On Sunday, Faisal Hussain, 29, opened fire in Toronto's vibrant Greektown neighbourhood, killing a 10-year-old girl and an 18-year-old woman. Thirteen people were also injured in the shooting, some with potentially life-altering injuries.
"I have suddenly become the talk of the town," Alok Nath laughs.
Sabyasachi Satpathy reveals what the Bigg Boss 11 housemates are really like.
Khandaani Shafakhana neither enlightens nor entertains, feels Sukanya Verma.
A mechanical engineer - Upendra Nath Bramhachari - has applied for the post of head coach of the Indian team with an aim to 'drag an arrogant Virat Kohli on right track'.
Google really wanted to know why people kept asking the Assistant to marry them, says Amrita Singh.
Just how well do Ajay Devgn's comedies fare?
Sukanya Verma hails Bollywood's memorable bus moments.
'I always gave my best, even to what people considered to be trashy content.'
The singer reveals how she lost those extra pounds.
Russell Peters sets up $20,000 Scholarship at alma mater.
The judges for the 2009 Man Booker Prize for Fiction announced the shortlisted books for this year's prize. The shortlisted titles are The Children's Book by A S Byatt (Random House, Chatto and Windus), Summertime by J M Coetzee (Random House, Harvill Secker), The Quickening Maze by Adam Fould (Random House, Jonathan Cape), Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel (HarperCollins, Fourth Estate), The Glass Room by Simon Mawer (Little, Brown) and The Little Stranger by Sarah Waters (Little,
Anusha Rizvi, former NDTV producer talks about her directorial debut with Peepli Live! produced by Aamir Khan.
Mira Nair on helming the biopic on aviation pioneer Amelia Earhart.
Is there trouble brewing in Sonia Gandhi's paradise? And is there a clash of personalities between the two top leaders in the government, an echo of which is being heard in the corridors of the United Progressive Alliance?
Chhichhore offers too good a time to pay attention to its faults, feels Sukanya Verma.
Johnny Lever and Asrani get candid about De Dana Dhan and their love for its director Priyadarshan.
Aviation pioneer's biopic is Indian-origin director's first big Hollywood film.
Meet the actor, who made the character in Rajkumar Hirani's blockbuster hilarious.
According to a survey, 94 per cent of job hunters risked missing out on vacancies through poor spelling, grammar or presentation on their CVs. One such example: 'I'm a pubic relations officer'.
A chat with Rajendra Prasad, the actor who plays a gun-toting cowboy in this year's promising comedy, Quick Gun Murugun.
Debutant Anil Senior's Dil Kabaddi is pretty much a hand-me-down version of Woody Allen's much-admired take on infidelity, Husbands and Wives. A fun ride.
With Satish Kaushik's Juno remake around the corner, here's a look at different kinds of Bollywood pregnancy plot-twists.
Rajneesh Gupta picks fun sledging through the decades.
The hits and misses of the week.
Let us know the 10 things that would make it to your priority list if you had only three years of life left. The most interesting entries will win prizes from rediff Books, so hurry and mail in your ideas today!
Ronda Rousey thrashes body shamers calling her 'masculine'.
The smile stays on long after you've left the theatre, says Sukanya Verma.
Cast member Cyrus Broacha and director Kunal Vijaykar talks about their new film Fruit n Nut and much more.
Jimmy Moses is all set to add some spicy tadka in Comedy Circus 3.
A look at Mira Nair's take of the aviation pioneer's biopic starring Hilary Swank, Richard Gere and Ewan McGregor.
Director Sujoy Ghosh talks about his upcoming film Aladin.
Aseem Chhabra lists the best non-Hindi language films he watched in 2020, with the hope that they will have a wider reach in the new year.
Ambassador Natarajan Krishnan and Ambassador Shankar Bajpai helped shape Indian foreign policy at a glorious, but difficult, time in history, recalls Ambassador T P Sreenivasan.
The additional scenes and gags surely enhance the pleasure, making this as one of the must-see guilty pleasures of the season.
The regulatory system in India has become a farce, and needs to be either scrapped, or thoroughly revamped. The way the law has been formulated, Trai is a toothless tiger -- it works well if the ministry chooses to be gentlemanly and takes the recommendations seriously; if the ministry chooses to assert its authority, there's little Trai can do, says Sunil Jain.