Travis Kelce decided on comeback after Las Vegas Raiders defeated Kansas City Chiefs; his decision included Patrick Mahomes element

Travis Kelce decided on comeback after Las Vegas Raiders defeated Kansas City Chiefs; his decision included Patrick Mahomes element

Travis Kelce decided on comeback after Las Vegas Raiders defeated Kansas City Chiefs; his decision included Patrick Mahomes element (Image via Getty: Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes) The 2024 season was speculated to be Travis Kelce’s last dance on the gridiron. But he played two more seasons. 2026 was speculated to be his “calling it…

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– The 2026 assembly elections have redrawn West Bengal’s political fate in saffron. BJP didn’t just win, they swept the state clean. But beyond the blockbuster headline numbers, real political plot twist lies in where some of its most stunning breakthroughs came from: Muslim-majority and Muslim-influenced constituencies that for decades had acted as Mamata Banerjee’s support system. These weren’t just routine wins, they were TMC’s stronghold, once seen as politically untouchable. This time, however, the old equations have now turned upside down and Bengal’s electoral playbook is getting rewritten.For years, Bengal’s minority vote, especially in districts like Murshidabad, Malda and Uttar Dinajpur, was seen not just as a demographic factor but as a political fortress. First, it shielded the Left Front. Then, after Mamata Banerjee’s rise in 2011, it became one of the Trinamool Congress’s strongest pillars. The formula was simple and remarkably effective: consolidate Muslim voters, combine that with women-centric welfare support, position TMC as Bengal’s protector against Hindutva politics, and neutralise BJP’s challenge. That strategy delivered spectacularly in 2021. Mamata Banerjee won 215 seats, while BJP, despite an aggressive national campaign, was restricted to 77. In Bengal’s minority belt, particularly the 43 seats across Murshidabad, Malda and Uttar Dinajpur, TMC dominated with 35 seats, while BJP won just 8. Murshidabad alone, where Muslims form over two-thirds of the population, gave TMC 20 of 22 seats.Five years later, that political certainty has been profoundly shaken.The 2026 election has not necessarily shown a wholesale Muslim shift to BJP. Instead, it has revealed something perhaps even more politically significant: the minority vote in Bengal is no longer acting as one consolidated bloc. That fragmentation, combined with BJP’s disciplined Hindutva consolidation, local anti-incumbency, welfare competition, identity politics and stronger grassroots systems, created a new electoral equation, one that breached beyond even TMC’s most protected zones.Numbers behind the political earthquakeThe scale of the shift becomes clearer when comparing 2021 with 2026.In 2021:TMC won 215 seats statewideBJP won 77 seats2026 was a complete flip the script moment, a blow that gave BJP whopping 206 seats while TMC’s map contracted to 80 seats.Now, let’s focus on Bengal’s critical minority belt: -Together, TMC’s dominance in these 43 seats formed a crucial safety net.In 2026, BJP nearly doubled its tally in these districts, moving from 8 to around 18–19 seats, while TMC lost significant ground. Across wider minority-influence seats, estimated at 142 constituencies statewide, BJP reportedly won 72, TMC 64, with Congress, CPI(M) and others taking the rest.This wasn’t just a seat swap but a major shake-up in Bengal’s political game.The biggest factor: Fragmentation of minority voteThe most decisive story of Bengal 2026 is that Muslim voters, long considered tactically consolidated anti-BJP, were divided across multiple political channels. -Instead of TMC emerging as the singular anti-BJP beneficiary, Muslim votes were split among:TMCCongressCPI(M)Indian Secular Front (ISF)Humayun Kabir’s Aam Janata Unnayan Party (AJUP)Smaller regional outfits and independentsThis fragmentation proved devastating for TMC in tightly contested seats. Here’s whyIn 2021, the electoral logic in many minority-heavy seats was binary: TMC or BJP. Fear of BJP often drove strategic voting.In 2026, local dissatisfaction, anti-incumbency, corruption allegations, candidate fatigue and the revival of dormant opposition players changed that pattern.This meant BJP often did not need a dramatic expansion of Muslim support. It simply needed opposition votes to divide.Murshidabad: The fortress that crackedMurshidabad became the clearest symbol of this transformation.Historically one of TMC’s safest minority bastions, Murshidabad’s 66 percent-plus Muslim population had made it politically difficult terrain for BJP.In 2021:TMC: 20 seatsBJP: 2 seatsIn 2026:TMC’s dominance sharply weakened as BJP surged and multiple opposition players cut into TMC’s core.The Humayun Kabir factor was especially crucial. A former TMC heavyweight, Kabir’s AJUP emerged as a local disruptor by converting anti-TMC dissatisfaction into political relevance. AJUP reportedly won seats like Rejinagar and Nowda while polling strongly elsewhere, damaging TMC’s arithmetic.At the same time:Congress regained ground in RaninagarCPI(M) performed strongly in DomkalLeft and Congress together sliced into TMC’s traditional Muslim supportThe result was politically seismic: BJP could win or become competitive even without dominating minority voters, because TMC was no longer monopolising them.Malda: Congress’s survival hurt TMCMalda’s politics has always been more significant due to Congress’s historic roots.In 2026, Congress did not necessarily dominate, but its revival mattered enormously.Even modest Congress recovery among minority voters was enough to erode TMC margins. Combined with BJP’s Hindu consolidation, this produced major shifts.Englishbazar became one of the standout examples, where BJP candidate Amlan Bhaduri reportedly won by over 93,000 votes, a margin that reflected:Consolidated Hindu votingMerchant-class backingMinority fragmentationTMC slippageMalda proved that TMC no longer had automatic ownership of anti-BJP minority arithmetic.Uttar Dinajpur: Identity politics sharpened the splitIn Uttar Dinajpur, BJP’s rise was shaped by both fragmentation and identity mobilisation.The party’s campaign around:SIR (Special Intensive Revision)Voter roll scrutiny“Ineligible voter” allegationsOBC and Rajbanshi concernshelped consolidate sections of Hindu voters -At the same time, Congress and Left retained enough influence to damage TMC in close contests.In multiple seats, combined Congress-Left votes exceeded TMC’s losing margin.That pattern became central to BJP’s Bengal strategy: hold your vote, let the opposition divide.SIR and electoral identityThe SIR exercise became one of the election’s most politically charged subtexts.Large-scale voter deletions in some minority-heavy districts triggered anger and controversy. TMC argued this disproportionately affected its support base.Yet contrary to expectations, fear over voter deletions did not fully reunify Muslim voters behind TMC.Instead, local grievances often pushed voters toward alternative platforms.Similarly, BJP’s narratives around Waqf politics and identity issues energised its core supporters while forcing TMC into reactive politics.Women voters: Mamata’s shield weakenedOne of TMC’s strongest social coalitions had long been women, especially through schemes like Lakshmir Bhandar.But BJP’s Annapurnar Bhandar promise, offering Rs 3,000 monthly support, directly challenged that advantage.Combined with:Women’s safety concerns after incidents like RG KarAnti-corruption messagingWelfare competitionBJP significantly narrowed TMC’s edge among female voters, including in minority-heavy regions.For many poorer women, especially Gen Z and younger households, practical economics began competing with traditional loyalty.Governance fatigue and corruptionTMC also faced a decade-plus burden of incumbency.Key issues included:Recruitment scamsCorruption allegationsLocal syndicate politicsGovernance fatiguePerceptions of dynastic or centralised controlIn many constituencies, this did not automatically make BJP popular, but it did make TMC vulnerable.That vulnerability was enough when combined with vote fragmentation. -BJP’s organisational transformationUnlike 2021, BJP in 2026 was not merely running on national charisma.It had spent five years building:Booth-level infrastructureLocal cadre strengthSuvendu Adhikari’s regional influenceSukanta Majumdar’s organisational expansionStronger local candidate networksIts 2024 Lok Sabha gains were a stepping stone, not a peak.This allowed BJP to fully exploit fractured opposition zones.More shockwaves: How Mamata lost Bhabanipur and beyondPerhaps the most symbolic moment was Mamata Banerjee’s defeat in Bhabanipur, where Suvendu Adhikari reportedly defeated her by over 15,000 votes.This was more than a seat loss. It brought back focus to BJP’s claim that TMC’s political invincibility had ended.West Bengal 2026 has broken one of Indian politics’ most durable assumptions: that a substantial minority population, if politically consolidated, can permanently block BJP.That assumption now appears conditional, not guaranteed.BJP’s Bengal breakthrough suggests that:Opposition fragmentation can outweigh demographic arithmeticWelfare politics has limitsIdentity politics can be countered by governance fatigueRegional strongholds are vulnerable if core coalitions fractureThe bottom lineFor Mamata Banerjee, this result is a blunt political warning.The Muslim vote remains crucial, but no longer appears automatically unified enough to function as an electoral veto.The story of Bengal 2026 is not that Muslim-majority constituencies suddenly turned saffron.It is that the political unity which once kept BJP out weakened enough for BJP to enter. The minority vote did not disappear. It diversified.And in that diversification, Bengal’s old electoral map was redrawn. This election was not just a victory for BJP.It was the end of one political certainty and the beginning of a far more contested Bengal.Follow the latest election results 2026, live updates, winner lists, constituency-wise results, party-wise trends and full coverage for Tamil Nadu election results, West Bengal election results, Kerala election results, Assam election results and Puducherry election results results on Times of India.End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosDefeat but ‘Moral Win’? Mamata Targets EC, Hints At BIGGER Opposition AlliancePower Bank Catches Fire On IndiGo Hyderabad-Chandigarh Flight, All Passengers And Crew EvacuatedIndia Seeks To Lease Three Ultra Heavy Lift Helicopters To Boost CapabilityAIMIM Chief Owaisi Says Muslim Votes Wasted on Secular Parties, Calls for ShiftKejriwal Alleges BJP “Robbed” Punjab of Rajya Sabha Seats, Vows Political Revenge“Democracy Being Mocked”: Bhagwant Mann Meets President Over Defection of 7 AAP Rajya Sabha MPsNCERT Clears Revised Class 8 Textbook After Judiciary Chapter Row And Public ApologyPM Modi call Fujairah Attack ‘Unacceptable’, Three Indians Injured In UAEPunjab Showdown: AAP MLAs Head to President Over Rajya Sabha RowIndia Rejects Nepal’s Objection To Kailash Mansarovar Yatra Route Via Lipulekh Pass123PhotostoriesA fresh, green home without the effort: Plants that thrive even when you forgetBroccoli vs Cauliflower: One has more nutrients, the other fewer calories, which should you really be eating?Is there a ‘right’ age to get pregnant? Expert busts common fertility mythsGreater Noida’s top 5 real estate hotspots fuelled by the upcoming Jewar AirportThe ‘Big Four’ snakes of India and where travellers can spot them in the wildFrom ‘Leo’ to ‘Master’: Looking at ‘Jana Nayagan’ star Vijay Thalapathy’s biggest box office blockbustersThis mountain range is the oldest in India—and older than dinosaurs: 5 stunning facts5 Met Gala 2026 looks that turned famous paintings into iconic fashion moments5 simple and mindful steps for office goers to grow jade plants that attract prosperity and positivityWhat really happens when you drink Beetroot juice every day for a week123Hot PicksBarrackpore election resultTiruchirappalli election resultMettupalayam election resultsEttumanoor election resultPerambur election resultBagnan election resultKazhakkoottam election resultTop TrendingIran warRahul GandhiBadruddin AjmalIPL Playoff Qualification ScenariosIPL 2026 Points TableMI IPL Playoff Qualification ScenariosPM ModiNEET 2026: Exam-day guideSRMJEEE 2026 Phase 1 ResultTVK Chief Vijay

– The 2026 assembly elections have redrawn West Bengal’s political fate in saffron. BJP didn’t just win, they swept the state clean. But beyond the blockbuster headline numbers, real political plot twist lies in where some of its most stunning breakthroughs came from: Muslim-majority and Muslim-influenced constituencies that for decades had acted as Mamata Banerjee’s support system. These weren’t just routine wins, they were TMC’s stronghold, once seen as politically untouchable. This time, however, the old equations have now turned upside down and Bengal’s electoral playbook is getting rewritten.For years, Bengal’s minority vote, especially in districts like Murshidabad, Malda and Uttar Dinajpur, was seen not just as a demographic factor but as a political fortress. First, it shielded the Left Front. Then, after Mamata Banerjee’s rise in 2011, it became one of the Trinamool Congress’s strongest pillars. The formula was simple and remarkably effective: consolidate Muslim voters, combine that with women-centric welfare support, position TMC as Bengal’s protector against Hindutva politics, and neutralise BJP’s challenge. That strategy delivered spectacularly in 2021. Mamata Banerjee won 215 seats, while BJP, despite an aggressive national campaign, was restricted to 77. In Bengal’s minority belt, particularly the 43 seats across Murshidabad, Malda and Uttar Dinajpur, TMC dominated with 35 seats, while BJP won just 8. Murshidabad alone, where Muslims form over two-thirds of the population, gave TMC 20 of 22 seats.Five years later, that political certainty has been profoundly shaken.The 2026 election has not necessarily shown a wholesale Muslim shift to BJP. Instead, it has revealed something perhaps even more politically significant: the minority vote in Bengal is no longer acting as one consolidated bloc. That fragmentation, combined with BJP’s disciplined Hindutva consolidation, local anti-incumbency, welfare competition, identity politics and stronger grassroots systems, created a new electoral equation, one that breached beyond even TMC’s most protected zones.Numbers behind the political earthquakeThe scale of the shift becomes clearer when comparing 2021 with 2026.In 2021:TMC won 215 seats statewideBJP won 77 seats2026 was a complete flip the script moment, a blow that gave BJP whopping 206 seats while TMC’s map contracted to 80 seats.Now, let’s focus on Bengal’s critical minority belt: -Together, TMC’s dominance in these 43 seats formed a crucial safety net.In 2026, BJP nearly doubled its tally in these districts, moving from 8 to around 18–19 seats, while TMC lost significant ground. Across wider minority-influence seats, estimated at 142 constituencies statewide, BJP reportedly won 72, TMC 64, with Congress, CPI(M) and others taking the rest.This wasn’t just a seat swap but a major shake-up in Bengal’s political game.The biggest factor: Fragmentation of minority voteThe most decisive story of Bengal 2026 is that Muslim voters, long considered tactically consolidated anti-BJP, were divided across multiple political channels. -Instead of TMC emerging as the singular anti-BJP beneficiary, Muslim votes were split among:TMCCongressCPI(M)Indian Secular Front (ISF)Humayun Kabir’s Aam Janata Unnayan Party (AJUP)Smaller regional outfits and independentsThis fragmentation proved devastating for TMC in tightly contested seats. Here’s whyIn 2021, the electoral logic in many minority-heavy seats was binary: TMC or BJP. Fear of BJP often drove strategic voting.In 2026, local dissatisfaction, anti-incumbency, corruption allegations, candidate fatigue and the revival of dormant opposition players changed that pattern.This meant BJP often did not need a dramatic expansion of Muslim support. It simply needed opposition votes to divide.Murshidabad: The fortress that crackedMurshidabad became the clearest symbol of this transformation.Historically one of TMC’s safest minority bastions, Murshidabad’s 66 percent-plus Muslim population had made it politically difficult terrain for BJP.In 2021:TMC: 20 seatsBJP: 2 seatsIn 2026:TMC’s dominance sharply weakened as BJP surged and multiple opposition players cut into TMC’s core.The Humayun Kabir factor was especially crucial. A former TMC heavyweight, Kabir’s AJUP emerged as a local disruptor by converting anti-TMC dissatisfaction into political relevance. AJUP reportedly won seats like Rejinagar and Nowda while polling strongly elsewhere, damaging TMC’s arithmetic.At the same time:Congress regained ground in RaninagarCPI(M) performed strongly in DomkalLeft and Congress together sliced into TMC’s traditional Muslim supportThe result was politically seismic: BJP could win or become competitive even without dominating minority voters, because TMC was no longer monopolising them.Malda: Congress’s survival hurt TMCMalda’s politics has always been more significant due to Congress’s historic roots.In 2026, Congress did not necessarily dominate, but its revival mattered enormously.Even modest Congress recovery among minority voters was enough to erode TMC margins. Combined with BJP’s Hindu consolidation, this produced major shifts.Englishbazar became one of the standout examples, where BJP candidate Amlan Bhaduri reportedly won by over 93,000 votes, a margin that reflected:Consolidated Hindu votingMerchant-class backingMinority fragmentationTMC slippageMalda proved that TMC no longer had automatic ownership of anti-BJP minority arithmetic.Uttar Dinajpur: Identity politics sharpened the splitIn Uttar Dinajpur, BJP’s rise was shaped by both fragmentation and identity mobilisation.The party’s campaign around:SIR (Special Intensive Revision)Voter roll scrutiny“Ineligible voter” allegationsOBC and Rajbanshi concernshelped consolidate sections of Hindu voters -At the same time, Congress and Left retained enough influence to damage TMC in close contests.In multiple seats, combined Congress-Left votes exceeded TMC’s losing margin.That pattern became central to BJP’s Bengal strategy: hold your vote, let the opposition divide.SIR and electoral identityThe SIR exercise became one of the election’s most politically charged subtexts.Large-scale voter deletions in some minority-heavy districts triggered anger and controversy. TMC argued this disproportionately affected its support base.Yet contrary to expectations, fear over voter deletions did not fully reunify Muslim voters behind TMC.Instead, local grievances often pushed voters toward alternative platforms.Similarly, BJP’s narratives around Waqf politics and identity issues energised its core supporters while forcing TMC into reactive politics.Women voters: Mamata’s shield weakenedOne of TMC’s strongest social coalitions had long been women, especially through schemes like Lakshmir Bhandar.But BJP’s Annapurnar Bhandar promise, offering Rs 3,000 monthly support, directly challenged that advantage.Combined with:Women’s safety concerns after incidents like RG KarAnti-corruption messagingWelfare competitionBJP significantly narrowed TMC’s edge among female voters, including in minority-heavy regions.For many poorer women, especially Gen Z and younger households, practical economics began competing with traditional loyalty.Governance fatigue and corruptionTMC also faced a decade-plus burden of incumbency.Key issues included:Recruitment scamsCorruption allegationsLocal syndicate politicsGovernance fatiguePerceptions of dynastic or centralised controlIn many constituencies, this did not automatically make BJP popular, but it did make TMC vulnerable.That vulnerability was enough when combined with vote fragmentation. -BJP’s organisational transformationUnlike 2021, BJP in 2026 was not merely running on national charisma.It had spent five years building:Booth-level infrastructureLocal cadre strengthSuvendu Adhikari’s regional influenceSukanta Majumdar’s organisational expansionStronger local candidate networksIts 2024 Lok Sabha gains were a stepping stone, not a peak.This allowed BJP to fully exploit fractured opposition zones.More shockwaves: How Mamata lost Bhabanipur and beyondPerhaps the most symbolic moment was Mamata Banerjee’s defeat in Bhabanipur, where Suvendu Adhikari reportedly defeated her by over 15,000 votes.This was more than a seat loss. It brought back focus to BJP’s claim that TMC’s political invincibility had ended.West Bengal 2026 has broken one of Indian politics’ most durable assumptions: that a substantial minority population, if politically consolidated, can permanently block BJP.That assumption now appears conditional, not guaranteed.BJP’s Bengal breakthrough suggests that:Opposition fragmentation can outweigh demographic arithmeticWelfare politics has limitsIdentity politics can be countered by governance fatigueRegional strongholds are vulnerable if core coalitions fractureThe bottom lineFor Mamata Banerjee, this result is a blunt political warning.The Muslim vote remains crucial, but no longer appears automatically unified enough to function as an electoral veto.The story of Bengal 2026 is not that Muslim-majority constituencies suddenly turned saffron.It is that the political unity which once kept BJP out weakened enough for BJP to enter. The minority vote did not disappear. It diversified.And in that diversification, Bengal’s old electoral map was redrawn. This election was not just a victory for BJP.It was the end of one political certainty and the beginning of a far more contested Bengal.Follow the latest election results 2026, live updates, winner lists, constituency-wise results, party-wise trends and full coverage for Tamil Nadu election results, West Bengal election results, Kerala election results, Assam election results and Puducherry election results results on Times of India.End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosDefeat but ‘Moral Win’? Mamata Targets EC, Hints At BIGGER Opposition AlliancePower Bank Catches Fire On IndiGo Hyderabad-Chandigarh Flight, All Passengers And Crew EvacuatedIndia Seeks To Lease Three Ultra Heavy Lift Helicopters To Boost CapabilityAIMIM Chief Owaisi Says Muslim Votes Wasted on Secular Parties, Calls for ShiftKejriwal Alleges BJP “Robbed” Punjab of Rajya Sabha Seats, Vows Political Revenge“Democracy Being Mocked”: Bhagwant Mann Meets President Over Defection of 7 AAP Rajya Sabha MPsNCERT Clears Revised Class 8 Textbook After Judiciary Chapter Row And Public ApologyPM Modi call Fujairah Attack ‘Unacceptable’, Three Indians Injured In UAEPunjab Showdown: AAP MLAs Head to President Over Rajya Sabha RowIndia Rejects Nepal’s Objection To Kailash Mansarovar Yatra Route Via Lipulekh Pass123PhotostoriesA fresh, green home without the effort: Plants that thrive even when you forgetBroccoli vs Cauliflower: One has more nutrients, the other fewer calories, which should you really be eating?Is there a ‘right’ age to get pregnant? Expert busts common fertility mythsGreater Noida’s top 5 real estate hotspots fuelled by the upcoming Jewar AirportThe ‘Big Four’ snakes of India and where travellers can spot them in the wildFrom ‘Leo’ to ‘Master’: Looking at ‘Jana Nayagan’ star Vijay Thalapathy’s biggest box office blockbustersThis mountain range is the oldest in India—and older than dinosaurs: 5 stunning facts5 Met Gala 2026 looks that turned famous paintings into iconic fashion moments5 simple and mindful steps for office goers to grow jade plants that attract prosperity and positivityWhat really happens when you drink Beetroot juice every day for a week123Hot PicksBarrackpore election resultTiruchirappalli election resultMettupalayam election resultsEttumanoor election resultPerambur election resultBagnan election resultKazhakkoottam election resultTop TrendingIran warRahul GandhiBadruddin AjmalIPL Playoff Qualification ScenariosIPL 2026 Points TableMI IPL Playoff Qualification ScenariosPM ModiNEET 2026: Exam-day guideSRMJEEE 2026 Phase 1 ResultTVK Chief Vijay

The 2026 assembly elections have redrawn West Bengal’s political fate in saffron. BJP didn’t just win, they swept the state clean. But beyond the blockbuster headline numbers, real political plot twist lies in where some of its most stunning breakthroughs came from: Muslim-majority and Muslim-influenced constituencies that for decades had acted as Mamata Banerjee’s support…

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Looking at ‘Jana Nayagan’ star Vijay Thalapathy’s biggest box office blockbusters

Looking at ‘Jana Nayagan’ star Vijay Thalapathy’s biggest box office blockbusters

Lokesh Kanagaraj’s ‘Leo’ gave Vijay Thalapathy one of the biggest openings of his career. Part of the Lokesh Cinematic Universe, the film seamlessly blended action, mystery, and a stylised narrative. Backed by Vijay’s powerful performance and sharp execution, it emerged as a global blockbuster, raking in massive collections and setting new milestones for Tamil cinema….

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Rb Choudhary Death News: Veteran film producer RB Choudhary dies in fatal car crash near Udaipur; Rajinikanth mourns his friend’s loss | Tamil Movie News

Rb Choudhary Death News: Veteran film producer RB Choudhary dies in fatal car crash near Udaipur; Rajinikanth mourns his friend’s loss | Tamil Movie News

Veteran film producer RB Choudhary has died in a fatal car crash near Udaipur on Tuesday. Reports suggest the accident took place around 3 pm. The exact cause of the crash and the condition of others involved are yet to be confirmed.The producer, who founded the Super Good Films banner, had been a prominent name…

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Sugarcane price hike: Govt raises FRP to Rs 365/quintal for 2026-27, farmers to benefit from higher returns

Sugarcane price hike: Govt raises FRP to Rs 365/quintal for 2026-27, farmers to benefit from higher returns

The government has increased the fair and remunerative price (FRP) of sugarcane by Rs 10 to Rs 365 per quintal for the 2026-27 season beginning October, PTI reported.The decision was approved by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA), chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.“The FRP will be Rs 365/quintal for a basic recovery rate…

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‘Mukesh Khanna is too stubborn, he should reconsider Ranveer Singh as Shaktimaan,’ says actor Surendra Pal

‘Mukesh Khanna is too stubborn, he should reconsider Ranveer Singh as Shaktimaan,’ says actor Surendra Pal

Mukesh Khanna continues to stay relevant in public discourse, largely due to the enduring popularity of his superhero avatar in Shaktimaan. Adding to the conversation, veteran actor Surendra Pal, who shared screen space with him in both Shaktimaan and Mahabharat, recently reflected on their bond and professional journey together.In an interview with Sidharth Kannan, Surendra…

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‘Protecting Britishers is our top priority’: Keir Starmer reacts as hantavirus outbreak on Atlantic cruise kills three

‘Protecting Britishers is our top priority’: Keir Starmer reacts as hantavirus outbreak on Atlantic cruise kills three

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said his government is working closely with international partners to ensure the safety of British nationals aboard the stranded Antarctic expedition cruise MV Hondius, which has been hit by a suspected hantavirus outbreak.“My thoughts are with those affected by the hantavirus outbreak onboard the MV Hondius. We are working…

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‘Maskara’ song from ‘Main Vaapas Aaunga’ out: Netizens react to Sharvari and Vedang Raina’s chemistry and on-screen romance

‘Maskara’ song from ‘Main Vaapas Aaunga’ out: Netizens react to Sharvari and Vedang Raina’s chemistry and on-screen romance

Just in: The enchanting new track ‘Maskara’ from Imtiaz Ali’s upcoming film ‘Main Vaapas Aaunga’ features fresh talents Sharvari and Vedang Raina. Crafted by the legendary AR Rahman with thought-provoking lyrics from Irshad Kamil, early reactions are mixed—listeners are enchanted by Vedang’s singing, yet there are some opinions on the romantic pair’s dynamic and style….

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‘Making herself a laughing stock’: BJP flays Mamata Banerjee for refusing to resign after West Bengal poll loss

‘Making herself a laughing stock’: BJP flays Mamata Banerjee for refusing to resign after West Bengal poll loss

NEW DELHI: Bharatiya Janata Party questioned Mamata Banerjee’s “won’t resign” remark saying that she was free to approach the Supreme Court in case of any irregularities as alleged by the outgoing West Bengal CM. Banerjee accused the EC of colluding with the BJP after the saffron party won Bengal polls and refused to accept the…

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Pakistani man pleads guilty for human smuggling in US, charged ,000 to bring people on ‘dunki route’ for film work

Pakistani man pleads guilty for human smuggling in US, charged $40,000 to bring people on ‘dunki route’ for film work

A Pakistani man pleads guilty in the US for leading an international human smuggling organization. A Sialkot man pleaded guilty in a US court for leading an internatioinal human smuggling conspiracy that involved fake companies, fake visas and a ‘dunki’ route through Ecuador, Cuba, Colombia and then the US through the southern border. 49-year-old Abbas…

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When Michael Caine recalled Heath Ledger’s chilling Joker transformation for ‘The Dark Knight’: ‘I was terrified’

When Michael Caine recalled Heath Ledger’s chilling Joker transformation for ‘The Dark Knight’: ‘I was terrified’

Heath Ledger is remembered as one of cinema’s most talented and dedicated actors, known for his versatility across films like ‘Brokeback Mountain’, ‘Moonlight Mile’, and ‘A Knight’s Tale’. The Australian performer builds a reputation for fully immersing himself in his roles, pushing boundaries and challenging himself with complex characters. His commitment to his craft becomes…

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