London, March 4: Former “king of pop” Michael Jackson will be making a 150 million pounds comeback with the 30 gigs he will be performing in London.
Jackson, 50, who has contracted an MRSA-type bug, is said to be desperate to revive his flagging career, and hopes the string of concerts will bail him out.
The ‘Thriller’ star is said to be in “advanced talks” with the O2 arena to stage the shows, which are expected to earn him five million pounds each.
From the hallowed halls of MSU to the tinsel town - was that an accident or a calculated step? “I was never interested in Bollywood. I have done movies because they came on my way,” claimed the dusky beauty that captured eyeballs not only on the ramp, but also on the silver screen.
Yes, we talking about non else but our very own Nethra Raghuraman, who's hot, who's happening and who's also very very Gujarati. “Yes, I too believe to be one of Gujarat as I have stayed in Baroda and completed my honours in industrial psychology from MSU,” Nethra gushed.
The friendly hawker who sells pirated VCDs and DVDs — only to scamper off when police raids happen — is now selling originals.
At first glance, one cannot make out the difference. Take the vendor outside Andheri railway station. The four-legged wooden table, shabby heap of home video labels coated in cheap plastic foils, and a steady stream of customers looking for titles of their choice — the setting is the same.
Pooja Gandhi surely seems to have come a long way from the shy doe-eyed damsel that she was during Mungaaru Male's release. The actress will now be managed by Globosport, who will take care of not only all her endorsements and public appearances but even provide her acting opportunities outside the Kannada film industry. Pooja shares this information first with After Hrs.
Artist Seema Kohli's paintings take you through an imagined world. It's a world where fish have no fins, cows are masculine and Krishna effeminate.
Her birds and butterflies do not have much bearing with natural facets. Her figures are disproportionate, her Gandharvas (flying angels) have wings and trees grow on the sun.
So what is the reason for her paintings being so diametrically opposed to reality? "Reality is hypothetical and who knows what is real and what is a dream after all? I'm talking about time, space and positive energies being constantly recycled through my works, so maybe that is why they get into such an unreal realm," she says.