Author: Sushmita Dahal

Waheeda Rehman ‘not okay’ with a biopic on herself

Veteran actress Rehman, who recently unveiled Nasreen Munni Kabir’s book Conversations with Waheeda Rehman, says she is “not okay” if a film is made on her life. The 76-year-old has featured in several Bollywood classics like Solvaa Saal, Pyasa, Sahib Bibi Aur Ghulam, Bees Saal Baad and Guide, and she has regaled audiences with her graceful dancing skills over the years. Biopics are a new trend in the Hindi film industry. So, asked if she would be fine with a film on her journey, she said, “I am (over) 75. Now it’s a long journey…it has to be made in...

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Oscar Pistorius: from Blade Runner to Blade Gunner

  Oscar Pistorius: a champion athlete who beat the odds to inspire millions worldwide, or a disgraced hero with a penchant for guns, beautiful women and fast cars? Both versions of South Africa’s double amputee Olympian will be pored over from Monday when the 27-year-old goes on trial for murder after gunning down his girlfriend on Valentine’s Day a year ago.   Before the shock shooting, Pistorius was one of the world’s most admired sportsmen. A formidable competitor known as the “fastest man on no legs”, he was courted by luxury big brands and named to flattering lists such as the “Sexiest Man Alive.” But his “Blade Runner” epithet, earned by his trademark prosthetic legs that powered him to fame, swiftly became recast as the “Blade Gunner” after he shot dead Reeva Steenkamp. Born in 1986 in Johannesburg with no fibula bones, Pistorius had both legs amputated below the knee when he was 11 months old. But he played sports unhindered while growing up, switching to running after fracturing a knee playing rugby.   “It was never made an issue. My mother would say to my brother, ‘you put on your shoes, and Oscar’, you put on your legs, then meet me at the car’,” Pistorius told The Independent in 2011. Just eight months after taking to the track, he smashed the 200m world record at the Athens Paralympics...

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LinkedIn launches China version despite censorship fears

Business networking site LinkedIn has launched a Chinese version, attempting to tap the huge market while navigating a strict censorship regime that has seen other foreign social media giants banned. China has the world’s largest online community with more than 618 million users. But its so-called Great Firewall blocks any online forums or content deemed sensitive, and has barred access to Facebook and Twitter for several years. Foreign tech giants are required to abide by strict rules to operate in the country, and unlike the English-language version of LinkedIn, the new site does not currently allow group discussions. LinkedIn...

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How black activists get erased:Whitewashing reproductive rights

Over the past few decades, we have seen conservatives distort our legacies of struggle, erase the disproportionate impact of their policies, and co-opt our victories – remember Glenn Beck’s attempt to reclaim the civil rights movement from those who have “distorted” it? More recently and preposterously, the Christian right and some groups on the left have been whitewashing black history in the movement for women’s autonomy – even using it and our children against us without our full consent. They’ve rewritten history to the point that many believe our ancestors were fervently antiabortion, and still would be today. We’ve allowed them to change the legacy of our leaders, and it’s time we take it back. It’s time we tell our own stories.   Black History Month is a time for celebration of heritage. It’s 28 days that our ancestors’ stories and struggles are shared in schools, media and communities. But, as with most things these days, it’s been appropriated, mangled and spoon-fed to us without the rich flavor and spice. Bland. Antiabortion activists think themselves clever when they compare abortion to slavery, but reams of historical records prove their narrative to be rooted in quicksand. They have ignored the stories of men and women being raped, beaten, starved and worked literally to death and the reverberating effects of that most inhumane of institutions. It is indeed preposterous to assert that a free black woman deciding...

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WhatsApp down for 3 hours, 3 days after $19bn Facebook deal; service restored today

WhatsApp is the leader among a wave of smartphone-based messaging apps that are now sweeping across North America, Asia and Europe, and is known to appeal to teens and others who avoid mainstream social networks. During the outage the buzz on Twitter ranged from the conspiratorial – that Facebook had really bought WhatsApp to shut it down and funnel users to Facebook Chat – to the philosophical. WhatsApp, the rapidly expanding mobile messaging app, suffered an outage for more than three hours on Saturday, frustrating users just days after its acquisition by Facebook for $19 billion. “WhatsApp service has been restored. We are so sorry for the downtime…,” WhatsApp tweeted to its more than 1 million Twitter followers on Saturday around 5:48 p.m. EST (2248...

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