Virender Sehwag Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid concentrate hardPosted using
ShareThisLove this photograph. Viru is now the fourth member of the Fab Four.
One year from the horrific attacks and the perpetrators still roam at large. India still remains a soft state, one very much vulnerable to attack.
My friend and one of the followers of this blog, remarked that India is the only country where all people hate each other. The Marathas are fighting with the north indians, the south indians look down upon the northies and vice versa. But despite all this problems, India continues to make progress and the largely young population of the country who fortunately remains above all this regional crap is standing up and making a difference which is a testimony to our socio-cultural and educational set-up.
Everyone of us as Indians should come together, forget our differences and take a moment to pay homage to the great men who put down their lives to bring back peace not only to Mumbai but to the whole nation and Indians all over the world. A great country needs our support.
2012 is another offering from disaster specialist director Roland Emmerich whose credits include Independence Day, Godzilla and the The Day after Tomorrow. So you know, it is leave your brains at home time, ignore character development and just enjoy the noise, the craziness and the mind-blowing CGI.
This time it is world annihilation due to solar flares. The first half of the movie is excellent and has everything that popcorn entertainment has to offer. Cities just falling off due to the movement of fault lines will leave you agape. But it is the second half where the movie starts to get boring and repetitive. And all the cliches that you expect also come hopping out with glee with the conscience stricken Americans saving the world yet again.
No one performance stays in the mind even though the movie runs for almost three hours. Watch the movie just for the spectacle of seeing a plane taking off from a runway crumbling behind it, ships being hit my massive tsunami waves and much more.
Rating : 3/5
Today the world commemorated the Armistice Day or Remembrance Day in memory of those who died in WWI. During those years of war, Indian political leaders had stupidly allowed our citizens to fight for the British in Europe and elsewhere. In all 140,000 men from the British Indian Army served on the Western Front and nearly 700,000 in the Middle East. Casualties of Indian soldiers totaled 47,746 killed and 65,126 wounded during World War I*. And all this show of loyalty to the empire, just because the Congress "expected" the goras to hand them self-governance. What a piece of trash. What were they thinking?
All of 91 years later, we still show our weakness in taking strong steps and continue to bow down to corruption, communalism and terrorism. Let us not forget the valor shown by our soldiers in war who have sacrificed so much dear to them so that we can enjoy what is dear to us. Let us mark the moment..
*Source : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_I#Fighting_in_India

Next stop Bangalore/Bengaluru to meet Deepika Padukone. Ok ok alright...but close enough since I was meeting a schoolmate of hers. :)
Had heard a lot about the steady improvements of airports in India. After being impressed by the Mumbai Domestic Terminal, I expected the same for the Bengaluru Airport as well. And it did not disappoint.

Spacious, airy terminals, self-check in counters, uncomplicated design for departure gates and clear announcements. On the outside too, was a revelation with pretty landscaping, organized cab areas and bus lanes. BMTC operates air-conditioned Volvo buses into the city and we hopped onto one of them

to make our way along the six-lane highway to the city-center.
One of the major complaints has been the lack of alternative means of transport. Being the IT hub, the expansion and opening of a new airport was done in order to facilitate more passengers due to the increasing business and it didn’t make any sense being stuck in traffic for many hours to reach your meeting place. A high-speed rail link ideally should have been built simultaneously along with the airport. It is being done now and remains to be seen how quickly it can be completed.
Anyway it is easy to be critical. But we have to give credit where it is due. Because airports in India sucked big time and the posters of "Incredible India" plastered on seedy walls never alleviated the discomfort that any tourist was going through. All in all, it was pretty good and this was just phase 1. With a 4000 acre area to play with, I think this airport can go places.