Thursday, September 19, 2013

President in the doghouse

Why Barack Obama is fast losing the faith of Americans

"Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time. We are the ones we've been waiting for. We are the change that we seek,” was one of the trademark Obama promises on being a different animal in the corridors of Capitol Hill. He had been a socialist, a peace lover, sympathetic to the cause of Palestine, terminating the war in Iraq – and that’s being different. And a rising applause of appreciation he received too from the American electorate to crown him once more to the most coveted throne in the world with a thumping victory in last presidential election.

However, things have been going awry in recent times for US President Barack Obama. The personal data collection overdrive, which entails tapping phone calls and social media sites, has met with a response that is loaded with angst and outrage of the Americans. Obama's nosing around with the activities of journalists is being perceived to be in direct conflict with what America has stood for through out its history and particularly during the Cold War, i.e. freedom of the press and the people at large. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) targeting of conservative groups like the ‘Tea Party’, which has sought tax-exempt status from the federal government, has come to be seen as unnecessary harassment. Also, there is a deep resentment as well as apprehension among Americans that the country’s population will swell by 30 million within the next decade and a half because of the amnesty that Obama has planned for foreign workers. The gun control measures that he promised, too,  have ruffled quite a few feathers – and without large public support looks destined to die.

And lastly, the US President’s tax cuts promises that were envisioned as a major drift from the Bush era tax structure (drawing down the rate to 28% and setting the property tax rate at 45% for property valued more than $3.5 million) is all but fated to sink into oblivion.

There are also accusations from various quarters that President Obama is fast losing the faith of American people and is looked upon with suspicion and incredulity. The catalyst fomenting this new perception has been his failure to reverse the trend of secrecy, which was started by former president George Bush and his lieutenant Dick Cheney. The culture of secrecy has in fact aggravated during Obama’s time as is evident by the rapid increase in FOIA lawsuits that challenges federal government’s withholding. The number of FOIA suits in 2011 increased by a gigantic 111% at State Department, 50% at Justice Department,  43% at CIA, 22% at Defense Department, and 15% at Home Security.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
ExecutiveMBA

Monday, September 9, 2013

Jungle Nights: Episode 1

Sshhsshhhhh!” Silence, as thick as the heat of the night settled in as we followed in single file. Runner soled shoes walked along silently ahead of and behind me. But I walked with my eyes peeled to the ground for my feet clad in sandals were vulnerable to the attentions of the. Saw-scaled viper. “Hemotoxic venom... If it bites your feet, the pain would be so bad you’d want to hack your foot off... But worse than that is the hideous disfigurement and you will definitely lose more than a half your toes..”, Mithun had said,  “so remember to follow in my footsteps... Literally”

Ten of us picked our way along the brambles, streams and loose rock, each foot competing with nineteen others to see which would fall the lightest. I was with a group of wildlife enthusiasts who dedicated a fair share of their days to rescue wild animals that stray into human habitation. Like scalps hanging from the belt of a brave, these lads would trade tales of rescues with a hint of pride mixed with the satisfaction that only saving lives can bring. We were out hunting by the light of a full moon… hunting for a glimpse of a predator.

I had spent a long hot May afternoon looking for signs of life in the Sariska Tiger Reserve and as expected, I didn’t see too much. It was just too hot for anything to be about. Which is why common sense begs the question… why would the forest department insist on safari  jeeps entering the park before four and exiting before six even in the white heat of summer? Anyway, what’s the point in charging at windmills, and so I set off on a foot safari with the wildlife rescuers I met in a canteen in the forest department’s office.  Mithun Sharma, one of the lieutenants of the group joined me in my car, regaling me with his adventures with pythons, crocodiles and hyenas, as we headed off for a rivulet about 25 kilometres away that they said was famous for muggers, marsh crocodiles. Suddenly, the quiet group grew even quieter as our leader, a wildlifer and an old acquaintance, Chinmaya Macmaseey, raised his hand and strained to catch a sound. And then he pointed in the direction of a large body of still water…  and then we all heard it. It sounded like a cricket’s drumming mixed with a frog’s croak..  “remember this sound… it is the sound of new life… baby crocodiles!”, whispered Mithun with a smile.

The croaks seemed to have stirred something deep within. We stood there listening for a fair while, trying to figure out how many of them there might be and then, as if on a silent command, five flashlights came out in unison.  Powerful beams chased the sound and little halos lit up the lake. On cue, like new stars on the night sky, bright orange dots twinkled back at us from the surface of the lake… crocs. Excited, we all shuffled forward for a better look and tried to gauge the size of the reptiles from the gap between the eyes.  “That one’s about nine feet at least” said one.  “Sub-adult, six feet long I think”, said another. “That’s a big one…not an inch less than 12 feet”, said Chinmaya, pointing his flashlight at a pair of eyes gliding towards us. We moved back a few respectful feet and the eyes slowed to a stop. A slow restrained collective sigh escaped from our lips. Our hearts too slowed down with our breaths and that’s when Chinmaya said “I smell something…” He sniffed around like a hound on a hunt and Mithun followed… My nostrils were still full of the smell of slow water, algae and fish. I could see little fish fry wriggling between the beams of light. I switched off the light and tried to focus my energies on the odours  floating around me. My senses dulled by smoke-filled cities seemed to be letting me down.

And then the wind changed. Like a pungent spear, the smell of death flooded my being. I turned and followed the stench. Chinmaya and Mithun were walking ahead of me. Their noses and their lights led us to a large bush where bluebottle flies were swirling like revelers at a rave. There was a big hole under the bush. Mithun and Chinmaya jumped in. The stench was overpowering my senses. But I was curious and if it wouldn’t kill Chinmaya and Mithun, it wouldn’t kill me either, I reasoned. The others stayed back but I jumped in after the duo. The wind changed and we lost the aroma for a while and then it came right back, with greater force… The light bounced off something black and caught our eye. We moved in towards the object, three streams of light trying to wrest the size and shape of death from the darkness. And then we saw it…. A large blue bull carcass! “Must be the 12 footer’s kill”, said Mithun. But then he examined the nilgai’s legs and realized it didn’t have the tell-tale bitemarks. I saw the carcass’ flanks and saw the skin lying like a flap over the ribs. All the organs and flesh had been eaten from the back. This looked like a big cat’s kill and I said so. The others nodded. The city slicker had earned the respect of the wild ones. Mithun and Chinmaya examined the neck and mouth. “A leopard!” they both concurred. Almost on cue, the sawing call of a leopard rent through the quiet of the night.

We clambered out of the hole and continued our walk along the banks of the stream, flashlights tucked away and just the warm glow of a full moon guiding our path. “This place is wild!” I exclaimed. Mithun fished out his phone and flicked the screen with his fingers till he came upon the picture folder. Close ups of large crocodiles basking in the sun; magnificent specimens clambering out of the water; large gaping jaws glinting in the sun; water birds, egrets,  wooly necked storks, pied kingfishers…. This place was full of birdlife and crocs. “If you come here at dawn, you’ll see them all”, said Mithun. “I go and do my puja at dawn in a temple nearby and then I often come and sit here… It is beautiful”. And so much of wildlife, all right here… “Is this place protected?” I asked. Mithun smiled a wry smile and shook his head. “The authorities seem to be in denial. This place has more crocodiles than either the sanctuary or the much more well known Siliserh lake. But until now, no one has acknowledged or recognized the wealth in this buffer forest. We are right behind Silserh’s Lake Palace, and ideally this should be a protected zone but if you come here in the morning you will see empty beer cans, bottles of alcohol and plastic bags strewn around the place. People take their bikes and ride them right up to the banks.” But don’t the crocs attack encroachers, I wondered aloud. “Our crocs are like cows. They are as timid as our leopards are aggressive… such is the nature of Sariska”, said Chinmay. “Usually they just slink away at the slightest disturbance.”

“We have given a proposal for a reptile park in this area” added Mithun.  “A venom bank and a tourist interpretation centre would help us sustain the facility. Most importantly, it will help enrich the area as we have been rescued animals in this zone. Sound biodiversity and protection from human encroachment will ensure the wildlife stays here and doesn’t wander into neighbouring villages and towns. More importantly, it will allow wildlife to breed and grow, for most species here are red lined on the endangered species list. But the authorities are worried about the fact that if they acknowledge the wealth of this are they will have to invest resources in protecting the area. They will have to be responsible and accountable. Going by past records, everyone in Sariska understandably enough shies away from extra responsibilities”.

“There’s a new management in place and we are very hopeful..”,  added Chinmay.

For the sake of these crusaders, for the sake of the snakes and those bitten by them, for the sake of the crocodiles and leopards and hyenas and all the bright and beautiful things they hunt and eat, I hope this ‘new management’ sees the light  and looks at this little eden as an opportunity to redeem themselves instead of running away from an opportunity to wash away the past and build a new tomorrow. Sariska and the forests around it are blessed with riches that are still being unearthed. Every few years, a new species, considered extinct locally or never seen before announces itself to the world from the shadows  of this forest. Who knows what other jewels lie hidden in this precious habitat.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
IIPM’s Management Consulting Arm-Planman Consulting
Professor Arindam Chaudhuri – A Man For The Society….
IIPM: Indian Institute of Planning and Management
IIPM makes business education truly global
Management Guru Arindam Chaudhuri
Rajita Chaudhuri-The New Age Woman

ExecutiveMBA

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Movie Review: Shootout at Wadala

Guns and virile poses

Bollywood gangster flicks are a dime a dozen these days. Only a handful of them manage to stand out. Shootout at Wadala nearly does. But for all its stylistic vim and vigour, it falls prey to a propensity for excess.

The film delivers an overwhelming surfeit of everything – blood-soaked action sequences, glorified machismo, no-holds-barred cuss words, and raunchy item numbers.

As the cops and gangsters gun for each other with bullets and punch lines all through its two-and-a-half-hour runtime, Shootout at Wadala throws in as many as three item songs, including one by Sunny Leone, who, not surprisingly, leaves nothing to the imagination.

Overload is the name of the game for co-writer and director Sanjay Gupta, so he gives you two more of the same musical routine post-interval, with Priyanka Chopra (Babli badmaash) and Sophie Chaudhry (Aala re aala) doing the honours.

But all said and done, the making of Shootout at Wadala, which traces the rise and fall of mafia don Manya Surve, is marked by a degree of visual and technical panache that is difficult to miss.

Aided by his cinematographers (Sameer Arya and Sanjay F Gupta) and production designer (Sunil Nigvekar), the director recreates the 1970s and 1980s Mumbai ambience to great effect.

A large part of Surve’s story – that of a young man who was sucked into a life of crime when he was wrongfully jailed for a murder he did not commit – comes from a journalistic account of the period (Dongri to Dubai: Six Decades of the Mumbai Mafia) by S. Hussain Zaidi.

The heightened fictionalization of the life and times of the most dreaded of Mumbai’s crime lords gives Shootout at Wadala a dramatic edge that might have had a greater impact had the director opted for more restraint.

A few of the performances are outstanding. Anil Kapoor, playing ACP Afaaque Bhagran, Surve’s tormentor, is consistently effective, while Manoj Bajpayee wades into the character of Zubair Imtiaz Haskar (modelled on Dawood Ibrahim) with visible delight. Unfortunately, neither Kapoor nor Bajpayee is the fulcrum of the film.

That onerous role is apportioned to John Abraham. He has a wide range of emotions to convey as he interprets the larger-than-life figure of Manya Surve from his college days in the early 1970s all the way up to his death in a police encounter in 1982. It is too tall an order for the actor. While he puts in a game effort, he isn’t quite able to evoke the requisite air of menace.              

Shootout in Wadala certainly isn’t in the league of Parinda or Satya, but it is no worse than the film that it is a follow-up to, Shootout at Lokhandwala. Notwithstanding its excessive reliance on violence and expletives, it is watchable for the most part.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

B-town's blue-eyed boy

Ranbir Kapoor is not only a star girls drool over, but is also an actor whom critics wait to watch. Pratishtha Malhotra chatted up with this superstar in the making who was recently in Delhi for a charity football match of Actors Vs Cricketers about his past successes and his next big flick with his ex flame...

You’ve been taking out a lot of time to practise for the All Stars Football Club. Is football your favourite sport?

Yes, football is my favourite sport. I love it. In fact, I think everyone should play at least one sport. I have been playing the game since my school days. I carry a football with me all the time and play with my crew. I feel that the infrastructure in Delhi is much better than that in Mumbai. There isn't any good football stadium there. I wish the authorities take up the issue and give the city a world class football stadium.

Who do you think is the toughest competitor in the match?

I think Dhoni, Virat and Suresh Raina.

Who is the best footballer in the Actors’ team?

 I’d like to believe it’s me! (smiles). There is Leander Paes, Arjun Kapoor, Marc Robinson, Dino Morea, Shabbir Ahluwalia, Karan Waahi Varun Dhawan and Aditya Roy Kapoor. All these guys are very good.

In your upcoming film, Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani (YJHD), your character says that one should get married and have kids at 30. Do you personally propagate this thought?
I am also 30 and I am not married yet! My milk teeth have also not fallen yet (winks). I think we should not give deadlines to marriage. Jab pyaar hota hai toh shaadi hogi, jab shaadi hogi toh fir bachche honge (When one falls in love, marriage will happen and so will kids). So I think everything is a natural progression. This is I think Ayan’s (Director of YJHD) teaching to me. When I got to know him four years back, I was in a hurry to get married and have children and he used to tell me to relax. He’d tell me ‘you’re just starting out your career. Meet people, live your life a bit and then get married.’ And because I listen to him so much, I am also saying this dialogue in the film. I don’t know if it’s the right thinking or not. Agar chaar saal baad bache nahi hue mere toh main isko pakdunga! (If after four years, I don’t have kids, I’ll catch hold of him). Until now, things are all going fine…

Your character is called Bunny. And even in your other films, you’ve never had the typical ‘hero-like’ names… there was Jordan, Barfi and now Bunny… Do you think it makes the character distinct?
 The directors and writers think of the name for my character. I don’t interfere and say I want something like Barfi, and then Ladoo and then Jhandubaam etc (smiles). But I think I am lucky. Names like these, which are a little quirky stay with you and the fact that you can recall my name is good. Bunny is nice too. It’s a cute name. Perhaps Ayan thinks that my teeth look like Bugs Bunny’s teeth. I have nothing to do with this.

This is your second film with Deepika Padukone and during Bachna Ae Haseeno you two were dating. Were there any awkward moments during the shoot of Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani? Did you notice any changes in her as an actor?
Not at all! When Deepika and I worked together about four years back, it was our second film. We were very new and were still finding ourselves as actors. Today when I work with Deepika, I am really amazed and can proudly say that she’s fantastic in the film. I’ve seen her grow as an actor with her experience and her intelligence. It’s amazing to work with co-stars like her because it only makes your job easier. When you have such a pretty actress with such a pretty smile, you automatically can act like you’re in love. It’s not hard to act being in love with her. And I don’t think there was any awkwardness. We both were really passionate about this film and we both are really nervous for Ayan. He’s a friend and he’s worked so hard on this film so we thought we should just bring out the best of our talent in the movie. And well, we’ll blame it on Ayan if it doesn’t work (winks).

You must be very hopeful of Deepika and you being able to mesmerise the audience one more time like you guys did in Bachna Ae Haseeno…
The right answer is that the chemistry of two characters depends on how the characters are written, on the scenes in the film and what they share. What Deepika and I can bring is hardwork and honesty to the script. And, well, Deepika and I share a great chemistry, biology and physics and hopefully that translates on screen (smiles). So when you see it, you guys will feel the love because the simple philosophy of this film is that asli khushi vo hoti hai jo batai ja sake (Real happiness is that which can be expressed). The film is about friendship, love and about growing up. It’s about all the things that all of us somewhere have seen in our lives.

Is it easier to act a role like you have in Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani after doing tough roles like in Barfi and Rockstar?
 I think those films are far easier than a Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani because in those films you have a character and you know how he talks and walks and what kind of clothes he wears. But when you play urban characters like in YJHD, it somewhere reflects your own personality. It’s very hard to actually bring that character on screen because you have to be real, be yourself and you have to be spontaneous. You don’t have any crutches for support. I think YJHD has been a really hard character for me…I still haven’t understood that character; only Ayan has. But I enjoyed myself. You know, sometimes it’s good to break away and play characters like this.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
IIPM’s Management Consulting Arm-Planman Consulting
Professor Arindam Chaudhuri – A Man For The Society….
IIPM: Indian Institute of Planning and Management
IIPM makes business education truly global
Management Guru Arindam Chaudhuri
Rajita Chaudhuri-The New Age Woman

ExecutiveMBA

Monday, June 3, 2013

What a Budget sirji

No new taxes have come as a big relief to the middle class reeling under pressure 

The UP Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav presented his second budget – full of hope and optimism, and laid the foundations of future growth that UP aspires for under the leadership of its youngest-ever CM.

No new taxes have been levied in the state budget giving a much-deserved respite to the middle class that has otherwise been reeling under the pressure of rising energy and food prices.

The budget has managed to limit the fiscal deficit and to notionally bring it down to 2.94 percent - well within the responsible limit of 3 percent. It is targeted to go down further. This increase in the budget size of 10.5 percent to Rs 2,21,201.19 crore has been made possible without increasing the incidence of taxation through targeted efficiencies and is expected to be achieved through growth of 20 percent in the collection of trade tax, excise, vehicle tax, and 17 percent in in stamp duty.

The budget is focused on the key factors of mahilayein, gareeb, nujavan, kisan and Musalman. The CM in his budget speech stressed on the importance of overall development of UP and the need to transform the state into ‘uttam pradesh’. He proposes to achieve it by growing at a rate of 8.5 percent .

The budget extended the educational incentives offered in the first edition to women. The state government has decided to provide free education upto graduation for women. This addresses the urgent need to educate and empower women for societal transformation. For education, many new colleges, medical colleges, engineering colleges and agricultural universities have been announced. Forty-one districts will get new Model Rajkiya Sahsiksha Mahavidyalayas (degree colleges). Siddhartanagar, and Allahabad, the yesteryear’s ‘Oxford of the East’ get a new university each. An IIIT is planned in PPP mode and the Gorakhpur Engineering College will be strengthened on the lines of IIT Roorkee. A total of 21 new ITI’s are also proposed. New centres of excellence will come up in established universities. A new Sports University will come up in Aligarh.The total outlay for education is about Rs.32,886 crore, which is almost one-sixth of the total budget outlay.

In India, statistical data establishes significant complementarity between public and private investment, also witnessed in other economies like US, UK, Japan for example. Thus capital investment by the government must be emphasized. The CM has laid great emphasis on capital expenditure by making a budgetary allocation of Rs 53,308 crore. This represents a 21.5 percent increase over the previous year and is the highest ever such jump in UP. Similarly investment earmarked for infrastructure is proposed to shoot up by 25 percent. This trend is best represented in the fact that Plan budget is proposed to grow at 19 percent vis-à-vis non Plan budget growth capped at 7.1 percent.

A significant portion of this expenditure is allocated to 219 newly-launched schemes, besides increasing investments in critical infrastructure like security, water, roads and bridges. Money has also been allocated for proposed four-lane connectivity of all district headquarters to the capital, Lucknow, while strengthening the within village road network. Many PPP infrastructure projects are purported to kick start investment revival through its forward and backward linkages with other industry sectors.

An important highlight of this budget has been the green signal to the Lucknow Metro Project – an Urban Rapid Mass Transportation System – that has the people of Lucknow and the state very excited. It is proposed to be funded via a series of innovative models like increased FSI and FAR charges on land sold in its vicinity, commercialization of land resource, identifying land banks and generating revenue to be kept aside for the metro project. Other support will also be sought as necessary.  A SPV will be floated for the project.

Infrastructure seemed to be the flavour of the day. The budget, apart from Metro, also laid out schemes for integrated village development (Lohiya Grams), housing for the poor, four 4-lane state highway projects, six 4-lane state highways, construction of 259 new bridges, a northern peripheral road in Ghaziabad, creation of infrastructure in panchayat areas and development of new airports. Another ambitious infrastructure project connecting Lucknow to Agra with a green field eight-way expressway was also announced. This would connect with the Agra-Noida Yamuna expressway, thus bringing Lucknow and Delhi closer.

Read more.....

Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
IIPM’s Management Consulting Arm-Planman Consulting
Professor Arindam Chaudhuri – A Man For The Society….
IIPM: Indian Institute of Planning and Management
IIPM makes business education truly global
Management Guru Arindam Chaudhuri
Rajita Chaudhuri-The New Age Woman

ExecutiveMBA

Friday, May 31, 2013

Diplomatic Ransom

India’s Constitution forbids state governments to meddle in foreign affairs

Recently the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government was stupefied when old ally Dravida Munnettra Kazhagam (DMK) asked its five ministers to resign from the Union government remonstrating the Indian government’s reluctance to admonish Sri Lanka over its alleged ‘genocide’ against its minority Tamil population. This hard line DMK stance was fueled partly by a film by Callum Macrae called ‘No Fire Zone: The Killing Fields of Sri Lanka’, which was shown during the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) meeting in Geneva on March 1 this year. This film depicts horrific atrocities committed by the Sri Lankan soldiers on Tamils. This resulted in a US-sponsored resolution which holds the Sri Lankan Army guilty of war excesses resulting in the deaths of 40,000 civilians.

It placed India in a quandary. Last year New Delhi had voted against Sri Lanka at Geneva in a non-binding resolution. This had left the Lankans aghast. The reasons for their disappointment are not too difficult to fathom. India had provided crucial intelligence inputs to the Lankans to end their three-decade war against the LTTE. This victory against the Tamil Tigers would not have possible without India’s tacit approval and strategic support.

Regional parties like the DMK have been making deafening noises in the Parliament and Tamil Nadu Assembly demanding that India openly condemn the ‘genocide’ in Sri Lanka. Such a posture by India would be perceived as undue interference in the ‘internal matters’ of Sri Lanka. Colombo may end up being firmly in the Chinese camp. The signs are ominous and New Delhi simply cannot afford more hostility in the region than what already exists.

Sri Lanka has virtually given China control over the Hambantota region in the southern part of the country. China is in the process of developing a port there, which would augment its ‘String of Pearls’ strategy which seeks to fortify the Chinese sea lines of communication extending from the Chinese mainland to Port Sudan. This port along with the Chinese ports in Chittagong (Bangladesh), Gwadar (Pakistan) and Marao (Maldives) effectively surround India. Sri Lanka has allowed India to set up a consulate in Hambantota to observe the Chinese. They may not be as accommodating if India continues to cast aspersions on them in international forums.

Regional parties have a penchant for meddling in foreign policy issues. India’s relationship with Bangladesh is another case in point. The issue of water sharing, especially over the Teesta River has always been contentious. A new bilateral treaty (Teesta River Waters Agreement) was proposed which entailed an equal allocation of the Teesta River. This was to be ratified in September, 2011, when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited Dhaka. However the treaty did not materialize as the Trinamool Congress (TMC) opposed it. West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Bannerjee even declined to accompany the Prime Minister to Dhaka. This has put a severe strain on our relationship with Bangladesh. It should be considered a painful setback considering that the Sheikh Hasina government in Bangladesh has always been a well wisher and a staunch ally of India. This advantage should not be squandered, especially in a South Asian neighbourhood where India lacks reliable allies and its foreign policy is often perceived as being impertinent.

 The Sir Creek issue can be cited as another example of regional interests unduly influencing foreign policy. The dispute lies in the interpretation of the maritime boundary line between India and Pakistan on Sir Creek, a 96-km water body that empties out into the Arabian Sea from the Rann of Kutch. Last year India and Pakistan came very close to signing an agreement to resolve this dispute, till Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi threw a spanner in the works. He stated that it would amount to a ‘sell out’ to Pakistan and demanded that the agreement be put on the back burner. And that is where it went.

Regional parties have every right to put forth their views on foreign policy. Involvement of regional governments in foreign policy is a global phenomenon and has been defined as ‘constituent diplomacy’ by American scholar John Kincaid. While it is true that regional governments and parties need to be consulted and their feedback be welcomed, they should refrain from meddling in foreign policy for populist reasons.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
2012 : DNA National B-School Survey 2012
Ranked 1st in International Exposure (ahead of all the IIMs)
Ranked 6th Overall

Zee Business Best B-School Survey 2012
Prof. Arindam Chaudhuri’s Session at IMA Indore
IIPM IN FINANCIAL TIMES, UK. FEATURE OF THE WEEK
IIPM strong hold on Placement : 10000 Students Placed in last 5 year
BBA Management Education

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Jeckyll and Hyde shades of Hooda...

Murder 1 and Murder 2 had been a hit at the box office. Did you feel any kind of pressure on you because of this?
It is my good luck that I got to do this film. This film is about modern-day relationships defined by power, fame, money and lust; but mostly by love. Murder is a brand name in itself. It has created stars. It has always dealt with modern issues. There is love, lust and sex in all relationships, but Murder 3 is beyond these things. It is not only about erotica. It is a fantastic story, explained well. The first two films were successful. It’s my job to act and I only concentrated in delivering good stuff.

How was it working with a first-time director Vishesh Bhatt and your co-stars Aditi Rao Hydari and Sara Loren?
Vishesh handled the film amazingly. It is his first, but didn’t look like it. He studied in New York and had a clear idea about what he wanted. He is the quietest of the Bhatts and is sorted. Also, it was nice working with the lead actresses. I had the benefit of being the eye-candy with them fighting over me! (Laughs)

The Murder series has also been very bold in terms of the scenes it has had and these days, Bollywood is being blamed for objectifying women.  What do you have to say about this?

I don’t think cinema should be blamed anyway. The problems that women face are socio-cultural. Men who treat women like shit and are biased should be blamed. Not films. The purpose of films is entertainment.

What are your upcoming projects?
I have a lot to do this year. I have a film with Imtiaz Ali and Alia Bhatt. It’s called Highway. The shooting has not started yet though. There’s another film I’m doing called Kick. It’s by Sajid Nadiawala. It also features Salman Khan. Bombay Talkies is again another one. It is an anthology consisting four short films. I am in one of them with Rani Mukerji.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
IIPM’s Management Consulting Arm-Planman Consulting
Professor Arindam Chaudhuri – A Man For The Society….
IIPM: Indian Institute of Planning and Management
IIPM makes business education truly global
Management Guru Arindam Chaudhuri
Rajita Chaudhuri-The New Age Woman

ExecutiveMBA