'The past few weeks in England will be remembered as much for Kohli's skilled conquest of his English demons as they will be for his dreadful reading of pitches, curious selection choices, sporadic tactical lapses, and overall inability to help his side cross the finish line,' notes Dhruv Munjal.
The scorching summer season is approaching, and it brings along several skin problems. Are you geared up to fix them yet?
'My simple instruction to every IBM salesperson is, "When you go to the customer, use less of this (he points to his mouth) and more of this (ear)".' 'Talk less, listen more",' Karan Bajwa tells Raghu Krishnan.
'How much fashion she used to do.' 'Now all gone in the water!' 'All good things have to come to an end.' 'And all bad things have come to an end.'
'You don't need a godfather to protect you from dangers of Bollywood because nobody will.'
Model Prabhjot Singh shares his fitness mantras.
Harnoor Channi-Tiwary visits the spanking new restaurant and returns impressed.
A round-up of our favourite photographs from the week gone by
In India post the success of masala and green bonds on the LSE, Nikhil Rathi tells Rajesh Bhayani that there are many international investors interested in buying into the India story
Singer Kavita Seth tells us what kind of songs she loves to sing -- and then even sings them!
Mini Ribeiro tells us where to go salad hopping.
How did the Kwid become an Indian success story?
A daughter's ode to her mother.
Just as Billa-Ranga had become symbols of everything that was wrong with the system many years ago, Nestle is now portrayed as the wickedest of the wicked. Every known food crime in India is now attributed to Nestle including deliberately increasing the level of lead in their noodles, as well as deliberately destroying the health of millions. That's not only unfair, it's downright idiotic, says Rajeev Srinivasan.
'If I am able to inspire at least one student in this country with the Spirit of India run, I will feel that my purpose is served.'
Uncooked, fresh and unprocessed -- that's the diet a number of people are swearing by
In Delhi, the poor are pitted against the middle class, with the former led by Arvind Kejriwal and the latter by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.