the Indian Embassy in Belgrade, there are only a handful of NRIs and persons of Indian origin (PIOs) in Serbia and there is no Indian community association there.