'MeToo is about people who were exploited, and who are now trying to come out and say things out loud.'
Aseem Chhabra introduces us to the best of Berlinale.
If the government thinks that they will be able to control it, then they're either fooling themselves or have no clue about the power of viral media.
Mental health and life coach Anu Krishna tells you how to take charge of your life.
To truly love your woman, you must know how her body functions.
Mission Mangal has its heart in place, feels Sukanya Verma.
In her weekly column, mental health guru Anu Krishna offers advice on how to take charge of your life.
In Mehreen Amin's gym, Kashmiri girls who earlier had no access to female trainers, are 'gymming' their way to fitness.
'We feel thrust into a motion picture that has all the makings of a carnival but no real fireworks,' Sreehari Nair notes after watching Malik.
Here's your weekly digest of the most weird, true and funny news from the across the globe.
2 States, for all its modern touches, is a very regressive film, deeply rooted in old fashioned values that surely make no sense in the India of 2014.
In her weekly column, mental health guru Anu Krishna offers advice on how to take charge of your life.
'I always felt that Basu Chatterjee was a kind, gentle, man who truly believed that in directing films like Chhoti Si Baat, he was impacting our lives,' remembers Aseem Chhabra. 'He seemed to be on a mission to make us believe that the world could be a better place.'
'I did not find anything atrociously out of place about the depiction of the IAF's image,' says Group Captain Murli Menon (retd).
Summary of sports events and persons who made news on Thursday
'Sci-fi is a very expensive genre; I need to become a much bigger star for people to invest that kind of money in me.' 1920 London actor Sharman Joshi talks about his favourite genre, and why he won't be doing it anytime soon.
Bisexuals make better lovers, fathers and partners, a new study has revealed.
Here's your weekly digest of the craziest stories from around the world.
"Registering police cases against me is an infringement on my fundamental right to freedom of expression mandated by Constitution," he wrote in a series of tweets.
'I just have to go on set with conviction and honesty and portray the characters. Whether it is the consumption of alcohol or premarital sex or bad language or whatever that my character indulges in the film, are these the things I stand for? I don't know.'
'Mothers as characters may have the same problems as they had years ago.' 'But what's refreshing is how they are becoming more accepting towards the changes in society.'
'Whether it is Mulk or Article 15, I am talking about love and against hatred.'
Hindi cinema has not just explored various instances of brute force, but often glorified its misogyny.
Mind/life coach, NLP trainer and Mental Health Guru Anu Krishna encourages you to talk about your problems and offers solutions.
The Congress chief hit out at the BJP's ideological mentor, the RSS, alleging that it was a "male chauvinist organisation" and did not have women in it, thus cannot do what the Congress can for women.
The discrimination against girls reflects "mental illness", says PM.
'I want to something drastically different, where people will get the shock of their lives. But that has not happened yet.'
Anup Patel tells Chaya Babu that he is bound by a sense of duty to help the country of his birth fight the menace of human trafficking
Sukanya Verma lists significant memories in our 1996 recap.
'In an era defined by vengeful anger, he was a star who sang and danced while most others hollered and hectored on the big screen,' remembers Saibal Chatterjee.
A group of protesters on Saturday marched to the office of a Malayalam vernacular magazine in New Delhi raising slogans, claiming that a novel serialised in the publication defamed Hindu women and the Brahmin community.
'People may frown upon things like role play or the fact that the father is talking to his daughter about sex. But slowly, shows like this will shift the conversation to our homes.'
Confined to their rooms and small houses, they are reminded of the time when they were subjected to physical and sexual torture.
Aseem Chhabra lists 10 of his favourite films that played in various sections at the 74th Cannes Film Festival.
'Now with many itchy-fingered ex-bosses being raked through the mud, their marriages ruined, their careers trashed, their finances hit, the inclination of many male hiring managers will be to hire fewer women,' believes Rajeev Srinivasan.
'Basuda welcomed viewers into a world that was instantly familiar and comfortable,' observes Sukanya Verma.
Did I cry? Yes. Did I smile? Yes. Did I get goosebumps? YES! Do I want to watch it again? Of course! Do I believe this is the end? Not quite. Sukanya Verma gets emotional watching Avengers Endgame.
'You have to sell yourself as a product in Bollywood.'
But this project is changing that -- one public artwork at a time.