2010: Girls to watch in Bollywood
Aruna Shields
Website:http://www.arunashields.com

Personal Information:
'INDIA'S NEW BOND GIRL' Times 2010
Aruna Shields, Fearless and talented has leads in two studio feature films releasing in cinema's soon. With starring roles in evertying from action to arthouse she's hot property.
Aruna's the explosive femae lead in action thriller PRINCE. India's answer to the Bond franchise - with a budget that makes you go 'phew'. She's espionage agent Maya, Prince’s partner in crime, a femme fatal but much more than just eye candy. Aruna performs all her own stunts: free falls, gymnastic flips, gliding...even motor-bike bungee jumps!
INT. CINEMA RELEASE. April 9th 2010.
She's also just finished the lead in epic adventure AO THE LAST NEANDERTHAL.A griitty beauty and the beast love story set 30,000 years ago in a lost savage world. She's, tribal woman, AKI, who saves the last Neanderthal After global auditions and Penelope Cruz interested in the part Aruna finally secured the challenging role. Aruna spent months learning prehistoric languages, spear throwing, and authentic body movement. Produced by European cinema chain UGC.
'A CINEMATIC SHOCK' Le Figaro.
INT. CINEMA RELEASE. Sep 2010.
BIOGRAPHY
Aruna of Anglo Indian decent (Scottish/English/Indian) begun her education at a convent school before winning an academic scholarship to attend boarding school. She went onto gain a distinction from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. She also obtained a degree from Central St Martins, London.
Aruna's passion lay in performance and while at a theatrical workshop she was spotted by an acting agent.
Aruna is now training with celebrity acting coach Howard Fine in LA.
Aruna's earlier work includes touring in theatre for over a year. Lead Neera in art-house film Mr. Singh/Mrs.Mehta. Various other leads in Independent and feature films.
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Mona Laizza
Mona Laizza is a Pakistani actress who will debut in Bollywood film Kajraa Re opposite Himesh Reshammiya.
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Sonakshi Sinha

Sonakshi has two brothers, Luv Sinha and Kussh Sinha and is the daughter of Indian actor Shatrughan Sinha and Poonam Sinha. Sonakshi started her career as a model, and walked the ramp at the Lakme Fashion week in 2008 and then again in Lakme Fashion week 2009
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Worst 5 Shows on Star Plus

Still not learned from previous lessons, Star Plus still sticks on to the Agony aunty serials. It is high time for Star Plus to withdraw itself from long interminable serials to some General Knowledge quiz and more reality programmes.
Few such serials from which Star Plus should detach itself are:
- Kis Desh Me Hai Mera Dil:
Banned in India to the mid day time, it is still in operation in the Middle East in the prime time. High time Ekta Kapoor and Star Plus, enough has been done away with death, re-incarnation and double marriage. Think of some other alternative to bamboozle viewers. - Raja Ki Ayegi Barat:
Again banned in India to the day time slot, it is shown as a mirthful serial in the Middle East. Again the subject of one marriage, culminating into another marriage, still sticking to the earlier wife, Star Plus should end up the serial with immediate effect. - Bidai:
Having left with no option, the producer thought he will switch over the only one good person in the serial, chotti ma to a vamp to increase the TRP; I don’t think it has made any impact on the viewers, it is the dullest serial, showing a beautiful but poor girl living with a madman who does not know the significance of marriage. - Yeh Rishta Kya Kahlata He:
The producer and Star Plus only knows Yeh Rishta Kya kahlatha He. The generation-X teenager does not distinctively identify herself with the main lead of the serial, the main lead is shown as too much timorous and nervous, who believes? - Sach Ka Saamna:
We hope that it will not re-christen again, as it does not suit the Indian culture, our kids are not being born and brought up in the kind of questions being asked by the host; our children may not have heard of anything so much belligerent about the things

Never tell a story because it is true: tell it because it is a good story.
Beautiful World of the Backbenchers
Printed from http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/
Beautiful World of the Backbenchers
Manu Joseph13 April 2008, 12:01am IST
The most foolish description of youth is that it is rebellious. The young do wear T-shirts that say Rebel or Che or Bitch. But the truth is that the youth, especially in this country, is a fellowship of cowards. It lives in fear. Fear of life, fear of an illusory future. The perpetual trauma of the forward castes is inextricably woven into this fear. And what Arjun Singh's successful reservation campaign has denied them is the right to a secured but ordinary life, a life that comes with scoring 98 percent in the board exams, a life that goes like this: Engineer-MBA-anonymous. You can argue that this route is better than sociology-salesman-anonymous. But that will be to focus unduly on the ordinary among the cowards. The real tragedy concerns the extraordinary cowards. Great writers, painters, musicians and athletes who are lost forever to what are moronically called, 'the professional courses'. Instead of pursuing their talents they are, right now, in dark gloomy tutorials preparing for entrance exams, fatally infected by objective type questions. The angle between tangents drawn from the point (1,4) to the parabola y^2=4x is?
The angst of the types who score over 95 percent also fills me, and several lakhs like me, with wicked joy. I was the 75 percent type. It was not pleasurable to be so in Madras of the eighties. I grew up in Kodambakkam where Telugu film directors, who wore white shoes, kept their beautiful mistresses; and Anglo Indian girls in skirts, who did not have hair on their legs, and all of whom I now remember only as Maria, walked to Fatima Church. But a large part of my formative years were spent in a Brahmin housing society called Rajaram Colony where fathers were all clerks and mothers were housewives. Rare working women had the same aura as divorcees. I was special because I was a Christian, and the transitory relatives of my neighbours, when they learnt my religion, would speak to me in English.
Many of my friends were periodically thrashed with belts by their fathers when the miasmic green report cards came home. Once, I heard the cries of a boy who had scored just ninety percent in a maths monthly test. Another form of punishment was heating a stainless steel serving spoon and inflicting minor burns. It was called, 'soodu'. My parents never hit me for my marks though my report cards were inspiring. My mother beat me up occasionally for political reasons – every time her mother-in-law came visiting. Apparently, according to a rustic Malayalee way of life, thrashing the kids was a hint to the in-law that it was time to leave.
Those days, the legends of Rajaram Colony were our seniors who had entered the IITs, or as a consequence, had gone to America to study further. Their names were taken with reverence. When they visited home, they left a trail of whispers. And when they deigned to play cricket with us, we observed closely how they bowled and how they batted. Because they knew everything. It was already decided in every household, except mine, that the boys will go to IIT, a certainty just like their sisters will do BSc Nutrition. And so my friends began their furtive preparation when they were not yet thirteen. They began to score higher and higher at school. And they began to look at me as an unfortunate freak, not only because they thought they were brighter but also because I said I wanted to become a journalist. They scored better than me in English too. (Once in an English test, when asked the opposite gender of ram, almost every one in my class, astonishingly, knew the answer was ewe. I wrote, 'Sita'). I did always claim a higher creative status and often entertained the backbenchers, who were chiefly sons of illiterate parents, by calling my Brahmins friends, "curd-rice muggers".
In the school I had slowly gained a reputation as a poet and some sort of a stand-up comedian. But as I approached the 12th standard, I was not the hero anymore of the juniors. That honour drifted to a brilliant boy, the first ranker who once used to play the tabla and did not touch the instrument anymore because he was preparing for IIT's Joint Entrance Exam. (A few years later, I would meet him on the campus of IIT Chennai. He would tell me that he will not go to America. "Because, you see, with transcendental meditation, you can sit here in Madras and visit any country in the world". He was serious. Now, he is a banker in San Francisco).
Meanwhile, in the Rajaram Colony, I observed that older Brahmin boys who had, somehow, fared poorly in the 12th standard and had to suffer the humiliation of pursuing BSc walked in the perpetual mist of guilt and embarrassment. They took to smoking and drinking, and 'sighting' – the disreputable art of looking at girls. They stared at a future in Eureka Forbes.
I eventually moved out of the Colony to another such fiendish place but kept in touch with my childhood friends. The distance between us, however, grew. They did not really want to see me. I was a distraction in their preparation "for life". There was nothing they could talk to me about, nothing they could share, like their latest JEE sample test scores or the traits of the teachers at Brilliant Tutorials. On my part, I began to find them unhappy and bleak. Once, they were fresh and eager. Like me, they wanted to play cricket for India. Some were interested in music, some even attempted novels. Now, they were zombies in the trance of a whole material world that was just one entrance exam away.
Eventually, almost all of them scored in the high nineties in the 12th standard exams. One made it to the IIT. The others prepared to go to second rung engineering colleges in humid melancholic towns. But they still thought they were more victorious than me because I had got 75%, a misfortune that their parents could not believe would visit someone who had two hands and one head. Worse, I told them that I was going to do a BA in English Literature. At that time, people did not think you were gay because you wanted to do literature. But they still did not understand why a male would do such a thing. They asked me if I was alright, if I could reconsider, if some maternal ornaments could be sold for the good cause of capitation fee.
Some days, I think of those boys from another time. They are mostly bankers in America now and, I imagine, partly responsible for the subprime crisis. They are in the glow of the life that they had so dearly sought. But somehow I feel that their sisters, who eventually pursued what they wanted to, have more interesting lives. Also, occasionally I hear that some IITian or the other is returning to the art that he had originally loved. And is making up for the time he has lost because he could crack the toughest questions in the world but could not answer in time the class teacher's annual question, "What do you want to become in life?"
manu.joseph@timesgroup.com
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Akshay Kumar Arrested for get himself unbuttoned by wife Twinkle
Mar 31, 2009: Akshay Kumar is one of the few actors from Bollywood who know well how to remain in public eye all the time and his recent stunt only underlines the fact.
Walking for designer Tarun Tahiliani at Lakme Fashion Week on ramp to promote Levi's jeans recently, Akshay surprised everybody present at the show by making his wife Twinkle to unzip his pant.
Setting the ramp on fire, the Singh is Kinng star Akshay stopped before Twinkle and asked her to unbutton his jeans.
The erstwhile actress went blushing and then shrunk a bit. However, Akshay pursued her to do the act, leaving eyes of the spectators popped up.
Khiladi star Akshay was reportedly paid Rs 1.2 crore to do the act.
Film star Akshay Kumar was arrested on Monday (May 18) morning by the police in Mumbai in connection with obscene behaviour in public during the recent Lakme India Fashion Week (LIFW), a senior police official said.
"We arrested him under Indian Penal Code Section 294, which deals with obscenity in public. Since it is a bailable offence, he was released on bail," said Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP), Arvind Mahabadhi.
During the LIFW in early April, while walking the ramp for Levi’s, Akshay had walked up to his wife Twinkle, who was sitting in the front row, and got her to unbutton his jeans.
Akshay's unbuttoning act had kicked up a storm with some private individuals lodging police complaints, accusing Akshay of immoral and indecent behaviour in public.
Akshay had been away from India since that incident and has just returned to Mumbai today after the long schedule abroad.
ACP Mahabadhi said that now the case would be further investigated and depending on the outcome, a charge-sheet would be filed against the star.
Another controversy that Akki has landed into is over a dialogue in the film “Kambakkht Ishq”.
In one of the scenes he says “women are good only for one thing”.
There has been a huge objection to this from social groups who say the statement is highly obscene and disrespectful of women.
Akshay has clarified that his character in the film is of a bad man who has no respect for women, so the dialogue has been penned accordingly.
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People shouldn't be treated like objects. They aren't that valuable. |
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Enjoy when you can, and endure when you must. |
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