Bollywood Forum CC#15 - Page 31

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Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: hantel

Mere pagal totey mujhe entertain karte rehte hai. *turns the signature option on*

Mujey bhi *turns the sig option on *

They give whole new visual effects to ur divine comments.

Edited by HummingBird12 - 6 years ago
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Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: Billi_Bangalan

Hmmph. Yeah hdfc is doing great in pvt sector. I use sbi plus another nationalised bank and they are absolute sweethearts so i have never faced any problem. Didnt move an inch to get new cards.

Have to accounts der, mine and dad's. Dad's got active par mera hua hi nahi via the generate the new pin or whatever.

I have another work account in another national Bank as well. Par I needed the personal one.

Might give a final dhamki ll shut down my account ad well as dad's! 😆

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Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: HummingBird12

I don't get it. Because those 3 people u have mentioned are the nicest people on IF. They put up with a cranky head like me. The only thing I can assume that u want to be the part of the cool gang. I will suggest you to get an image change and enter the IF with new ID and new attitude and we could all be friends. 😃❤️

Thanks humming for your kind words. On behalf of janta shinee and me here's a leg rub to show gratitude.

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Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: ~*sindhu*~

You can but most don't do that . If they can do away with debit cards they will probably take down the atm machines too and asks customers to go completely digital. They anyways encourage people to not use physical money but do more digital transactions even now. As it is the number of ATM machines is slowly decresing in this country. The trend is supposed to continue which is why I guess they are introducing such ideas.

Geeee thanks for explaining.

I hope it happens slowly lol i luv my debit cards :/

Edited by Billi_Bangalan - 6 years ago
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Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: Billi_Bangalan

Thanks humming for your kind words. On behalf of janta shinee and me here's a leg rub to show gratitude.

Image

I am in heaven. 😊😊😊

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Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: VintageWine

Have to accounts der, mine and dad's. Dad's got active par mera hua hi nahi via the generate the new pin or whatever.

I have another work account in another national Bank as well. Par I needed the personal one.

Might give a final dhamki ll shut down my account ad well as dad's! 😆

Well on the contrary my dad's dhamki got my ass moving to the atm to get my new emv card working. Warna shayad mera halat bhi kuch tumhare tarah hota.😆

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Posted: 6 years ago

https://scroll.in/reel/829082/ek-doctor-ki-maut-and-the-missing-indian-scientist-in-the-laboratory

‘Ek Doctor Ki Maut’ and the missing Indian scientist in the laboratory

Tapan Sinha’s acclaimed movie is a rare exploration of the complications faced by scientific researchers in India.

Damini Kulkarni Feb 11, 2017 ¡ 01:30 pm

‘Ek Doctor Ki Maut’ and the missing Indian scientist in the laboratory Pankaj Kapoor in Ek Doctor Ki Maut | National Film Development Corporation

Women might be breaching boardrooms and breaking glass ceilings, but when it comes to pursuing careers in science or technology, they seem to be encountering impenetrable brick walls. In 2013, the United Nations declared February 11 as International Day for Women and Girls in Science in order to raise awareness about the global lack of female representation in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics).

Women have been attempting to make headway in STEM research in India, but the field is already fraught with a host of diverse difficulties. Although gender complicates access to resources, the facilities available to Indian scientists and researchers are woefully scarce to begin with. The cultural assumptions and social realities around scientific research in India have been summarised insightfully in Tapan Sinha’s unflinchingly honest Ek Doctor Ki Maut (1990). The movie was inspired by the true story of Subhash Mukhopadhyay who was denied credit for his research in in-vitro fertilisation. The powerful performances by Pankaj Kapoor, Shabana Azmi and Irrfan lend the narrative a bolstering layer of credibility.

After a decade of intense experiments conducted in a makeshift laboratory in his own home, Dipankar Roy (Pankaj Kapoor) invents a vaccine for leprosy. When he approaches his superiors with the news of his invention, they are confident that if such a vaccine were even a remote possibility, it would have already been invented in the west. This depiction of the casual and matter-of-fact acceptance of inferiority among Indian scientists is still relevant.

Ek Doctor Ki Maut.

Amulya, a dedicated journalist (Irrfan), hastily breaks the news of the invention, hoping that the publicity will aid the progress of Roy’s work. Instead of being feted, Roy is vilified by government agencies, health professionals and his extended family. He struggles acquire timely permissions to conduct clinical trials. And when he ruffles too many political feathers, he is promptly transferred to a little village.

Roy’s work gets tangled in the complex web of bureaucracy and professional jealousy, and the ensuing delay allows a group of American doctors to be credited for the invention of a similar vaccine. Ek Doctor Ki Maut elaborates upon the many pitfalls that are created by a lethargic political administration and depicts the lack of infrastructural support to Indian scientists with heartbreaking insight.

It is eventually implied that a disillusioned and heartsick Roy continues his work abroad.

Shabana Azmi and Pankaj Kapur in Ek Doctor Ki Maut.Shabana Azmi and Pankaj Kapur in Ek Doctor Ki Maut.

Roy is the archetypal obsessed scientist. Ensconced in his laboratory and prioritising his work above everything else, even a wife he loves very deeply, he is taciturn, undiplomatic and unsocial. His wife Seema (Shabana Azmi) is vocal about her frustration and hurt, but remains unflinchingly loyal. She tolerates her husband’s occasional neglect and condescension, even looking after his laboratory mice when he is unable to care for them. Like Seema, women have often made silent, unacknowledged and indirect contributions to scientific research.

Although Seema’s personal motivations are never explicitly stated, her intellect is amply evident. At the peak of her disgust with her husband’s self-absorption, she remarks that as a university graduate, she too could have chosen a flourishing career. Seema’s story resonates deeply with many Indian women who might be qualified but are unable to pursue careers in their chosen fields. For instance, a study reveals that although females constitute 20% of Indian engineering graduates, they form only 13% of the engineering workforce.

When Roy is panned because he refuses to ingratiate himself with influential doctors, Ek Doctor Ki Maut illustrates the indomitable sway of the old boys’ network. This overwhelmingly male-dominated nature of the powerful group of opinion leaders also perhaps explains the vicious cycle that leads to the paucity of women in STEM.

Parineeti Chopra in Hasee Toh Phasee.

The underrepresentation of women in STEM fields is a global issue. A study conducted across 14 countries reveals that while the probability of females graduating with a Bachelor’s and Masters’ degree in science-related fields are 18% and 8% respectively, the percentage of males is 37% and 18%. In India, only 39% of students engaged in STEM education are females, according to a study conducted by NGO Girls in Tech.

This lack of representation peters down into our cinema as well. A study conducted by the Geena Davis Institute of Gender in Media reveals that female characters constituted only 8.3% of STEM professionals in popular Hindi films in 2014. Ditzy inventor Meeta (Parineeti Chopra) in Vinil Matthew’s Hasee Toh Phasee (2014) is a rare exception, but she is portrayed as a lovable and eccentric frump, furthering the notion that scientific inquiry is incompatible with feminine predilections.

The diverse and persistent complications faced by scientific researchers in India imply that we are miles away from a film which depicts a character – especially a female one – who simply happens to be a scientist.

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Posted: 6 years ago

Originally posted by: Billi_Bangalan

Geeee thanks for explaining.

I hope it happens slowly lol i luv my debit cards :/

I hope they don't like at all. I don't want to be this dependent on my phone not unless they can assure me of absolute security

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Posted: 6 years ago

Bohat jald hi buddha aur unattractive ho gaya yeh banda.


https://www.instagram.com/p/B1Y2r7XAegB/?igshid=1856z6ah4tem6

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Posted: 6 years ago

She started going to dance shows now?

lol

https://www.instagram.com/p/B1YPg9-hgci/?hl=en

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