They call me the Big B of Bangalore. The B-word and I share a history of sorts.
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COVER STORY
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A Hollywood rom-com acting as a desi prem kahani. A bad Hollywood rom-com that won’t catch your interest even on Sunday afternoon TV.
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There’s a cloud over middle-class dreams of affordable homes
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The bitter duel between his family and companion spills out
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Our co-warrior against terror, Bangladesh must ferret out marked men
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The India-Bangladesh bonhomie is warmed by solid quid pro quo
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The Punjab and Haryana HC was indicted in a vigilance probe
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The Chandigarh judge’s case is curiouser for all its acquittals
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In this Youngistan of ours, the moolah’s with the middle-aged
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Urban Indians are turning mid-age crisis into mid-life opportunity
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A Hollywood rom-com acting as a desi prem kahani. A bad Hollywood rom-com that won’t catch your interest even on Sunday afternoon TV.
OTHER STORIES
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After playing the ideal mother in <i>Paa</i>, she is set to scorch the screen in <i>Ishqiya</i>
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The Big Fat Indian Litfest - and how Tina Brown could well be its official blurber. And, erm, Chetan Bhagat is there too.
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Genial flow of a fireside chat—easy, amiable explanations of the role of design in society.
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Literary low marks, yes. But Two States scores with a Bollywood-folksy style of painting middle-class India.
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When we went to the Shivpuri jungle in 1950, daaku Maan Singh was the great Robin Hood of India. He was a romantic figure...
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Komal saul, a rice meal without the cooking
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Author sued, his work read out of context
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On his new novel —Naipaul, Mayawati, Mala Singh ... and of course the new India
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Exclusive extracts from the much awaited first novel, <i>The Temple-Goers</i>: The world of Delhi’s power dinner.
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The ministry of personnel has shown a surprising lack of alacrity in prosecuting errant babus
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Ranji Trophy veteran Rahul Dravid talks about how things could improve in the premier competition.
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It cramps players, wastes talent. India’s domestic cricket needs a refit.
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AP’s nod to a rash of power projects spells doom for its ecology
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On his differences with Prachanda, the need to work with India, and his party’s blind anti-Indian nationalism.
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Top JNU professors oppose quotas in academic posts to “maintain quality”
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The new BJP president slowly makes his presence felt at the party’s headquarters.