Ayesha Tabassum

Syndicate content

Political faux pas

“Oh no! Not again,” is what most netizens are crying out loud. This time, it’s UK’s MP and shadow public health minister Diane Abbott.

A bullish beginning

It is one event that will grab a million eyeballs. Film buffs and cricket fans will not want to miss this tournament.

Networking for a cause

Charity is a noble deed, but making it fashionable is its online avatar. Social networking games and CSR initiatives are getting the young Internet addict to contribute to a social cause.

Mum is the world for celebs

It was a year of palpable excitement and jittery moments. It was the year of celebrity mommies. A few had their babies, while others are expecting to deliver soon.

Mr Right doesn’t exist

Smart, tall, dark and handsome are essential. But do these attributes complete a man? Not really. A poll of 2,000 women conducted by a UK-based beauty company revealed, Mr Perfect does not exist.

Gold is glamorous on the red carpet

The shimmery and glamorous gold is back in vogue. Not just in clothes, but accessories like goldstreaked watches, bags and footwear are the ‘in’ thing now.

The Midas touch

The shimmery and glamorous gold is back in vogue. Not just in clothes, but accessories like gold streaked watches, bags and footwear are the ‘in’ thing now.

Wannabe celebs hit jackpot

life12183.jpg

The self-made strip-tease star Poonam Pandey has dedicated a video called “Double Treat 219” to Virender Sehwag and tweeted about it to her 87,508 followers. Meanwhile Pooja Missra is acting as a translator to Andrew Symonds on Bigg Boss and viewers can’t seem to get enough of the “spare me” girl.

A socially high livelihood

Did you know you can get paid for being on Facebook, Twitter and other social networking sites all day long?
Companies today are looking at hiring youngsters to take care of their social networking pages. The role comes with a fancy designation of social media

Bad guys get inked

The patch, the mole and the bushy moustache — the intimidating ‘bad man’ of Indian cinema no longer exists.

No Articles Found

No Articles Found

No Articles Found

I want to begin with a little story that was told to me by a leading executive at Aptech. He was exercising in a gym with a lot of younger people.

Shekhar Kapur’s Bandit Queen didn’t make the cut. Neither did Shaji Karun’s Piravi, which bagged 31 international awards.