The couple making headlines all the time, yes, none other than Yasir Hussain and Iqra Aziz are up to something again. They are taking the ‘power couple’ notion to a whole new level by being each other’s muses. The husband, Yasir Hussain directs and the wife, Iqra Aziz acts! Are you excited to see how this plays out?
Yasir Hussain has had several hits to his name, all of which have made him a super successful actor. However, now the actor is dabbling into the world of directing too! He is directing a murder mystery drama by the name ‘Aik Thi Laila’.
Sources suggest for now that the show will follow a girl named Laila, who goes missing. Instead of catching the culprit, many including her ex-fiancé, begin to character assassinate her by accusing her of eloping. These people also become suspects in the case of her disappearance. The story also further goes on to unravel what really happened to Laila. They follow how she had to go through a long route of betrayals. The thematic focus of the drama is how it is easier for society to point fingers at women as opposed to providing them safety. Only when the body of Laila is discovered does everybody come to their senses and realize how they wronged the girl.
Starring Iqra Aziz
Iqra Aziz is definitely not here because she’s the director’s significant other. The woman has proven her merit by delivering successful dramas. Her work in Suno Chanda and Ranjha Ranjha Kardi stole hearts and made her a darling in the entertainment industry. We’re sure there was no one better to cast for this special role!
The couple announced this news last Thursday and made many super excited. The husband cum director wrote that this is the first time he’s directing this “superstar” and we think it was the cutest thing ever.
Previously, the use of smartphone devices has been linked with cases of hyperactivity in children. Many studies have shown that children who use smartphones have a hyperactive imagination, and their behavior tends to aggravate using digital devices and excessive screen time.
However, a recent study suggests that the current studies might not prove the point. In fact, digital devices are only adding to the already hyperactiveness. The relationship between digital devices and hyperactivity/attention deficit is, therefore, a two-way street, with bidirectional effects influencing one another.
A study at Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE) in Hungary says that hyperactive kids need constant stimulation to maintain their alertness. The fast-paced video games and movies on mobile devices often increase the level of attention.
Digital Devices & Hyperactive Children
The study was conducted to analyze the impact of digital devices on children at the Alpha Generation Lab at the Department of Ethology at ELTE. The parents of preschool children between four and six years old were asked to complete a questionnaire. The questions included their child’s mobile device or tablet usage and behavioral problems. Researchers followed up with the parents three years later with the same questionnaire. At that time, the children were between seven and nine.
The researchers found that restless children are more likely to use digital devices.
“Fidgety, restless children are more likely to use digital devices. Meanwhile, parents are more likely to engage their children with gadgets. We found that the hyperactivity and attention deficit in preschool predicted the amount of mobile use in school. The more fidgety and distracted a child is in preschool, the more gadgetry they use in early school. This can be explained by the fact that parents are more likely to use digital devices to distract or engage these children, and the children themselves are more likely to seek exciting intense content.” Veronika Konok, head of the research team at the Alpha Generation Lab, concluded in the statement.
Image source: students.blogpost.com
The researchers also found that children with social problems use mobile phones more, but this is only true at school-going age. They did not find a causal relationship, i.e., whether early mobile use leads to later social problems or vice versa. The question of cause and effect is therefore unclear, and there is likely a two-way relationship: neither the chicken nor the egg came first.
Pakistan commemorated its 75th independence day on Sunday 14th August 2022. In honour of the big day, several brands released Azaadi ads to pay tribute to Pakistan. Today, we have picked the top 10 ads to share that debuted this year on Pakistan’s 75th anniversary.
Take a look at our top ten picks below.
1. Habib Metro Bank
Habib Metro Bank, in its campaign, highlights the highs and lows, the struggles, and the resilience of Pakistan and what the nation went through collectively in 75 years.
2. UBL Bank
UBL celebrated ‘Azaadi ka Jashan’ with black and white snippets from 1947 to cool and comical highlights from the present with an upbeat song congratulating the nation.
3. Oreo
Oreo used their cookies to offer a visual aid for the Azaadi campaign. Highlighting the significant locations and cultural heritage sites in Pakistan using oreo biscuits, the ad is fun and light-hearted.
Honouring the strength, love, and dedication it took for Pakistan to come through all these years, PSO highlights the notion of unity, strength, and discipline in its Azaadi campaign.
5. ZONG
Paying tribute to Ahmed G. Chagla, this Zong ad is a masterpiece and amalgamation of humour, art and music. The ad follows a story of a student who works hard to showcase his talent and identity. Nonetheless, you are bound to get goosebumps.
6. GulAhmed
The collective need to work for Pakistan regardless of whatever sect and culture we belong to has been highlighted by many. The GulAhmed’s ad also shared the same message to set aside the cultural differences and to remember Pakistan above everything.
7. Ufone
Ufone debuted the most upbeat and fun ad for independence day, raising a question we often ask ourselves. ‘Is there anything good in Pakistan?’ A carousel then starts, which shows what Pakistan has to offer with the background vocals of none other than Sajjad Ali.
8. National Bank Of Pakistan
Showcasing the theme of resilience and perseverance, the ad chanels the true spirit of Pakistanis regardless of the circumstances life throws at us.
J. shared the essence of being a Pakistani and showed who we are as a nation. The ad starts with a song in the Sindhi language showcasing its culture, followed by Balochistan, North, and Punjab. With the roots that have bound us and the heritage which we share, the entire ad feels like a small musical piece.
The ad pays homage to the motherland, showing what it means to care for everything we own—feeling proud of where we belong and projecting that love for our land.
[12th August 2022- Karachi, Pakistan] – As the most anticipated film of the year ‘The Legend of Maula Jatt’ releases in theatres on October 13th, 2022, the film has partnered with TikTok as its Official Entertainment Partner in a first of its kind collaboration from this region. With this partnership, TikTok will add to the anticipation and excitement by launching multiple in-app activations, allowing fans to engage and get involved with the biggest movie to come out of Pakistan’s ever-evolving film industry.
As the Entertainment partner, TikTok will provide a place where fans can get exclusive content from the movie including teasers, trailers and behind-the-scenes footage. ‘The Legend of Maula Jatt’ is by far the most expensive film to come out of Pakistan and its large fan-base has awaited the release of the film patiently for around three years now. The Maula Jatt fandom can now interact with the movie’s cast and each other on a much larger scale through TikTok’s unique features and effects specially created for ‘The Legend of Maula Jatt’ on the platform.
TikTok will also allow fans to enjoy exclusive content from the stars of the movie who have all joined the platform officially, including Hamza Ali Abbasi (@iamhamzaaliabbasi), Mahira Khan (@mahirahkhan), Fawad Khan (@fawadkhan81), Ali Azmat (@aliazmatbuttt), Mirza Gohar Rasheed (@mirzagoharrasheed), Humaima Malick (@humaima.malick), and Faris Shafi (@farishafiofficial).
This intense and epic hero origin story, with screenplay by Bilal Lashari and dialogues by Nasir Adeeb, is a hard reboot of the 1979 cult classic ‘Maula Jatt’. The film is directed by Bilal Lashari, known for his directorial debut, the box office megahit film ‘Waar’ and produced by Ammara Hikmat under the joint venture of Encyclomedia & Lashari films in association with AAA Motion Pictures. The film is being distributed by Nadeem Mandviwalla of Mandviwalla Entertainment, who is well known for his contribution to cinema. Internationally the film will be distributed by MovieGoers Entertainment.
TikTok is fast becoming Pakistan’s one-stop shop for entertaining content, championing in diversity of categories including but not limited to movies, music, acting, sports, food, travel, education and fashion. The TikTok community in Pakistan creates unique entertainment content that brings joy, celebrates creativity, shapes culture, and transcends boundaries. This partnership with ‘The Legend of Maula Jatt’ will bring even more exciting content and will showcase the talents of Pakistan’s every growing TikTok community.
As Pakistan is celebrating its Diamond Jubilee this year, Ripple Koncepts in collaboration with Engro Corporation has taken yet another exceptional initiative of producing Pakistan’s first Inclusive National Anthem which is sung by a group of kids & persons with and without disabilities together. Every line of the anthem is showing progress towards inclusion & empowerment of Persons with Disabilities (PwDs) in Pakistan.
“Determined Pakistan” is the vision of Ripple Koncepts which aims to facilitate multistakeholder partnerships for inclusion and empowerment of PwDs in Pakistan, learning from the guidelines by United Nations’ Division for Social Policy and Development (DSPD) – Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA). The Vision is also encompassing various parts of the SDGs where Disability is directly or indirectly referenced.
It is pertinent to mention that Pakistan had ratified the UNCRPD on 5th July 2011. The Country has witnessed an increasing commitment to bring PwDs into mainstream but having over 32 million people living with some form of disability in the country (Source: WHO Pakistan), the challenge is much bigger than the efforts that are presently being made in this regard.
Hence, determined Pakistan is striving to transform the energies being invested in silos into a concerted and efficient effort to achieve better results faster. Highlighting progress already being made in an inspirational way to create awareness is one of the key achievements of this mission.
Two of its unique initiatives have been resounding success in past:
PODIEC Virtual – People of Determination International Virtual Exhibition & Conference held from 12-14 March 2021 inaugurated by H.E. the President of Pakistan. This was the first step towards building bridges not only among the Government and major entities, but between all the Pakistani stakeholders from around the globe.
Seminar on “Pakistan – A progressive country towards inclusion & empowerment of persons with disabilities” held on 17th March 2022 in Pakistan Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai attended by the first lady of Pakistan Mrs. Samina Alvi as Chief Guest and presided by HE Sheikha Dr. Hind Al Qassimi from the Royal Family of Sharjah.
While Engro Corporation is the Platinum Sponsor for this endeavor, the other partners and supporters in inclusion and diversity teamed up for this initiative are Pakistan State Oil Company Limited and National Database & Registration Authority (NADRA) as Gold Sponsors, whereas Yunus Textile Mills, Zarai Taraqiati Bank Ltd., Ronak & Iqbal Trust, Unilever and Riphah International University have supported the initiative as Silver Sponsors.
With the success of this initiative, Determined Pakistan pledges to accelerate its efforts and special emphasis will be on similar media initiatives for advocacy, awareness, acknowledgement and inspiration.
The nostalgic memories of our mothers opening rustic family trunks and taking out hand-knitted khaees and dariyan made from indigenous cotton and proudly setting those up for guests have become a thing of the past. However, to try and revive this lost cultural heritage and tradition, Sarsabz Fertilizer recently released the second episode of its Sarsabz Kahani web series titled, ‘Khaki Desan’, which focused on the true story of Jugnu Mohsin, a renowned entrepreneur and public figure, who realized the dearth of good quality local cotton and the dying breed of Khaki Desan which nobody was striving to preserve.
Sarsabz Kahani’ is a strategically-driven initiative that highlights true inspirational stories of farmers (men and women) passionately fond of their motherland and the cultural heritage it possesses. It is a tribute to their bravery and resilience of their hard-work and to the pivotal role they play in the national food security and the economic uplift of our country.
Khaki Desan – named after a local breed of cotton which was popularly grown in the past, especially in the subcontinent particularly in the rural communities to make hand-knitted khaees and dariyan – is a purpose-led initiative between Sarsabz Fertilizer (a brand of Fatima Fertilizer) and Jugnu Mohsin. The series focuses on the decline of cotton production in Pakistan which is detrimental to our economic stability.
According to Rabel Sadozai, Director Sales and Marketing, Fatima Fertilizer, “We believe in promoting marketing initiatives that are purpose-led and that help establish a better understanding of the broader issues faced by our society, which directly impact our economic and social fabric.”
The Khaki Desan campaign, she says, has a multifaceted quality to it. Firstly, it helps bring attention to the important issue of cotton’s recent decline in production. Secondly, it highlights the crucial significance of cotton for our country’s economic revival as well as community support.
In the good old days, the cotton harvest season was celebrated with great festivity and fervour across the cotton belt, which is now mainly sugar cane and rice, dotted with abandoned cotton ginning mills and scattered housing societies. Sadozai believes, keeping in view the recent decline in cotton production and the preference of farmers for harvesting other crops to earn a better profit, the Khaki Desan campaign appeals to the relevant stakeholders in our government to consider formulating a clear policy that favours the revival of cotton production.
Jugnu Mohsin – a leading Pakistani woman enterepreneur, politician and journalist realized the scarcity of good quality local cotton in the country and the inevitable death of Khaki Desan and decided to intervene. Hence Fatima Fertilizer decided to collaborate with her to harvest the finest crop of Khaki Desan cotton with the purpose of creating an exceptional quality of khaddar, a hand-spun and woven cotton cloth.
Fatima Fetilizer also extended unravelling financial assistance to Jugnu Mohsin in setting up a training centre under the name of ‘Haveli Crafts’ in Sher Garh, Okara District, with an aim to re-engage and empower a community of thousands of rural women in the centuries-old craft of cotton spinning and weaving.
(Sarbsabz Kahani’s first episode ‘Nazo’ also highlighted a similar brave woman from Sindh, who sacrificed a great deal to protect the piece of land she called home. She battled dacoits and personally fought off several attempts on her agricultural land – often armed with just a single Kalashnikov – while also managing to raise four children and ensuring that her land remains productive and profitable. Fatima Fertilizer also holds the honor of proposing to celebrate Pakistan’s first-ever official Kissan Day on December 18, 2019 which was officially recognized and endorsed by the Government as well).
According to Fatima Fertilizer, such campaigns that have a purpose or a strong social message are highly celebrated nowadays since they resonate strongly with a large audience due to their cultural relevance and the social and economic insight they offer. They address broader issues faced by society and work towards bringing positive change through instilling realization and influencing its target audience positively.
The downfall in cotton production is currently a major issue, attributed to several factors including environmental changes, cotton crop’s competitive loss in comparison to other major crops, particularly sugarcane as well as inconsistent policy support. As per the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, in the past 10 years, cotton production has almost halved from 13.6 million bales in 2011/12 to about 7 million in 2020/21. Cotton crop yield is faced with many challenges including a significantly reduced crop area, inconsistent gas supply to fertilizer plants resulting in limited availability of locally produced urea, and increasing cost of farm inputs for an already burdened farmer due to high market inflation.
The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has reported that the crop area of cotton has significantly reduced to 2.2 million hectares, the lowest since FY82, which has also severely affected the crop’s overall yield and production.
Furthermore, there are also issues of pesticide adulteration, which means the pesticides available are either adulterated or too expensive for farmers; increasing their cost of production and putting the cotton crop at a severe vulnerability against threatening pest attacks. Poor quality of seeds is an added challenge that hampers the revival of cotton production.
Lastly, Pakistan Kissan Ittehad (PKI), a representative body of Pakistani farmers, raised concerns in March 2022 over the issue of tractor shortage and other farm machinery in the market which negatively affected cotton sowing and wheat harvesting at that time.
Fatima Fertilizer has been actively engaged in promoting awareness about these challenges, and the company is actively working on the agenda of helping modernize the country’s agricultural sector by forging international alliances, as well as promoting technologically driven solutions to help farmers overcome their current challenges, such as Sarsabz mobile app to educate farmers on useful topics related to farming and how to access the market and financing; Sarsabz Assan, to facilitate all Sarsabz dealers with convenient online stock booking, monitoring, managing and giving quick payment gateway solutions to save time and effort; and Electronic Bank Guarantee for Sarsabz dealers, that supports green solutions to protect the environment and efficiently steps away from the traditional stamp paper-based bank guarantees to a completely digital Swift code based transaction.
However, the company believes that more should be done at the government level to increase the production of cotton, such as reducing the farm input costs to increase the cultivated area and offering more subsidies to make fertilizer accessible so that farmers can utilize it for better yield.
“There should be increased research spending on developing high-quality seed varieties to combat water scarcity and pest attacks, policies to support cotton farmers to allow them to earn a good return on their investment so that those who have converted to sugarcane or rice can revert back to cotton harvesting,” says Sadozai.
She also stresses on the involvement of the textile sector in making this policy and they should be encouraged to not just be a sourcing hub for global brands but to market their own brands around the world, proudly claiming them to be made from the finest Pakistani cotton.
Sarsabz Kahani’s both short films were promoted on traditional and digital media on Eid-ul- Azha.
Earlier, in March 2022, Fatima Fertilizer also hosted a special panel discussion at the Pakistan Pavilion of Expo 2020 Dubai with the purpose of celebrating exceptionally inspiring Pakistani female farmers. The protagonist of Sarsabz Kahani’s first short film, Nazo Darejo, was also invited as a guest panelist at this event whereby she narrated her inspirational story to an international audience.
Going forward, the company is producing a third episode of Sarsabz Kahani, which will highlight a story related to Kabadi, a cultural sport of Pakistan which is most popular in our rural areas, especially amongst the farmers community.
“Sarsabz Kahani is a perfect example of a marketing campaign which is based on the human values of empathy, care and long-term commitment to its adopted purpose, hence we, through this platform and its short films, will continue to speak to a wider audience in the country to amplify these tributes,” concludes Sadozai.
Stay tuned to Brandsynario for the latest news and updates.
“Just borrowing a story from Hollywood will not mean the film will be a hit. I need something in the film with the Indian roop (touch). Even in Punjabi videos, everything will be Western, they will be wearing jeans and shorts, but the dhol (drum) will be playing in the background, which is the essence of our civilization. I will always need that Indian touch in films.”
The Indian film industry, previously confined mainly to South Asia in its scope and resources, has evolved globally, attracting more significant international audiences and foreign investment. Since 2005, corporations such as UTV Motion Pictures, Eros International, and India Film Company, are included in trade on the London Stock Exchange and its Alternative Investment Market. The Walt Disney Company obtained a majority stake in UTV in 2011. On top of that, UTV and other Indian media companies have entered production and distribution agreements with global media conglomerates, such as the infamous partnerships between Disney and Yash Raj Films, 20th Century Fox and Dharma Productions, and Warner Bros. and People Tree Films. With the continued development of multiplex cinemas across India and the drive toward digital distribution, by 2024, overall revenues are expected to rise as high as 58.423 percent above 2021 figures. The Mumbai-based Hindi film industry alone has an overall revenue of approximately 1.5 billion dollars by 2021, even after the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on cinema.
Alongside these market developments, Indian film narratives in scope have also become more global. Due to the rapid expansion of communication and economic networks between South Asia and its Diaspora during the 20th century, the complex relationships between Indians, Non-Resident Indians (NRIs), and their descendants have served as significant plot points in numerous feature releases. In the Hindi film industry—more commonly known as “Bollywood”—international hits like Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (Brave Heart Will Take the Bride, Aditya Chopra, 1995), Namastey London (Vipul Amrutlal Shah, 2007), Delhi 6 (Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra, 2009), My Name is Khan (Karan Johar, 2010), and Anjaana Anjaani (Strangers, Siddharth Anand, 2010) all have embraced the South Asian Diasporic experience as an essential element for romance, comedy, action, and melodrama.
Image Source: Rediff.com
According to Amit Rai, an Indian film director and writer, this shift in markets and storytelling has created a new tension in Hindi films. “It selectively sells a chauvinistic brand of national culture, thereby paying its debts to (Hindu) nationalism,” he explains, “while its financial and profit base is increasingly oriented toward the centers of capitalist accumulation in the West” Rai sees this as “a tendency of profit accumulation as much as ideological alignment”
Indeed, changes in markets and audiences for Hindi cinema on different narratives have contributed to new visual and discursive procedures to filmic space as an expression of South Asian identity. The developing geographical imperatives of characters and events scattered across South Asia, North America, Australasia, Europe, and beyond have challenged traditional hierarchies of exegetic and diegetic space of Bollywood storytelling, particularly in the location, arrangement, and discursive implications of the musical sequence. Films rooted in the Diasporic experience, for example, have decreased or eliminated the conventional meta-narrative role performed by musical arrangements held in Western settings by displacing these with South Asian sequences serving a similar purpose. Since musical sequences are regularly shot and launched before the finished film, they may continue to circulate as music videos on satellite television, the internet, and other media platforms long after audiences lose interest in the movie. Ultimately, becoming a critical component in representing the diaspora and shaping a Diasporic imaginary.
Musical arrangements from the 1990s to the beginning of the 21st century have established alternative visual frameworks of national and cultural inclusion, embracing both the diaspora and the effect of globalization on identity and the non-elite audiences in India. However, this global shift has separated the musical sequence from the narrative. For film producer Anustup Basu, contemporary arrangements “often seem to detach themselves from relations of fidelity to the filmic whole,” in what he calls “an ‘indifferent’ logic of ‘televisual’ production and dissemination.”
“Simply put, such sequences can arrive without any casual relation to the story,” Basu claims, such that “they can invoke bodies, spaces, and objects that can arrive from any visual universe whatever” While recognizing the probable polyvalence of musical arrangements acting outside the film narrative across different platforms and exhibition modes, this paper will argue against such distinct divisions. Instead, such seemingly inconsistent arrangements invoke glocalization within film narratives while serving the cinematic representation of the nation and South Asian identity in new ways. This essay will examine this transformation by analyzing the relationship between narratives in two hit Bollywood films produced between 1973 and 1995: Zanjeer, without musical sequences, and Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, with musical arrangements.
According to most scholars, globalization has led to significant changes in the structure of media production and perception in South Asia. On the one hand, the process of globalization is expanding boundaries and, on the other hand, strengthening existing boundaries of culture, identity, and self. In short, people’s “perceptions of time and space” are changing due to globalization.
This article introduces and describes glocalization as an alternative to the typical international communication paradigm. Glocalization is epistemological, but its application to media studies is restricted. Globalization was presumed to represent Americanization and Americanization was not understood in local terms other than “western dominance”). Rarely did international communication include ethnographies or other reception studies that accounted for the diversity of international audiences, media practices, and consumption. Glocalization is best defined as international communication. The essential purpose of glocalization is to account for new cultural forms developing at the global-local interface. When ideas, artifacts, institutions, images, practices, and performances are transplanted, they bore the markings of history and undergo cultural translation. Glocalization must be understood as an encompassing process that, although located at national or subnational levels, involves transnational formations that “connect multiple locations in complex and contradictory ways.”
The emergence of Indian cinema paralleled the country’s fight against British colonialism. As a result, cinema has always played a key role in defining an Indian cultural identity in its “allegory, shape, and form. The Indian cinema industry was able to break free from the “shackles of Western influence” with the introduction of “talkies” in the early 1930s; language disparities provided “natural protection” to Indian producers Films were made in vernacular languages with a “profusion of songs”. The first Indian talkie, Alam Ara (1931), featured 12 songs and was advertised as “all talking, all singing, all dancing.” many of these songs were individually recorded and broadcast on the radio. The drama-music style drew on the lengthy heritage of the Ramayana and Mahabharata, two Indian classical Sanskrit epics whose narrative twists inspired cinematic storytelling.
Indian popular film evolved as “India’s sole model of national unity” with a focus on “realist aesthetics” after the end of colonialism. In the cinematic imagination, a tension between modernity and tradition, westernization and indigenousness, evolved. These dialectical conflicts gave rise to a unique conception of Indian identity. In the 1950s, directors like Raj Kapoor and Bimal Roy showed the underprivileged world by describing Indian society as “iniquitous and unequal.” In films including Awara (1951), Bandini (1963), Do Bigha Zameen (1953), Jagte Raho (1956), Shri 420 (1955), and Sujata (1959), the creators conveyed a sociopolitical message. In the 1970s, Hindi films served as catalysts for the nation’s homogenizing agenda, appealing to the disadvantaged by fostering faith in the “nation-protective state’s beneficence”. The underlying assumption was that the (poor) “angry, young man” was the primary audience of these films.
The tremendous success of Zanjeer (1973), a film about a police officer who works outside the bounds of the law, introduced the figure of the “angry, young man” to the Indian screen.
This hero is a disaffected, cynical, violent, rebellious, urban/worker who is often seen single-handedly fighting wealthy businesses and ineffectual and corrupt politicians. In Zanjeer and the evolution of the genre, the world of the “angry, young man” involved crime, unemployment, and poverty; articulating the anguish of the marginalized sector. It was a device through which Hindi films ensured viewer identification with the working poor and lower-middle-class audiences.
Image Source: IMDB
This idea is also present in Kumar Talkies, a documentary on what cinema means to people from small towns. Calling it the “slum’s point of view of Indian politics and culture … in the popular cinema, there is the same amount of stress on lower-middle-class sensibilities and on the informal, not-terribly tacit theories of politics and society the class uses.
The changes precipitated by the “liberalization of the Indian economy” throughout the 1990s facilitated the growth of the production and distribution of Hindi films. However, with the entry of satellite television, Indian filmmakers began operating in a new media landscape, where a vast range of options, including easy access to Bollywood and Hollywood films, was available to viewers at home. With liberalization, the financial equations in Bollywood changed too. Overseas distribution rights for a big-budget film roughly doubled in price compared to the Indian market. Television and music rights also generated more revenue than the entire production cost, even before selling a single ticket. The rise of multiplexes in large metropolitan cities (where the cost of tickets was ten times higher than the cost of tickets in family-owned, small-town theaters) increasingly focused film producers on niche audiences who “pay more, buy more” and needed to be reflected in the movie’s contents.
According to D’Souza, a film trade analyst, the days of the “silver jubilee are over.” He adds: “now films target small segments of primary filmgoers who constitute the paying public.” For D’Souza, the “paying public” not only can pay for the movie ticket but has disposable income and attracts advertisers.
Audiences also play a critical role in creating genres. Genres do not consist only of films: they consist also, and equally, of specific systems of expectation and hypothesis that spectators bring with them to the cinema. These systems provide spectators with a means of recognition and understanding. This recognition of a changing audience and Bollywood as an international cinema is increasingly articulated through musical passages exploring diasporic duality. Here, the ideological function of the film genre in shaping both viewer and product while making the process and relationship appear natural and reflective of the world as it is or ought to be is compromised. As the needs of audiences and markets threaten the traditional terms of national cinema, the changing role of the musical sequence reveals a tension between the recognition of demographic changes in the audiences for Hindi cinema and an effort to articulate nation and national identity.
In its effort to deliver a sense of national identity that inscribes the NRI through changing discursive operations, the convergence of Hindi cinema’s representational systems with the diasporic imaginary opens onto a third space, sometimes referred to as “Bollystan.” Bollystan, a neologism derived from the popular term for the Hindi film industry and the Hindi suffix for “place,” denotes a discursive space of mediated cultural overlap between India and the South Asian Diaspora. A- ranked films are popular in A centers: metropolises such as Delhi, Bombay, Madras, or Bangalore, as well as with NRI audiences overseas. B and C films play in small towns and villages as well as with lower-class viewers in tent theaters that cater to the urban poor. This is when recent Bollywood musical sequences attempt to preserve the ideological myth. It frequently reifies values such as chastity, piety, tradition, and familial duty, all typically displayed in the Western-oriented musical sequences of the All-India film, presenting them as latent but essential characteristics of the NRI, regardless of her specific everyday circumstances.
According to anthropologist Brian Keith Axel, the diaspora is “not strictly here, so much as it is here and there, or at least elsewhere.” Axel argues, “we come to understand Diaspora as something objectively present in the world today about something else in the past—the place of origin,” and “in searching for its context, we return our Diaspora home.” As emigration causes physical separation and psychological dislocation, the stability of the South Asian Diaspora becomes dependent on a fusion of West and East within a problematic identity split. The Bollywood narrative attempts to simplify the process by reducing it to an impossible, idealized separation of physical signs and mental states within the South Asian in the Western environment. The subject negotiates disparate cultural norms, creating the instability of a cultural hybrid of potential contradictions. An NRI bachelor imagines telling his ideal mate in 2007’s Namastey London, “I like one thing about you: your style is Western, but your mind is Indian.”
Image Source: Bollywood Hungama
Through Hindi cinema’s relocation of exegetic musical sequences to South Asian settings, Bollystan can offer diasporic audiences a combination of South Asian and Western codes while reinforcing an underlying allure of India and its culture at home and abroad.
Indeed, one can argue that in the Diasporic turn of Hindi narrative and its impact on musical sequences, Bollystan emerges less as a utopia than heterotopia, both for the South Asian Diaspora and the increasingly urbanized and technologically mediated Indian middle class. Heterotopias are privileged spaces within a culture that serves “as a sort of simultaneously mythic and real contestation of the space in which we live.”
Earlier sequences set in Western hotels and bars as places of escape from inherited Indian values reflect his idea of contemporary “heterotopias of deviation,” where “individuals whose behavior is deviant about the required mean or norm are placed.”
Amid the complex relationship between the South Asian diaspora and Indian media and its impact on ideas of national identity, To reflect this “crisis heterotopia,” Jyotika Virdi, author, The Cinematic ImagiNation – Social History Through Indian Popular Films, has proposed a long-lasting “discourse of the nation within the transnational” in Hindi cinema. “The ‘fictional nation’ is central to all Hindi films,” she says. “The film obsessively portrays serious tensions that threaten to divide the country as moral conflicts or ethical quandaries. The central goal of Hindi film’s “national fiction” is to address these issues ” By realigning the musical sequence as a long-standing trope of unmarked space, the informal structures of nationally-focused narratives suggest the persistence of a more general South Asian cultural heterotopia across global networks and markets. The hybrid codes of Hindi cinema have the potential to become paradoxically reassuring signs of cultural stability and the “fictional nation’s” endurance. This illusory continuity, which has been manifested in several films since the mid-1990s, may appeal to diasporic dreams of a homeland and India’s increasingly cosmopolitan, middle-class populations who seek imagined stability of national origin and character in the Hindi cinematic tradition.
Image Source: The Statesman
Over the last two decades, how has this shift manifested itself in Hindi cinema and its critical reception? Films such as Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge have received much attention for depicting the diaspora’s tense relationship with India and the role musical sequences can play in emphasizing or alleviating underlying cultural tensions. Musical sequences set in South Asia, particularly in rustic or traditional settings like farmyards, fields, and temples, represent a fantasy space where repressed and implicitly original Diasporic beings are revealed and celebrated. Such sequences depict India as a spiritual domain of inalienable national identity, capable of surviving the realities of modernization and migration. However, this contradicts claims that NRI-centered narratives portray the Indian diaspora as “preserving their cultural universe through Indian rites of passage in an alien Instead, South Asian musical sequences represent distant, imaginary spaces “alien” to the diegetic framework that such rites safely preserve. Musical interludes in this striking transformation, like Western sequences in older films, can still be read as transgressive or subversive, despite their ostensible rejection of Western values and culture.
The character’s changing physical traits and movements are crucial to these “transgressions.” According to author, Wimal Dissanayake, the performance of Bollywood musical sequences raises fundamental problems about identity and distinction. He asks, “How do the performing bodies enact their difference from themselves?” and “How do the bodies in dance sequences augment and subvert in non-dancing sequences?” Once upon a time, the stereotypical European metropolis or Western nightclub provided characters with brief opportunities to abandon native conventions and enjoy short dresses and rock and roll. However, modern films addressing the diaspora predicament may have a single South Asian scene. Miniskirts and jeans are frequently replaced by saris, kurtas, shalwar kameez, and dupattas. Westernized protagonists adorn themselves with South Asian cultural symbols. Dissanayake’s difference reveals an underlying unity of being in a South Asian spirit that is fundamentally irrepressible.
The sequence liberates the protagonists from the implied confines of so-called liberated Western clothing, hairstyles, and mannerisms, allowing a South Asian essence to play over and through their bodies, visually and ritualistically fusing physical and spiritual in front of the audience’s gaze. The depicted body quickly returns to its predominantly Westernized behavior and environments within the narrative. However, its subsequent actions can be interpreted as adaptation or mimicry rather than identity. As a result, much like the heterotopic mirror “that enables me to see myself there where I am absent,” the “non-dance body” is reinterpreted in the musical sequence’s counter-representation. This process is gender-biased, favoring female characters over male characters, and follows the pattern of Indian cinema. According to Majumdar, “the burden of nationalist representation” has fallen on female characters in narratives referencing the West as the “pure site of the superior traditions of the East” Nonetheless, the process extends to male characters, as shown in the examples below.
Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge (DDLJ), a seminal film in its treatment of Diasporic subjects in Western and South Asian spaces, marks the beginning of this discursive transformation of the musical sequence. Raj and Simran are portrayed in DDLJ as college-aged children of NRIs living in London. Simran, engaged to the son of a family friend in India, begs her father to allow her to travel through Europe with her schoolmates during the summer. “I’m going to live in a country I don’t know, marry a man I’ve never seen,” she explains. “There won’t be another chance. I don’t even know if I’ll ever return.” She meets Raj while Eurailing in the Alps and falls in love with him. However, she is dragged away to Punjab upon returning to England for her wedding. Raj follows her and ultimately thwarts the marriage by disrupting the wedding preparations and gaining her parents’ approval.
Image Source: Google Arts & Culture
The story of DDLJ takes place in three geographical locations: Great Britain, the Alps, and India. Although all three are thoroughly interwoven into the diegesis, the Alps serve as a narrative hinge with several functions. As the protagonists travel by train and automobile across this countryside, it preserves remnants of the unmarked site of escape accumulated in Hindi films since the 1960s. In the “Zara Sa Jhoom” (Let Me Dance a Little) segment, for instance, Simran rolls in the snow in a short, sleeveless red dress, the height of Western nightclub fashion, accompanied by a combination of tabla drums, violins, and trumpets. Simran, who was often reserved, had spotted the dress in a store window and thrown a rock through the plate glass to steal it. This occurrence is essential to the larger plot. Outside of the Alps, the places of Britain and India remain fixed geographical endpoints for the story’s diasporic conflict as the challenges of familial obligation and cultural conformity bounce between them. Zanjeer lacks DDLJ’s fragile mystification of the West as a destination of escape and daily experience, a defining moment in Hindi film. As Bollywood storylines have progressively inhabited these Diasporic spaces, successive films have offered a more significant opportunity for securing the South Asian musical sequence’s position as the principal exegetical setting. However, this alteration threatens the status of unmarked space.
Despite their various depictions, recent films focusing on the South Asian diaspora emphasize the necessity of a return to the Indian subcontinent, if only through the virtual threshold of film, to effectively articulate Diasporic identity. In contrast to earlier Hindi films, such as Zanjeer, where living in India was a central narrative motif, modern Hindi cinema has confined this subject to the musical segment. Characters—and the viewers who identify with them—travel for only a few minutes, frequently in scenes devoid of expository connection with the story’s more significant spatial and chronological elements. This juxtaposition of narrative imagination and physical reality, as fictional characters dance in the natural fields of Punjab or stand in front of the monuments of Uttar Pradesh, sublimates both Indian and Diasporic desires. As Diasporic and South Asian audiences contend with the growing effects of westernization and glocalization, the physical locations of India are portrayed as exotic, tradition-laden environments.
In both Zanjeer and Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge, the intricacy of Diasporic and non-Diasporic concerns of identity and national values is evident. As the generic hybridity of Bollywood films remains a defining characteristic of its cultural specificity, the industry has found new ways to utilize this quality in order to address concerns of cultural hybridity within South Asian diasporic culture. In today’s internationally networked digital media environment, where transnational adaptation has revolutionized the means of ideological transmission of national cinema, the evolution of Hindi film is an important event. Despite considerable changes in Bollywood audiences due to mass international migration, growing urbanization, economic affluence, and media globalization, projected cultural uniformity is maintained through the musical sequence’s mutations in terms of Hindi cinema’s generic hybridity. In this shared region of Bollystan, anyone might find safety, knowing that its presence, however fictitious, indicates a stable identity with its Indian touch, even as Bollywood acquires a larger global audience.
14th August 2022 marked the 75th Independence Day of Pakistan, and DICE Foundation made the day even more special with a perfect gift to the nation; Pakistan’s first indigenous electric car, Nur-E 75 the prototype of which was unveiled in Karachi, displaying all its features.
The car is named Nur-E, ‘Nur’ means ‘light’, while ‘E’ denotes ‘electric’. And the name of the brand is named ‘JaXari’, after a Muslim scientist, Ismael Al-Jazari, who was known as the first Muslim mechanical engineer.
Nur-E is a 5-seater hatchback car, with peak power of 107 HP (80 KW) and peak torque of 200 Nm. It has a 35-kWh battery, which can be charged in 7 to 8 hours from a regular 220V connection. With a fully charged battery, the car will be able to cover a distance of 210km at a speed of 120 kph.
The car has been developed and designed by DICE Foundation, with the help of Pakistani automobile experts from NED University, Sir Syed University, and other institutions. DICE Foundation is a US-based non-profit organization run by Pakistani expatriates and headed by Dr. Khurshid Qureshi.
Dr. Khurshid Qureshi is an expert on the development of autonomous vehicles and has worked with notable automobile companies across the globe. He presented the car and explained its features during a presentation.
He said, “This electric car will play a phenomenal role in the context of the environment and climate change, and will help us move away from non-renewable fuel consumption. This prototype is a 5-seater hatchback, but we also have plans to develop a sedan and small SUV on the same platform”.
He stressed the importance of innovation and called this innovation, a game-changer for Pakistan’s automobile industry, as well as its economy. He was reluctant to share the price bracket of the car, citing it’s still in the production phase and will take at least two years for its mass commercial production. However, he hinted toward a price range of over Rs. 3 million.
He also acknowledged and showed gratitude towards all the partners who facilitated this project, namely NEDUET, DSU, NCA, TEVTA Punjab, NUST, SSUET, and Amreli Steels.
Filmmaker Amena Khan, who is also a member of the DICE Foundation, called it “a huge feather in Pakistan’s cap”, during this time of political and economic turmoil.
Former Chairman of the Pakistan Association of Automotive Parts & Accessories Manufacturers (PAAPAM) Mashood Khan was also in attendance, stressing the need to appreciate and promote the efforts to make this car. “It is a great achievement that Pakistan has designed its own electric car. We should start now to be a part of the global race when electric vehicles begin to dominate by 2040,” said Khan.
The landmark unveiling event was attended by notable figures from the business community, the auto industry, and the engineering community. They acknowledged the efforts of the DICE Foundation and thanked Dr. Qureshi and his team for developing the vehicle.
Stay tuned to Brandsynario for the latest news and updates.
Persian carpets are an indulgence and will be found in almost every home. But have you ever wondered about the history and making of this amazing piece of history and decoration? Read all about its details and intricacies with us!
Persian rugs are hand woven with the finest materials including wool and silk. They originate from Iran and initially began as a way for Iranians to keep their heritage and history alive. These Persian rugs can take years or even decades to become finished products. There’s also a myth that carpet weavers in Iran can be distinguished by their bent backs.
Image Source: AI Monitor
The authentic Persian carpets and the traditional methods of producing them all began in Iran. In actuality, each Persian rug is regarded as a piece of art that reflects the history and culture of Iran.
What Are They Made Of?
Traditionally, Persian rugs are made from sheep’s wool. The wool is boiled, spun, and dyed by hand. The bright and vivid colors you see on it are also not artificial! They are elaborate yarns that are dyed with natural colorings from plants and insects.
Image Source: NYT
A common highly-detailed Persian silk rug can have over 1,000 knots per square inch. Each knot is a meticulous task and there are several types of Persian rugs. There’s one type that has to be knotted from bottom up which leaves its weavers with terrible backs!
The Most Expensive Rug Ever Sold and How To Make Them
The most expensive Persian rug ever bought was a 17th-century Persian vase-style carpet. It was recently sold at auction in June 2013 in London for a whopping $33.8 million.
People say that there is no formula to make a Persian rug. The philosophy is to “feel this with your flesh, skin, and bones.” It is also said that “someone who weaves a good Qashqai carpet, for example, cannot weave a good Tabriz carpet. Or the one who weaves a superb Tabriz carpet cannot weave a good Isfahan carpet.”
Shahnameh is a local brand in Pakistan that features authentic Persian carpets at a variety of prices. They have one showroom in all of Lahore which has been there for decades. Check out their variety to get your very own Persian carpet!
Health care professionals have warned regarding the grave consequences of excessive smartphone usage. According to the data, the patients reporting neck, joint, and muscle ailments are at an all-time high. Smartphone-related injuries have gone viral over recent years. The smartphone pinky is the most common amongst them.
Orthopaedic surgeon Peter J. Evans, MD, PhD, says, “Constant cellphone use can cause a range of joint problems. While some claims of injury might be overstated, others are real and involve serious, long-term damage.”
Injuries Associated With Smartphone Usage
A study reported that bending the head, neck, and shoulders over cell phones and handheld devices, along with distorted neck positioning when sitting, studying, and watching television, can lead to incrementally increased stresses in the cervical spine area.
The positions and movements caused by these devices cause undue damage and strain to the muscles and joints that aren’t used to staying in that position for a long time.
Take a look at some of the common smartphone-associated injuries.
Poor head posture, also known as ‘Text Neck’, has become one of the major problems with people extending their necks beyond their shoulders for texting. The increased muscle tension increases the chances of nerve pinching and slipping the disk. People holding these positions for a long time will eventually see their posture degenerating with a curvature of the neck bending over time.
Image source: hindustantimes.com
Texting Thumb Injuries
Synovium is the tissue surrounding the tendons. Studies have linked tenosynovitis of the thumb, called De Quervain’s tenosynovitis, to frequent smartphone use. Phone use could also worsen symptoms among people who already have arthritis.
Tendons are strong bands of tissue that form the scaffolding for the muscles and bones. The tendons travel from the forearm across the wrist to the thumb. The tendons pass through a narrow tunnel that helps keep them in place, ending at the base of the thumb. The repetitive motion injury due to texting can lead to increased strain in the tendons which can worsen over time.
Image source: Pinterest.com
Smartphone Pinky
While the so-called smartphone pinkie isn’t an established condition, it’s possible that using your pinkie to hold the weight of your phone could cause problems over time. It is characterized by a widening gap between the ring and the pinky finger. The online images of smartphone pinky show a variation in anatomy. However, this can be subjective and does not highlight a severe problem.
According to Dr. Evans, “It’s also possible that people who think they have smartphone pinky could have an underlying condition. Supporting your phone with your pinky could compress a nerve in your finger. Over time, you could experience pain, numbness or tingling.”
Image source: conversation.com
Cubital Tunnel Syndrome
Frequent phone use can also affect the nerves. When we hold our phones in front of us with our elbows bent, we compress the ulnar nerve, which runs from the neck to the hand. This constriction can cause numbness and weakness in the pinky and ring fingers. Over time bending your elbow causes traction and places pressure on your ulnar nerve at the cubital tunnel. Repeated elbow bending can cause long-term nerve damage. This condition can also mimic a smartphone pinky; hence if you are facing issues, the underlying problem might be due to your elbows.
Image source: conversation.com
How To Lessen The Strain
Downsizing to a small phone can solve most of the problems. Using the voice-to-text option to reduce the strain on fingers can also help the pain to dissipate quickly. Using phone grips and stands to reduce the pressure on your neck and hand joints can also aid in pain resolution.
However, if you’re experiencing a lot of pain, it’s a good idea to see a physical therapist or a doctor, such as an orthopedist or a physical medicine specialist, as they can recommend treatments and stretches. The key is to catch these things early. They don’t tend to become chronic.
Stay tuned to Brandsynario for the latest news and updates.
Smoothies are a great addition to your daily food intake. They have all healthy fruits and veggies packed with all essential nutrients. Smoothies are also a perfect option when you want to replace your high-carb meals as they provide us with a feeling of satiety and improve digestion.
So, here are some easy smoothie recipes with different fruits, to bring some variety to your daily diet plan.
1. Peach Smoothie
This healthy smoothie offers a blend of peaches, strawberries, and bananas. Power-packed with antioxidants and vitamins – the drink can replace your lunches as it can keep you feel satiated without having to compromise on your diet. Since strawberries are currently not in season, you can opt for frozen ones that are easily available in stores.
2. Mango Frappe Smoothie
This mango-style frappe smoothie is perfect to kick-start your day. The whipping cream topping comes with extra calories, so you might want to skip it if you are on a calorie-restricted diet.
An added spice can elevate your drink, just like this banana smoothie. Skip your bland banana milkshake and try this cinnamon banana smoothie to give a treat to your tastebuds.
4. Red Grapes Smoothie
The grape season is here giving us more reasons to switch to yummy smoothies. This traditional smoothie recipe comes with a hint of condensed milk to provide you with an extra kick of sugar.
This smoothie is enough to satisfy your sweet tooth while giving you all the nutrition you need. Top the recipe with some chocolate chips or some caramel syrup to provide yourself with a cafe-style drink from the comfort of your home.
Which one of these recipes do you like the most? Which ones are you excited to try? Let us know in the comments below.
Stay tuned to Brandsynario for the latest news and updates.
Felicitating the nation on the 75th Independence Day of Pakistan, University of Management and Technology (UMT) President, Ibrahim Hasan Murad, urged the nation to contemplate what Pakistan has been able to achieve as an independent state.
He called upon his fellow countrymen to strive harder to fulfill the dream of the Father of the Nation, Quaid-e Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, and face every national challenge by embracing the message of unity, faith and discipline.
Earlier, a special flag-hoisting ceremony was organized by Sitara-o-Hilal Foundation (SHF) at UMT to mark the 75th Independence Day. The flag hoisting ceremony was joined by the President, UMT Rector, Dr. Asif Raza, and UMT DG, Abid Shirwani.
Addressing the participants, Mr. Murad said that all stakeholders must join hands in “building a generation that brings the change we all hope for”.
He expressed that we must be thankful to Allah Almighty for granting us a separate homeland despite all the opposition, risks and obstructions posed by the enemies of Muslims of the sub-continent.
The SHF founder Ibrahim Murad said that it was the need of the hour to have a thorough understanding of our vision and then creating an action plan to achieve that vision with determination to steer the country out of the present crises.
Mr. Murad added that Pakistan must continue to raise its voice for the people of Indian-held Kashmir. A special prayer was also conducted for the prosperity of Pakistan and the Kashmiris. The ceremony included performance of national songs, drama skits and a cake-cutting ceremony.
HABIBMETRO Bank – subsidiary of Habib Bank AG Zurich (HBZ) –unveiled a monument at the entrance of Pakistan’s financial street, the I.I. Chundrigar Road, on Independence Day.
The monument, installed outside the HBZ Plaza, is an effort aimed at the beautification of the ‘City of Lights’. A flag hoisting ceremony was also held in the company of government officials and HABIBMETRO Bank’s senior management before the monument was unveiled.
Speaking at the occasion, President and CEO HABIBMETRO Bank, Mohsin Ali Nathani said: “HABIBMETRO commissioned this landmark to celebrate the heritage and significance of I.I. Chundrigar Road. This initiative would not be possible without the guidance and support of DC South’s office and the KMC. The aim of this initiative is to add to the beautification of Pakistan’s iconic financial street, I.I. Chundrigar Road, in Karachi.”
The monument at the I.I. Chundrigar Road will not only contribute to its beauty but also remind the people that there is more to this popular financial street than its usual hustle and bustle.
The I.I. Chundrigar Road houses the head offices of many banks and corporate organizations, including the HABIBMETRO Bank that has a network of 498 branches located across the country.
U Microfinance Bank in collaboration with the Capital Development Authority (CDA) organized a tree plantation drive on 12th August, 2022 at G-8/1 Islamabad.
To celebrate the onset of monsoons, U Bank employees participated in plantation activity. 5,000 trees were planted in order to continue U Bank’s drive to be an environmentally conscious company.
U Microfinance Bank is led by a triple bottom line ambition and have been organizing tree plantation campaigns every year. Cognizant of the impact of its work on the planet, U Bank has kept its tradition alive and has been playing its part in conserving and protecting environment from the past four years. The initiative is part of U Bank’s larger vision as a company to work towards reducing its carbon and waste footprint as well as incurring a set of products to support climate resilience and a sustainable change in society as a whole.
Emphasizing the need to conserve and safeguard the environment U Microfinance Bank President & CEO, Mr. Kabeer Naqvi said, “There is a dire need to initiate such drives in order to reduce the adverse impacts of climate change. U Bank has always been taking steps to protect the environment. We are committed to our ambition in consciously designing products to support our fragile environment which is constantly under threat from climate change. Let us all pledge not only to plant trees but also nurture them”.
If you have been waiting to buy new clothes, then you are in luck. Ideas has rolled out its Azadi Sale in more than 100+ stores nationwide and on its official website, gulahmedshop.com
More than 3,000 items are up on offer where several new designs have specially inducted for you to enjoy for seasons to come. From unstitched lawn suits to trendy ready-to-wear fashion, you can shop for summer essentials at up to 50% OFF.
Want some inspo? Well, look no further. Here’s what you should consider while shopping from this sale.
GulAhmed Lawn Specials
If you’re looking for stylish unstitched ladies’ suits at a bargain, then GulAhmed is worth a look. The brand has an extensive array of affordable ready-to-stitch two-piece and three-piece lawn suits that you can grab at up to 50% OFF. You should not miss out the exclusive discounts on their Summer Premium Collection where you can buy Chiffon, Silk, and Swiss Voile ensembles without hurting your budget.
Ideas Pret
Are you searching for an embroidered shirt to add to your wardrobe this summer? Perhaps, you might be looking to add a few pieces to your daily rotation. With prices as low as PKR 1,644, it would be a shame if you choose to skip to shop this weekend.
Ideas Home
Ideas Azadi Sale is packed with trendy home couture products. You can get stylish bed linen, chic rugs, fresh towels, bathrobes, blankets, pillow covers, and other home décor items at great discounts. Don’t let your inner critic take over. This is one time you can be a little impulsive. After all, your home is where your heart is. So, buy whatever your heart desires at up to 50% OFF!
Ideas Man
The best clothes are the ones that you can wear all year round. This is especially true for menswear. From polos, t-shirts, dress shirts, and casual shirts to shalwar kameez suits and kurtas, Ideas Man has more than 1,000 products for you to shop from.
GulAhmed Men’s Collection
Monochromatic ensembles are all the rage. Shop the premium quality fabrics from GulAhmed Men’s Collection to create effortlessly stylish outfits. From wash-and-wear and linen to Latha and cotton, you would be happy to see the variety of colors on offer. With up to 50% off on men’s unstitched fabric, you don’t need a reason to buy a few suits.
Shoes & Bags
Smart women know the true value of accessorizing themselves. If you love to buy shoes and bags, then you should check out the vast collection from Ideas. The brand has got it all! You can start by picking a few pumps, sandals, kolhapuris, and khussas. Obviously, you should also buy a few clutches, totes, and wallets to match your fits.
Ideas Azadi Sale gives you an opportunity to buy this season’s hottest trends on unmissable discounts. Head on to your nearest Ideas store or visit gulahmedshop.com from the comfort of your home. Happy shopping!
Standard Chartered Bank Pakistan Limited (SCBPL) in partnership with the British Deputy High Commission (BDHC), Karachi organised an event to celebrate 75 years of Pakistan’s independence.
The event was widely attended by girls between the ages of 11-15 years, from schools of underserved communities which the Bank supports through their Goal programme. Volunteers from the Bank conducted a mentoring sessions with these girls on career prospects and how they can leverage opportunities to be independent and confident in life. The purpose of the celebration was to enable these girls to structure their ideas on how can they be the catalyst for social change in the future.
Rehan Shaikh, Chief Executive Officer at Standard Chartered Bank, said, “We are delighted to partner with British Deputy High Commission for the celebration of Independence Day. Today, once again BDHC has supported the Bank’s efforts to address the social and economic challenges being confronted by young girls. Educating girls and providing them with additional tools to shape their own future through our GOAL programme, enables them to address life’s challenges themselves and has an incredible intergenerational multiplier effect on communities and societies. We have been running this programme locally for 6-years now and have already created an impact for over 22,000 girls in Pakistan, through 71 schools in Karachi and Islamabad.
With activities such as these we bring our brand promise Here for good to life and it is integrated as a core component of our community engagement strategy, enabling our employees to do the right thing. Fundamental to the Bank’s culture, purpose and values, the EV activities support volunteers from the Bank contribute to the delivery of our community programmes, such as teaching financial education to disadvantaged young people and mentoring females.”
Sarah Mooney, British Deputy High Commissioner Karachi & Director for Trade said, “The British Deputy High Commission in Karachi is delighted to partner with Standard Chartered Bank to host this celebration of Pakistan’s 75th National Day, and 75 years of close ties between the UK and Pakistan. I am delighted that so many girls attended this wonderful anniversary event and the ‘Mentor’s Den’. The U.K. is committed to working with Pakistan to improve the future of young girls. No nation can succeed without the full participation of 50% of its population. I hope these girls will carry forward what they have learnt today and in time become mentors themselves.”
The Independence Day celebrations ended with a cake cutting ceremony with girls from the Goal school. Goal is the Bank’s award-winning, sport-for-development programme that provides financial education and life-skills training to girls aged between 10 and 24. The objective of the Goal programme is to empower young women as economic leaders. Goal was launched in Pakistan in 2016 in collaboration with Right To Play and since its launch SCBPL has impacted more than 22,000 adolescent girls’ lives in Pakistan.
It’s summer which means students are eagerly looking for opportunities to spend their time productively. Even in addition to that, now it is essential for our youth to find community service projects to give back to the community. This International Youth Day, there are 5 stellar NGO’s the youth can align with to help give back to their community.
NGP is a famous NGO in the youth because they have rigorous and interactive summer internships that help students gain exposure. They mainly go to underprivileged schools and allow students to teach over the summers. Besides that, they hold food distribution campaigns too. All these are organized by the students themselves which is why, NGP is popular.
Image Source: Asia News
2. Akhuwat
Akhuwat is also an NGO that empowers families to be empowered socially and financially through microfinance loans. They have several schemes through which women can be especially helped. They also currently have a fund set up for people suffering from floods in Balochistan.
3. Youth For Pakistan
Youth for Pakistan is another organization that works around the clock to help young people find a way to help their community. They have several projects in the pipeline that encourage young people to immerse themselves in the university experience. Their website has many success stories involving young people and community service.
Image Source: REP
4. Dar Ul Sukun
Dar Ul Sukun is an amazing NGO that helps children with disabilities. Most of these children are often disowned by their parents and left to fend for themselves. This organization also allows young people to sit with their own peers and realize the kind of life many of them have. It can be a learning experience that inspires many to pursue a career in community service.
5. Kashf Foundation
Image Source: Tech Beast
Last but not the least, Kashf foundation works to empower women financially. They have helped rehabilitate hundreds and thousands of women around Pakistan get loans, set up their businesses and also support their families. Their work is tackling the biggest issue in Pakistan and they’re making strides.
Behind every successful business there is an army of loyal fans lending their support for its endeavors. For realme, the strong presence of its fans has always been felt in every step of the journey to grow to the heights that the smartphone brand has reached now. realme aims to maintain a certain level of transparency with its community of fans. Having them be aware of how realme operates, what goes into the making of realme devices, as well as realme’s core values is highly important in developing the tech democratizer’s relationship with its fan community.
For this reason, realme decided to pull back the curtain on Wednesday, 10th August 2022 during its 828 Fan Fest celebrations and took a group of select fans to their assembly plant on the outskirts of the city of Lahore. This inside look was followed by an exciting hi-tea and bowling session at the bowling alley, Uptown LA. This Fan Meet up presented a wonderful opportunity for realme fans to mingle with each other and get to know the people in the community as well as familiarize themselves with the faces behind their favorite technology brand.
Fans gathered at realme Headquarters in Lahore at noon on Wednesday after which they were loaded into buses provided by realme to take them to the assembly plant. While on the bus, realme fans and employees took part in various, engaging ice breaker activities to set the mood for the remainder of the day and dispel any inhibitions that fans may have about socializing freely. Once they arrived at the assembly plant, they were taken inside to get a breakdown about how realme devices are made. The functionality of the plant was explained while the fans were taken through the production process of realme phones from start to finish. Fans even got to witness the testing machinery in action as they marveled at the durability of realme phones during the drop test, scratch test, and more.
After exploring the factory to their heart’s content, the fan community was loaded into buses again to be taken to the final venue of the realme Fan Meet up – Uptown LA. The venue was decked out in realme décor to welcome the fan community with grandeur. Once at the venue, the community was greeted by the Country Director of realme, Syed Mashood Hassan, who delivered an inspiring welcome speech thanking the fans for their unwavering support during both smooth times and turbulent times and emphasizing the fan-centric approach of realme’s operations. A cake cutting ceremony was held with the participation of realme fans and employees to share the celebration. The floor was then opened for the community to hit the bowling lanes and roll out a new high score. A hi-tea buffet was also provided for fans to indulge in as they enjoyed their games. Each attendee of the realme Fan Meet up also left the event with their own personal goodie bag of giveaways.
While this may have been the first realme Fan Meet up of its kind, it certainly won’t be the last. As a brand, realme prioritizes getting to know its consumers so that it can cater to their interests as best as possible. However, it is equally as important that realme’s fans get to know the company on a deeper level to better understand the efforts they are making for them in the market as well as to acquaint them with the human faces behind the brand. Events such as these are essential touch points to deepen pre-existing bonds between a brand and its fans. Stay tuned for more exciting updates regarding realme Fan Fest activities throughout the month of August.
Pakistan’s mountaineer Naila Kiani has successfully summited the world’s 11th highest mountain, Gasherbrum 1 (G1) today. She becomes the first local woman to summit three 8000+ metre mountain peaks – G1, Gasherbrum 2 (G2) and K2 – in her first attempt. Naila was part of an expedition consisting of people who started their ascent towards G1’s peak.
Symbolizing empowered, strong, and resilient female athletes, Naila is a banker by profession and a mountaineering enthusiast. G1 was her second challenge of the year having previously summited K2 on 22nd July. Through her successful expeditions, the female mountaineer has inspired women across the country while promoting gender equality in the sports community.
“This was one of the most difficult tasks I have undertaken in my life and it has only been my passion for adventure sports and mountaineering that drove me to achieve this,” exclaimed Naila after her successful summit. “I’m humbled by the constant faith my nation and especially the mountain climbing community has shown in my efforts. The BARD Foundation has served as my guiding light through this time. Their unconditional support of my endeavors is a testament to their noble vision of enabling Pakistani sports enthusiasts.”
Bilquis and Abdul Razak Dawood (BARD) Foundation, is Naila Kiani’s official sponsor.
Congratulating Naila on making the record books yet again, Razak Dawood, Chairman BARD Foundation, stated, “Naila embodies the spirit of Pakistan’s greats, the work ethic, the desire to give of herself and of her heart, and the love of victory. With each successful climb, she etches her name in history, inspires countless other young girls, and makes our country great. Naila’s monumental feat to summit the Gasherbrum I right after K2 summit inspires the Foundation to continue supporting young talent, with opportunities to excel in athletics and sports. Naila’s success is proof of the tenacity women possess to achieve anything they set their minds to.”
A Dubai-based banker by profession, and a mother of two, Naila is also a trained boxer, a mountaineer, and an adventure enthusiast. In 2021, she set a record by becoming the first Pakistani woman to climb Gasherbrum-II (8,035 meters), the world’s thirteenth highest mountain. Naila also was one of the only two Pakistani female mountaineers to stand atop the world’s second highest peak, the mighty K2, and the first Pakistani woman to achieve this feat in the first attempt. She was presented with an award in December 2021 by the President of Pakistan in acknowledgement of her achievements and contributions to mountaineering.
BARD Foundation is a human-development initiative, founded by the renowned industrialist & technocrat Abdul Razak Dawood and his philanthropist wife Mrs. Bilquis Dawood. The foundation carries a deep vision to promote and facilitate local athletes and sportspersons in order to highlight their talent and true potential across the world. BARD resonates with Naila’s dream to influence the women of Pakistan to run after their dreams, to realise their potential and achieve their goals.
With the ever-increasing fuel price, everyone is in a state of mental stress. The inflation and the current state of the Pakistani rupee have also made it difficult for people to manage the essentials. 90% of people own motorcycles and bikes for their daily commute in Pakistan. Students, delivery workers, and many others prefer this mode of transport because of its convenient size to avoid traffic. The bikes also provide an advantage of low fuel consumption. However, the rising fuel costs have recently put everyone in a tight spot.
E-bikes have been gaining momentum throughout the world as well as in Pakistan. They can be a sustainable option for a sound, smooth ride in the long run. Whether you want to save the cost of fuel or to fetch a new ride, you can go for the E-bikes option. Here are the best E-bikes in Pakistan.
1. Jolta E-Bike 70cc
The Jolta E-bike offers an exquisite battery with a long running time. The bike can travel up to 80 km when it is fully charged. With 1000w power and an extreme speed of 60km/hr, the motorcycle is noise-free and light on the environment. Jolta electric bike price ranges from PKR 81,000 to PKR 86,000.
Image source: joltaelectric.com
2. Jolta Scooty
The iconic scooter now comes with an electric feature. It isn’t easy to distinguish it from the petrol-powered ones since they look identical. The 20AH battery offers a range of 60KMs on a full charge. The battery takes up to around 1.8units to fully charge. The scooty is priced at PKR 110,000.
The Jolta JE 70D- SE looks like any other 70cc bike. However, instead of the engine, it has a battery and no kick start or clutch. For the technical specifications, it will cover up to 80KMs in a single charge. The top speed on the road is 55KM/hour. The battery is made of lithium-ion with 20AH and a 1000w motor. It will completely charge in 8-10 hours, and the charging will take around 1.5units of electricity. The bike costs PKR 89,500.
Image Source: Jolta Electric
4. Jolta E-Bike 125cc
The Jolta electric bike 125cc is designed against Honda 125. The Jolta 125cc bike is designed with advanced features and advanced battery specifications. The battery travels about 80-100 km/hr and can be charged anywhere. The bike retails for PKR 141,600.