‘I Might Settle There’: Sunny Deol Highlights the Strength of South Indian Cinema, Encourages Bollywood to Learn

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   Sunny Deol shared his thoughts on what Bollywood producers could learn from their South Indian counterparts during the trailer launch of his upcoming movie  Jaat . Directed by Gopichand Malineni, known for  Krack , and produced by Mythri Movie Makers, the studio behind the  Pushpa  franchise, the film is generating considerable buzz. Written by: Devansh Sharma New Delhi | March 24, 2025 | 17:39 IST At the trailer launch for  Jaat , Sunny Deol remarked, “North India has witnessed the strength of this hand, now it’s the turn of the South,” referring to his iconic character. Following the immense success of  Gadar 2  in 2023, Deol is now venturing into the South Indian film industry. He also discussed how Bollywood producers can gain insight from the way their South Indian counterparts approach filmmaking. He continued, “I hope Bollywood producers can learn from South filmmakers. Focus on making Hindi cinema, and then learn the art of filmmak...

Political Tensions Rise as Yogi Adityanath's Image Appears at Nepal's Royalist Rally

  Yogi Adityanath poster at former Nepal king Gyanendra Shah's rally

This political drama sounds straight out of a Netflix thriller — only this time, the plot thickens with a poster! Imagine this: Nepal’s former king, Gyanendra Shah, makes a grand comeback rally in Kathmandu, and amid the crowd, there's an unexpected guest — a larger-than-life image of Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath. Cue the gasps!

Supporters of Nepal's struggling PM, K P Sharma Oli, were quick to cry foul, accusing the rally of being influenced by "foreign hands." Pro-monarchy voices fired back, claiming the poster was nothing but a sneaky plant by the Oli camp. The rally organizers, meanwhile, swore they never sanctioned Yogi’s face to grace their banners — their instructions were simple: bring Nepal’s national flag and Gyanendra’s portrait, that’s it.

Adding fuel to the fire, former minister Dipak Gyawali hit back with a spicy rebuttal — “We’re not so desperate as to need a foreign face,” he shot back, taking a jab at Communist groups for flaunting Marx, Lenin, and Mao portraits at their meetings.

Looks like Nepal’s political landscape isn’t just turbulent — it’s turning into a full-on soap opera with twists, turns, and yes… a surprise cameo!

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