Todays offer through this BLOG

TODAYS THE BEST DEAL

Amazon Product

๐Ÿ”ฅ Trending Product

Limited time offer! Grab this deal before it's gone.

๐Ÿ‘‰ Shop Now

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Kuldeep Yadav Marries Vanshika Chaddha In Dreamy Mussoorie Wedding. See Pics

India spinner Kuldeep Yadav tied the knot with his childhood friend, Vanshika Chaddha, on Saturday in the hill station of Mussoorie. The ceremony was attended by several current and former cricketers, including Kuldeep's 2026 T20 World Cup-winning teammates Tilak Varma and Rinku Singh. Social media was flooded with pictures and videos from the couple's festivities, following their private engagement last year. In one viral clip, Kuldeep and Vanshika are seen walking hand-in-hand as pyrotechnics lit up the background.

Kuldeep and Vanshika's wedding was hosted at the Welcomhotel The Savoy, which was reportedly reserved for several days to accommodate the guests and festivities. 

"So happy you've found your forever love. Cheers to a beautiful life, Lil Bro," Indian cricketer Yuzvendra Chahal posted on X.

Fans also took to social media to congratulate the couple of their wedding.

Photos and videos circulating on social media have offered glimpses of the colorful Sangeet ceremony held on Friday evening. In images shared by cricketing icons Suresh Raina and Yuzvendra Chahal, the bride and groom were seen in coordinated traditional outfits that quickly went viral online.

Tilak, who reached Mussoorie on Saturday, earlier said that he will enjoy the wedding before getting into the preparation for the upcoming Indian Premier League (IPL) 2026, where he will represent the five-time champions Mumbai Indians.

"We're going to Kuldeep's wedding to have fun. After that, we'll prepare for IPL," Tilak told IANS.

Media reports suggest that Kuldeep postponed the wedding, originally scheduled for November 2025, to focus on helping India clinch the T20 World Cup 2026. The couple, who both hail from Kanpur and grew up just 3 km apart, got engaged last year at a hotel in Lucknow. Vanshika currently works as an LIC employee.

Despite the team's success, Kuldeep featured just once during the T20 World Cup, returning tidy figures of 1/14 against arch-rivals Pakistan in the group stage. Meanwhile, the spinner's father, Ram Singh Yadav, visited Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath last week to personally extend a wedding invitation.



from NDTV News- Special https://ift.tt/eQ7XsAZ
via IFTTT

Friday, March 13, 2026

Watch: Chahal Lights Up Kuldeep's Haldi Day With Dance On 'Paan Ki Dukaan'

Indian cricket team spinner Kuldeep Yadav is all set to tie the knot with his fiancee, Vanshika, on Saturday in Mussoorie, Uttarakhand. The festivities for the big day have already begun, with the haldi ceremony taking place on Friday, giving fans plenty of memorable moments. Many big names are also expected to attend the wedding. The couple will exchange their vows at the grand Savoy Hotel, which has been fully booked for the 31-year-old wrist-spinner's wedding and will remain unavailable to other guests for two to three days.

A video from the haldi ceremony went viral on social media, showing Kuldeep's teammate and veteran leg-spinner Yuzvendra Chahal dancing enthusiastically.

Chahal, who has shared the field with Kuldeep in numerous international matches, was seen grooving to the popular song "Paan Ki Dukaan" from the movie O Romeo. He also actively participated in the ceremony and was spotted applying haldi to both Kuldeep and Vanshika.

On his arrival for Dehradun, Chahal had also expressed excitement about being part of the special occasion.

Speaking to ANI, Chahal shared his enthusiasm for the festivities and his close bond with Kuldeep. "I am very excited for my brother's marriage. I will dance a lot and enjoy," he said with a smile, hinting at lively celebrations ahead.

According to reports by PTI, former India captains Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma will be in attendance for Kuldeep's wedding on Saturday. The nation's premier fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah, who recently won the T20 World Cup 2026 alongside Kuldeep, is also expected to be present.

Alongside Kohli, Rohit and Bumrah, several other VIPs are expected to attend the grand wedding ceremony.

Legendary India cricketer Sunil Gavaskar, current India T20I captain Suryakumar Yadav and T20 World Cup-winning stars Rinku Singh and Tilak Varma are among the other high-profile cricket personalities expected to attend, according to reports.

Media reports suggest that Kuldeep postponed the wedding, originally scheduled for November 2025, to focus on helping India clinch the T20 World Cup 2026. The couple, who both hail from Kanpur and grew up just 3 km apart, got engaged last year at a hotel in Lucknow. Vanshika currently works as an LIC employee.

(With PTI Inputs)



from NDTV News- Special https://ift.tt/PjTSrx4
via IFTTT

Rashmika Announces Cocktail 2 Release Date, First Look Out On March 18

Cocktail 2, starring Rashmika Mandanna, Shahid Kapoor, and Kriti Sanon, is slated to be released on June 19, 2026. Backed by Maddock Films, the upcoming film is directed by Homi Adajania.

Rashmika Mandanna shared the first posters from Cocktail 2 on her Instagram page, teasing the look of the lead actors in the film.

In her post, the actor also said that the first look of the movie will be released on March 18, "only in theatres".

Days after Rashmika Mandanna married Vijay Deverakonda in Udaipur, the actor had invited her Cocktail 2 team to their wedding reception in Hyderabad. Kriti Sanon, Homi Adajania, and Maddock Films head Dinesh Vijan and his wife Pramita Tanwar had attended the star-studded event on March 4.

The cast and crew of Cocktail 2 completed shooting for the film in January. Homi Adajania shared a series of fun pictures from the film's wrap party at the time.

Cocktail 2 marks the second collaboration for Shahid Kapoor and Kriti Sanon after 2024's Teri Baaton Mein Aisa Uljha Jiya.

Homi Adajania also helmed 2012's Cocktail, which starred Saif Ali Khan, Deepika Padukone and Diana Penty.

Also Read | At Rashmika Mandanna-Vijay Deverakonda's Hyderabad Reception, Kriti Sanon Adds Cocktail 2 Glam



from NDTV News- Special https://ift.tt/oPMa1IF
via IFTTT

Thursday, March 12, 2026

APJ Abdul Kalam Foresaw This: Gulf War's Hard Lesson On Energy Imports

The war in the Gulf has exposed India's underbelly, this huge crisis on the shortage of petroleum products only exposes how energy insecure the country remains. 

If only someone had heeded to the plaintive calls made two decades ago by India's visionary "People's President" APJ Abdul Kalam. Two decades on, India is still at the mercy of Gulf oil.

Nearly two decades ago, India's "missile man" and then President, Dr APJ Abdul Kalam, laid out an audacious national mission, energy security by 2020, leading to energy independence by 2030. He framed it not as an engineering target alone, but as a strategic necessity: "Energy Independence is the lifeline of a nation."

Kalam's prescription, spelt out in his address at the South Asian Conference on Renewable Energy in New Delhi in April 2006, was clear-eyed about geopolitics, economics and technology. He warned that fossil-based oil, coal and gas reserves would not last forever, and that the "unpredictable increase in the cost of oil" should compel India to act decisively. 

He reminded the country that he had already elevated the idea of energy independence in his Independence Day Eve address on August 15, 2005, and sharpened it into a deadline-driven national agenda: "Energy Independence has to be our nation's first and highest priority. Our target is to achieve Energy Security by 2020 leading to Energy Independence by 2030 and beyond."

Yet, as India watches a fresh conflagration in West Asia, involving the United States and Israel striking Iran and retaliatory disruptions across the Gulf, the fragility of India's energy lifelines has returned to centre stage. International energy markets have been rattled by the risk to Gulf infrastructure and shipping, with tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for a significant share of global seaborne oil trade, reportedly nearing a standstill at points, pushing volatility into prices and freight. 

For India, which remains heavily import-dependent, the renewed instability is not just a distant headline; it directly threatens household fuel availability, industrial productivity, and the country's broader fiscal stability.

Kalam's "navigable route" for India's energy bouquet

Kalam's vision did not hinge on a single silver bullet. Instead, he urged a multi-route energy pathway, a diversified national "bouquet" with a navigable roadmap, one that could withstand shocks and reduce dependence on imported fossil fuels. 

In his words, India's power system needed a structural shift, with renewables rising from a marginal role to a quarter of the mix: "the power generated through renewable energy technologies has to be increased to 25% against the present 5%", he said this is 2006. 

Today India renewable energy production of non-fossil power installed capacity has reached 262.74 GW in November 2025, which is 51.5% of the total installed electricity capacity in the country which was 509.64 GW. A huge achievement, but far from giving India the much needed energy independence.

Kalam projected that to meet development targets, India's power generating capacity would need to rise dramatically - to 400,000 MW by 2030 from about 130,000 MW then. He also broke down the broad architecture of that growth: additional hydel potential including river interlinking contributions, a strong nuclear backbone, and large-scale solar farms delivering tens of thousands of megawatts. The strategic goal, Kalam argued, was to minimise fossil fuel imports while ensuring secure access, and to maximise hydro, nuclear and renewables alongside conventional thermal power.

Kalam's plan was unusually specific for a presidential speech. He spoke of hydel additions, large solar farms, and a nuclear ramp-up to 50,000 MW by 2030. And he did not stop at today's technologies. He pushed India's scientific establishment to chase disruptive breakthroughs, such as carbon nanotube (CNT) based photovoltaic cells, arguing that the efficiency leap could make solar truly competitive at scale.

A war exposes the gap between aspiration and security

Fast forward to March 2026, and the irony is stark. India has expanded electricity generation, built vast renewable capacity, and accelerated solar installations. Yet energy security, particularly in liquid fuels and gas, still remains exposed to geopolitical shocks. 

Recent reporting and government statements underline the scale of dependence: India imports roughly about 88% of its crude oil and around about half of its natural gas, a structural vulnerability when Gulf shipping lanes are threatened. Another account citing parliamentary information put crude import dependence at around 88.6%.

The current Gulf conflict has amplified the risk premium. 

Analysts tracking the crisis have warned about disruptions to oil and LNG flows through Hormuz, with consequences for price spikes, shipping insurance costs, and supply delays especially for Asian importers. In short, the war has exposed precisely the insecurity Kalam wanted India to engineer out of its future.

What India has achieved: power capacity rises, solar rockets

In electricity, India's installed base has grown into a global-scale system. Official reports show that India's total installed electricity capacity is now around 520 GW (520,510 MW range, as of early 2026). That number is a marker of the country's rising demand, industrial growth and electrification, and it also reflects how the energy transition is being built on top of a massive, complex grid.

Where India has moved decisively, arguably in the spirit of Kalam's call, is solar energy. The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy's cumulative physical progress data (as of 28 February 2026) puts India's solar installed capacity at about 143.60 GW, with ground-mounted projects around 109.50 GW and rooftop solar around 24.86 GW. This solar surge is not cosmetic; it signals that India has turned sunlight into an industrial-scale resource, reshaping the electricity mix and reducing marginal dependence on imported fuels for power generation.

Kalam had urged a major shift away from fossil dependence, insisting that renewables must rise from a minor share to a strategic pillar. India's solar ramp-up suggests that part of that blueprint is being executed, faster than many expected a decade ago, even as other parts of the national energy-security puzzle remain incomplete.

The SHANTI Act: a nuclear bet on 100 GW by 2047

That is where the next big policy lever enters: nuclear energy. Kalam placed nuclear power at the core of India's long-term energy security, arguing for capacity growth and for pursuing thorium-based reactors as a strategic advantage given India's reserves.

Now, the Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India (SHANTI) Act, 2025 seeks to modernise India's nuclear framework and explicitly anchors a long-range ambition: 100 GW of nuclear capacity by 2047.

In other words, even as Kalam's 2020 energy security deadline slipped away, the country is now attempting a longer, deeper structural correction: build a clean baseload backbone that can complement solar and wind and reduce exposure to imported fossil fuels.

A dream unfinished, yet still actionable

Kalam's speeches read today like both prophecy and provocation. He wanted India to treat energy as a sovereignty question, something that powers prosperity and protects peace. He spoke of solar missions for rural households, of technology breakthroughs, of nuclear scale-up, of biofuels for transport, each strand reducing dependence and creating resilience.

But the uncomfortable reality is that the most geopolitically sensitive part of India's energy system, oil and gas, remains import-heavy, and therefore hostage to maritime chokepoints and external crises. The West Asia war has simply made that dependency visible again, in the language of disrupted routes, freight premiums and inflation fears.

At the same time, India's achievements, 520 GW installed power capacity and 143.6 GW solar, show that when the state sets a mission and aligns industry and finance, scale is possible. The SHANTI Act's 100 GW by 2047 nuclear ambition is another attempt at such a mission.

Kalam's message from 2006 still rings: make energy independence the "first and highest priority." If the Gulf war has delivered any strategic lesson, it is that energy security cannot be wished into existence, it must be built, diversified, and defended by design, atom by atom, molecule by molecule and efficiently harvesting photon by photon.
 



from NDTV News- Special https://ift.tt/F7W6bKJ
via IFTTT

India Coach Asked Samson To Slam A Ton In T20 World Cup. Reply Startled Him

Sanju Samson's three consecutive half-centuries at the T20 World Cup 2026 was the inspirational story to emerge from the tournament. For long, Samson has been considered as having the talent to make it big on the biggest stage. Somehow, the consistency never arrived, and ahead of the T20 World Cup, he suffered a torrid run. He did not play in all matches in the tournament either. But once he started to fire, beginning with the Super 8 match against West Indies, there was no stopping him.

India batting coach Sitanshu Kotak revealed the quiet confidence that preceded Samson's resurgent run to becoming the Player of the Tournament in India's triumphant 2026 Men's T20 World Cup campaign, recalling how the wicketkeeper-batter promised that he would contribute whenever the team needed him.

"I always used to tell Sanju, 'Sanju, you don't know - sometimes in two or three days, an injury or form issue could come up, or even a combination issue may appear. So you have to be ready.' He has so much experience, but he would laugh and say, 'Arey Kotsi bhai, don't worry. Whenever the team needs me, I will contribute,'" Kotak told IANS.

The India batting coach even asked him for a hundred, and Samson gave an interesting reply.

"I told Sanju, 'Ek toh hundred karna hai' (you have to score one hundred). He replied with a smile: 'On one hand you say it's not about personal milestones, and on the other you say I should score a hundred. How are both things possible?'" Kotak said in an interview to Sportstar.

After being an unused member in India's 2024 Men's T20 World Cup win, Samson ended up amassing 321 runs across just five innings in 2026 to finish as India's leading scorer, surpassing Virat Kohli's 319-run mark from 2014 - making him the most prolific Indian batter in a single edition of the tournament.



from NDTV News- Special https://ift.tt/jwztgq9
via IFTTT

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Why Hansika Motwani Got Divorced From Sohael After 4 Years Of Marriage

Actor Hansika Motwani and businessman Sohael Khaturiya have officially ended their marriage. The couple was granted a divorce by a family court in Mumbai's Bandra suburb.

Hansika's lawyer, Adnan Shaikh, confirmed the development to NDTV and shared that the divorce was granted through mutual consent after both parties acknowledged that their marriage had irretrievably broken down.

Couple Struggled With Frequent Disagreements

According to a report by India Today, the plea submitted before the court stated that the couple had been facing regular disagreements, even over minor issues. Over time, these conflicts made it difficult for them to continue living together under the same roof.

The petition also noted that both families and close friends had attempted to help the couple reconcile and encouraged them to work on their relationship. However, those efforts did not succeed in resolving their differences.

Eventually, the two mutually decided to part ways and legally end their marriage. The plea also mentioned that Hansika and Sohael had been living separately since July 2, 2024.

Although the relationship had reportedly become strained, the two later held discussions and agreed to pursue a mutual divorce. Both parties submitted their affidavits to the court confirming their consent to the dissolution of the marriage, with neither making any claims against the other.

Hansika Refused To Take Any Alimony

In an official statement, Hansika's lawyer explained the circumstances behind the legal decision to NDTV.

He said, "Our client, Hansika Motwani, has been granted a decree of divorce by the Hon'ble Family Court Bandra. The divorce was granted by mutual consent after both parties acknowledged that the marriage had irretrievably broken down."

He further added, "Our client had initially approached her now former husband seeking an amicable separation, which ultimately culminated in the present decree. The respondent filed his affidavit before the court today, confirming his consent to the dissolution of the marriage."

Shaikh also clarified that the actor did not seek any financial settlement.

"It is pertinent to clarify that our client has made no claims whatsoever for alimony or maintenance, as her sole intention was to bring a dignified and peaceful closure to the marriage. The reasons for the breakdown of the relationship were placed before the Hon'ble Court in the petition. Our client now wishes to move forward with her life and professional commitments," he concluded

Hansika married Sohael on December 4, 2022, in a grand ceremony. Speculation about trouble in their marriage began last year after the actor deleted her wedding pictures from Instagram.

As of now, neither Hansika nor Sohael has publicly commented on their divorce.

ALSO READ: Hansika Motwani And Sohael Khaturiya Relationship Timeline: Paris Proposal, Jaipur Wedding, To Quiet Divorce



from NDTV News- Special https://ift.tt/Ja6BjnL
via IFTTT

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

In Khamenei's Will, He Didn't Want Son To Be Iran's Supreme Leader: Report

Few people wanted Mojtaba Khamenei to become Iran's next supreme leader, not US President Donald Trump, and not even his own father.

The late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed in airstrikes on February 28th, had made clear in his will that he did not want his son to succeed him, according to a report by the New York Post. However, the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) ultimately pushed Mojtaba into the position anyway.

According to experts, the elder Khamenei had serious reservations about his son's suitability for the role.

"In Khamenei's will, he explicitly asked Mojtaba not to be named as successor," said Khosro Isfahani, research director at the opposition group National Union for Democracy, which has ties to Iranian intelligence networks.

Read | When A Young Mojtaba Khamenei Was Witness To Father's Assault

Isfahani said the late leader believed Mojtaba lacked the experience and political stature needed to run the country.

"Mojtaba is an impotent young cleric who has achieved nothing in terms of political life," Isfahani said.

"All these years, he has been nothing without his father's name," he added.

Iran's leadership succession is typically determined by the Assembly of Experts, the clerical body responsible for selecting the supreme leader. But according to Isfahani, Mojtaba's appointment did not follow the normal process.

Instead, he said the IRGC pressured the Assembly while it was deliberating last week and ultimately forced the decision.

Read | Why US Sanctioned Iran's New Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei In 2019

Isfahani, citing sources inside Iran, said Mojtaba did not even secure a majority of votes from the council. The pressure from the IRGC reportedly led several clerics to boycott the session where the successor was formally announced.

"The Assembly of Experts that was supposed to pick the replacement of Khamenei didn't vote for Mojtaba," Isfahani said.

"There was a lot of pushback against him, but under pressure from the IRGC, he was named as the successor."

According to Isfahani, the powerful military force sees Mojtaba as someone they can easily control.

"They see him as a puppet - a blank canvas that they can paint anything on," he said.

Trump On Mojtaba Khamenei

Trump said that Iran's new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei will not be able to "live in peace". He has expressed strong disapproval after Iran elected the second son of Ali Khamenei as the new leader.

Prior to Mojtaba Khamenei's appointment, Trump insisted that the US should have a say in selecting the next leader for Iran, similar to past US involvement in Venezuela.

In an interview with Axios, Trump said that Mojtaba Khamenei, the 56-year-old son of late Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei, succeeding his father as the new head of the Islamic republic is "unacceptable" and that he wants someone who would "bring harmony and peace to Iran".

Read | "I Don't Believe He Can Live In Peace": Trump's Warning For Mojtaba Khamenei

Trump said that making someone a leader who would continue Khamenei's policies would force the US to be back to war "in five years".

On Sunday, Trump told ABC News, "He's going to have to get approval from us. If he doesn't get approval from us, he's not going to last long."

Mojtaba, 56, had never held an official government position before his appointment. Much of his influence came from operating behind the scenes within his father's inner circle as the Islamic Republic tightened its conservative grip on power.

Leaked US diplomatic cables from the 2000s described him as "the power behind the robes". Around the same time, he was accused of helping manipulate Iran's presidential elections to ensure victories for regime loyalists.

Meanwhile, Israel's military has previously warned that any Iranian leader who continues Tehran's campaign of terrorism would be considered an "unequivocal target for elimination".



from NDTV News- Special https://ift.tt/SkTYXMr
via IFTTT

Peddi Box Office Day 13: Film Holds Steady Despite Screen Reduction

Ram Charan's Peddi continues to enjoy a strong run at the box office, maintaining its momentum well into the second week despite a redu...