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Tag: Story

  • Watch: Story Of Elderly Couple Selling Snacks At Thane Station Wins Hearts Online

    Watch: Story Of Elderly Couple Selling Snacks At Thane Station Wins Hearts Online

    An Instagram reel featuring an elderly couple who frequents Thane railway station (near Mumbai) is winning many hearts online. The video, which has since gone viral with millions of views, was shared by digital creator Siddhesh Lokare. In the video, the vlogger explains that someone sent him a photo of the couple – Bhimrao and Shobha – at Thane station a few days earlier. He later managed to track them down and interview them. He first asks them when they got married and the man states the exact date. The woman points out that they have been together for over four decades. Next, the vlogger asks them how often they come to the railway station. The woman replies that they come every day and they also go to deliver the snacks/sweets if someone has placed an order. We get a glimpse at some of their wares, which include treats like chakli, kachori, bhakarwadi, etc.

    In response to a question, Bhimrao also reveals that he lost his vision when he was two. The vlogger highlights that Shobha knew she was getting married to someone without sight. He asks her about the same and she smilingly declares that she still married him. She said that they always imagine themselves in each other’s shoes. Her husband says, “I am visually impaired. She has a deformed hand. We thought we’d complete each other.” She adds, “We’ll stay together… for life.”

    The vlogger asks the man how his wife helps him. He explains that she cooks food and serves water, etc. He also helps her out by chopping the vegetables for her dishes. His wife praises his cutting skills wholeheartedly. Next, the vlogger asks the couple what love means to them. The man replies that they need each other, especially at this age. The woman admits that they fight sometimes but they don’t stay away from each other for long. “It’s home. Utensils will collide but they will never break,” summarises the man. The vlogger also asks them what they are currently in need of. Shobha explains that they need a stall (for their wares) so they don’t have to remain standing most of the time to do their work. Finally, the vlogger asks the couple if they have a message for his generation (the youth). Bhimrao states, “Hard work is everything. You can’t live only for yourself. If you have lived for others, you have truly lived.”

    Also Read: Strangers-Turned-Friends Reunite At Same Restaurant Where They First Met A Year Ago

    In the caption, the content creator wrote, “I discovered Bhimrao and Shobha near Thane railway station and what happened next was just cathartic. Bhimrao is visually impaired and Shobha has a deformed hand, though, physical limitations never stopped them from being with each other and growing as a family. They visit Thane station daily to sell calendars, and snacks like chakli, laddoos, bhakarwadi and more. They stand as an example for me to realise what true love and companionship are.”

    The heartwarming video has received a lot of praise on Instagram. Many people asked the vlogger in the comments how they could help the couple out. Check out some of the reactions below:

    “Love is the answer to everything.”

    “They define the term, ‘LOVE’.”

    “I’m not crying. You are.”

    “More power to them.”

    “Respect for both of them.”

    “So so so wholesome.”

    “Videos like this are the ones that I genuinely look forward to.”

    “‘It’s a home, utensils will collide but they won’t break’ – Uncle dropping some heavy words.”

    For more such heartwarming stories, click here.



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  • Man Providing Free Nimbu Paani For Runners In South Mumbai Wins Hearts – Heres His Story

    Man Providing Free Nimbu Paani For Runners In South Mumbai Wins Hearts – Heres His Story

    A man from Peddar Road in Mumbai has been quietly keeping many runners hydrated with homemade nimbu paani for over a decade now. His efforts were recently lauded on social media when Tata Mumbai Marathon shared a video about him. The reel has since gone viral and received a lot of attention online. At the beginning of the video is a clip by another vlogger, Piyush Gadda, who introduces us to a “mystery man” helping other runners in South Mumbai. He explains that this person keeps free nimbu paani for all runners at a spot on Peddar Road. Piyush doesn’t know who this man is and asks people to share his name in the comments in case they do. He mentions that the drink is very refreshing and that it seems to eliminate one’s fatigue.

    The organizers of the Tata Mumbai Marathon managed to track down this person, who is now being hailed “Peddar Road Ka Nimbu Pani Hero.” His name is Rajesh Shah. In the video, he himself shares the story of how he began this simple yet much-appreciated initiative for fellow runners. Rajesh begins by clarifying that it’s not just his efforts that are behind this venture but those of other people too. He explains that he stays at Peddar Road and realised that it’s a good midway point on the marathon route (which starts from Nariman Point) to keep water for himself. He later began keeping a few nimbu paani bottles for his runner friends as well.

    He credits other people in the video for helping him since the project’s inception many years ago. One of them, Sanjay, makes the lemon water from scratch at home. The drink is transferred to bottles, which are refrigerated before being taken outside for the runners. He and Rajesh coordinate regarding the number of bottles to be kept, to ensure that people don’t miss out. Rajesh also reveals that in recent times he goes to keep bottles specially for early runners around 5.15 am, despite not being ready for his run. He feels responsible for providing this refreshment as he feels runners have come to expect its availability.

    Watch the complete video below to learn more.

    Also Read: LLB Students’ Sweet Birthday Cake Surprise For Middle-Aged Classmates Wins Hearts

    In the comments, many people praised Rajesh and his thoughtful initiative. Several users also thanked him for the same. Check out some of the reactions below:

    “Thanks Rajesh for the years of hydration and silent blessings to you, then anonymous, now known. The correct amount of lemon Enerzal and chilled.”

    “A wonderful gesture, God bless him and his team.”

    “Wow!!! This is inspiring… very selfless and kind gesture. Kudos.”

    “Such a thoughtful gesture Rajesh ji. Thanks on behalf of the running community. Thanks Piyush for sharing this story with us.”

    “Thank you from the bottom of my heart for your hydration support over the years.”

    “Just the post has refreshed my mind and faith in humanity!! When life gives you lemons, they should be used for limbu paani for all.”

    “Wow!! Seeing something like this for the first time! This is great great work!”



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  • A Chiefs Love Story’ Is About Passionate Football Fans Finding Connection

    A Chiefs Love Story’ Is About Passionate Football Fans Finding Connection

    Julie Sherman Wolfe wants to be clear, as she says, “I’ll start with the Taylor and Travis thing. As far as informing the movie goes, that was sort of a jumping off point.”

    She’s talking about the new Hallmark movie “Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story.”

    And, of course, she’s referring to supercouple, Kansas City Chiefs player Travis Kelce and superstar singer Taylor Swift and their well-documented romance.

    But, the movie isn’t about a performer and a player, it’s about Chiefs superfan Alana who’s trying to win the Fan of the Year Award as a Christmas gift for her family, while falling in love with someone in the Chiefs front office along the way.

    The movie stars Hunter King as Alana, Tyler Hynes, Ed Begley Jr., and Diedrich Bader, and features Travis Kelce’s mom, Donna, as well. Sherman Wolfe wrote the film.

    King says, “I mean, I’m a Swiftie. I don’t know who isn’t a Swiftie. So we’ll take all the Swifties we can get, right?”

    But, as it turns out, King is also a huge fan of the sport as well. “I grew up loving football. I was a really big Peyton Manning fan and I would YouTube his videos on how to throw a football. And then I was like, ‘I’m going to be a quarterback when I grow up,’ and my dad’s like, ‘I got news for you…’ So, I don’t get to be a quarterback, but I get to be a part of a football movie.”

    Hynes interjects that, “And she’s got an arm on her.”

    Lara Krug, VP and Chief Marketing Officer with Kansas City Chiefs agrees with Hynes, saying, “[She] she sent us a video of herself throwing a football” and it was incorporated into the movie.

    The film is the result of a partnership between Hallmark and the Chiefs as explained by Samantha DiPippo, SVP Programming at Hallmark Media.

    “The second we really sat down and started talking about what this could be, I think we instantly knew that there was a massive opportunity to make something truly magical here. And for us, it’s amazing to shoot in Kansas City. This is obviously the home of both of our iconic brands, but it’s also the biggest movie we’ve ever done,” she says.

    Krug says that while the narrative definitely has football all over it, “It’s really about celebrating the fans and their passion.”

    DiPippo wants to point out that, “You don’t have to be a Chiefs fan to love this movie.”

    In a twist of fate, Sherman Wolfe was not exactly a Chiefs supporter when she took on this project. She was in fact mourning her favorite team’s recent Super Bowl loss to the Chiefs, explaining that she’s a die hard 49ers fan.

    “I was still wearing black, and [DiPippo] said, ‘Okay, are you sitting down,’ and she told me all about the movie. And honestly, I feel so strongly about the passion that fans have for the game of football, and I think it transcends a particular team. So, I was able to separate my own personal angst from that and write a movie that, if you didn’t know I was a 49er fan, you would think that I was a Chiefs fan.”

    Krug adds, “I think regardless of being a Chiefs fan or not, [this movie is about] so much more than what is currently happening in the cultural zeitgeist. For us, we’re fans of our fans, so if we can tell a story where you get to combine [that] with Hallmark, it’s perfect.”

    King agrees, as she adds, “I don’t know who wouldn’t want to watch this movie. It’s centered around love and passion and football and Christmas and family.”

    Circling back to talk about a certain star and whether her fans should tune in, King believes that, “For a lot of Swifties, [all of this is] kind of her brand, so come on board, watch it. It’s going to be great.”

    Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story premieres Nov. 30 on Hallmark Channel at 8/7c as part of the network’s 15th annual Countdown to Christmas.

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  • Who is Lord Lucan? Real story of killer aristocrat 50 years after he vanished following…

    Who is Lord Lucan? Real story of killer aristocrat 50 years after he vanished following…

    4 November 2024, 10:16

    Lord and Lady Lucan

    Lord and Lady Lucan.

    Picture:
    Getty


    Fifty years ago, on November 7, 1974, the dead body of a children’s nanny, Sandra Rivett, was discovered in a mail sack in the basement of a Belgravia townhouse.

    The chief suspect was the father of the children, an Eton-educated gambler called Richard John Bingham, the seventh earl of Lucan, who had vanished.

    While most of Lord Lucan’s friends and family insisted that he had taken his own life, no body has ever been found. The manhunt for Lucan has lasted decades.

    Lord and Lady Lucan

    Lord and Lady Lucan.

    Picture:
    Getty


    Read More: Is Lord Lucan alive? Computer expert says elderly man in Australia’s face is ‘conclusively’ same as vanished killer

    Read More: Three missing Cluedo cards discovered in Lord Lucan’s car deepen nanny murder mystery

    Who was Lord Lucan?

    Richard John Bingham was the seventh Earl of Lucan, whose great-great-grandfather ordered the Charge of the Light Brigade, and whose father was a socialist peer who served in Clement Atlee’s government.

    Born in 1934, Lucan went to Eton, did National Service in the Coldstream Guards, and briefly worked at Brandt’s merchant bank in London.

    A spectacular win at chemin de fer (worth £26,000, when his annual salary was only £500) convinced him to become a professional gambler. He did not thrive: his nickname, “Lucky”, was ironic.

    Even so, he lived a ritzy lifestyle, driving powerboats, racing bobsleighs and owning race horses; his suave demeanour led to him apparently being considered for the screen role of James Bond.

    How was his marriage?

    Lord Lucan was a snob who reportedly refused to talk to people who “didn’t have proper shoelaces”, but he still married a middle-class woman, Veronica Duncan, in 1963; she was the sister-in-law of his friend Bill Shand-Kydd.

    Soon after, his father died and he succeeded to the earldom. The couple had three children, but Lady Lucan suffered from postnatal depression and the marriage gradually fell apart.

    He tried to have her committed to a psychiatric hospital, and they separated in 1973. A bitter custody battle ensued; Lucan became obsessed with the idea that she was incapable of raising his children, but he lost the court case, running up huge legal fees in the process.

    Police officer outside the home where Sandra Rivett was murdered

    Police officer outside the home where Sandra Rivett was murdered.

    Picture:
    Getty


    What happened on the night of Thursday 7 October 1974?

    At around 9:45pm, Lady Lucan stumbled from her home on Lower Belgrave Street into the nearby Plumber’s Arm. drenched in blood and screaming: “Help me, help me, help me! I have just escaped from being murdered! He’s in the house! He’s murdered the nanny!”

    It transpired that at around 9pm, she had asked her nanny, Sandra Rivett, 29, to make a cup of tea. Rivett had gone down to the basement kitchen. When she did not reappear, Lady Lucan had gone down to investigate, and had been attacked by a man whose voice she said she recognised as her husband’s.

    After fighting him and convincing him to stop the attack; she said that he admitted to having killed Rivett (by mistake). After he had taken her up to her bedroom, she managed to escape. When the police arrived, they found Rivett’s body in a sack, with a bloody lead pipe that had been used to beat her to death.

    What Lucan did after the attack?

    He left London and arrived at his friend Ian Maxwell-Scott’s home, in Uckfield in Sussex, at 11:30pm.

    His told Susan Maxwell-Scott that he had had a “traumatic night of unbelievable coincidence.” While passing the family house he seen an intruder struggling with his wife in the basement. He had run in to help, and the man had run off.

    Realising that his wife would accuse him of being responsible and that the evidence looked damning, he said he had decided to “lie doggo for a while”.

    The last confirmed sighting of Lucan was him leaving Uckfield in the early hours of Friday. His car was found near the harbour in Newhaven, 16 miles away; it had been parked between 5am and 8am.

    What is the evidence against him?

    In a landmark inquest in June 1975, it took a jury just 31 minutes to find that Lucan had murdered Rivett. This was based on Lady Lucan’s testimony, and on a wealth of other details.

    The car Lucan was using, a Ford Corsair, was found splattered with blood types matching both Rivett and Lady Lucan, along with another length of pipe, similar to the murder weapon.

    Lucan had borrowed a car, perhaps because it was less conspicuous than his Mercedes, and had found out from his daughter that the nanny’s night off was on Thursdays, though she in fact swapped her days that week.

    He knew that his wife made a cup of tea at 9pm; a light bulb had been removed in the basement.

    Lucan’s friend Greville Howard later told police Lucan had told him that killing his wife would save him from bankruptcy, because he would reclaim his house, and that he could dump her body in the Solent; she “would never be found”.

    What happened to Lucan?

    Initially police believed he had fled to Africa. Some speculated that the peer’s wealthy friends, dubbed “the Clermont set”, had helped spirit him away, and perhaps killed him because he had become an embarrassment, or at least encouraged him to shoot himself before his body was fed to tigers owned by John Aspinall at Howletts, his private zoo in Kent.

    There have been ‘sightings’ of the missing peer as far away as India, Mozambique and Australia.

    The most plausible theory remains that he committed suicide shortly after the nanny’s death. Lady Lucan believed that he took a ferry from Newhaven and threw himself into the Channel.

    In 2016, his son George Bingham said he believed his father had been dead since 1974, and that it was time to find “another Loch Ness monster out there”.

    Neil Berriman, son of Sandra Rivett

    Neil Berriman, son of Sandra Rivett.

    Picture:
    Alamy


    Why are people still fascinated by the case?

    There has been a real human cost in this case and tragically people often forget that Sandra Rivett is the real victim

    The BBC is to air a documentary series looking to solve the mysterious disappearance of Lord Lucan following the murder of his children’s nanny Sandra Rivett almost 50 years ago.

    The three-part series follows Ms Rivett’s son, Hampshire builder Neil Berriman, who has been consumed by the case since he discovered his mother’s identity at the age of 40, having been put for adoption as a baby.
    In 2016, Lord Lucan’s son Lord George Bingham inherited his title as the eighth Earl after he applied for a death certificate 42 years after his father vanished, under the Presumption of Death Act, which came into effect in 2014.

    Lady Lucan was estranged from her children and lived as a recluse, before killing herself in 2017.

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  • Who is Lord Lucan? Real story of killer aristocrat 50 years after he vanished following…

    Who is Lord Lucan? Real story of killer aristocrat 50 years after he vanished following…

    4 November 2024, 10:16

    Lord and Lady Lucan

    Lord and Lady Lucan.

    Picture:
    Getty


    Fifty years ago, on November 7, 1974, the dead body of a children’s nanny, Sandra Rivett, was discovered in a mail sack in the basement of a Belgravia townhouse.

    The chief suspect was the father of the children, an Eton-educated gambler called Richard John Bingham, the seventh earl of Lucan, who had vanished.

    While most of Lord Lucan’s friends and family insisted that he had taken his own life, no body has ever been found. The manhunt for Lucan has lasted decades.

    Lord and Lady Lucan

    Lord and Lady Lucan.

    Picture:
    Getty


    Read More: Is Lord Lucan alive? Computer expert says elderly man in Australia’s face is ‘conclusively’ same as vanished killer

    Read More: Three missing Cluedo cards discovered in Lord Lucan’s car deepen nanny murder mystery

    Who was Lord Lucan?

    Richard John Bingham was the seventh Earl of Lucan, whose great-great-grandfather ordered the Charge of the Light Brigade, and whose father was a socialist peer who served in Clement Atlee’s government.

    Born in 1934, Lucan went to Eton, did National Service in the Coldstream Guards, and briefly worked at Brandt’s merchant bank in London.

    A spectacular win at chemin de fer (worth £26,000, when his annual salary was only £500) convinced him to become a professional gambler. He did not thrive: his nickname, “Lucky”, was ironic.

    Even so, he lived a ritzy lifestyle, driving powerboats, racing bobsleighs and owning race horses; his suave demeanour led to him apparently being considered for the screen role of James Bond.

    How was his marriage?

    Lord Lucan was a snob who reportedly refused to talk to people who “didn’t have proper shoelaces”, but he still married a middle-class woman, Veronica Duncan, in 1963; she was the sister-in-law of his friend Bill Shand-Kydd.

    Soon after, his father died and he succeeded to the earldom. The couple had three children, but Lady Lucan suffered from postnatal depression and the marriage gradually fell apart.

    He tried to have her committed to a psychiatric hospital, and they separated in 1973. A bitter custody battle ensued; Lucan became obsessed with the idea that she was incapable of raising his children, but he lost the court case, running up huge legal fees in the process.

    Police officer outside the home where Sandra Rivett was murdered

    Police officer outside the home where Sandra Rivett was murdered.

    Picture:
    Getty


    What happened on the night of Thursday 7 October 1974?

    At around 9:45pm, Lady Lucan stumbled from her home on Lower Belgrave Street into the nearby Plumber’s Arm. drenched in blood and screaming: “Help me, help me, help me! I have just escaped from being murdered! He’s in the house! He’s murdered the nanny!”

    It transpired that at around 9pm, she had asked her nanny, Sandra Rivett, 29, to make a cup of tea. Rivett had gone down to the basement kitchen. When she did not reappear, Lady Lucan had gone down to investigate, and had been attacked by a man whose voice she said she recognised as her husband’s.

    After fighting him and convincing him to stop the attack; she said that he admitted to having killed Rivett (by mistake). After he had taken her up to her bedroom, she managed to escape. When the police arrived, they found Rivett’s body in a sack, with a bloody lead pipe that had been used to beat her to death.

    What Lucan did after the attack?

    He left London and arrived at his friend Ian Maxwell-Scott’s home, in Uckfield in Sussex, at 11:30pm.

    His told Susan Maxwell-Scott that he had had a “traumatic night of unbelievable coincidence.” While passing the family house he seen an intruder struggling with his wife in the basement. He had run in to help, and the man had run off.

    Realising that his wife would accuse him of being responsible and that the evidence looked damning, he said he had decided to “lie doggo for a while”.

    The last confirmed sighting of Lucan was him leaving Uckfield in the early hours of Friday. His car was found near the harbour in Newhaven, 16 miles away; it had been parked between 5am and 8am.

    What is the evidence against him?

    In a landmark inquest in June 1975, it took a jury just 31 minutes to find that Lucan had murdered Rivett. This was based on Lady Lucan’s testimony, and on a wealth of other details.

    The car Lucan was using, a Ford Corsair, was found splattered with blood types matching both Rivett and Lady Lucan, along with another length of pipe, similar to the murder weapon.

    Lucan had borrowed a car, perhaps because it was less conspicuous than his Mercedes, and had found out from his daughter that the nanny’s night off was on Thursdays, though she in fact swapped her days that week.

    He knew that his wife made a cup of tea at 9pm; a light bulb had been removed in the basement.

    Lucan’s friend Greville Howard later told police Lucan had told him that killing his wife would save him from bankruptcy, because he would reclaim his house, and that he could dump her body in the Solent; she “would never be found”.

    What happened to Lucan?

    Initially police believed he had fled to Africa. Some speculated that the peer’s wealthy friends, dubbed “the Clermont set”, had helped spirit him away, and perhaps killed him because he had become an embarrassment, or at least encouraged him to shoot himself before his body was fed to tigers owned by John Aspinall at Howletts, his private zoo in Kent.

    There have been ‘sightings’ of the missing peer as far away as India, Mozambique and Australia.

    The most plausible theory remains that he committed suicide shortly after the nanny’s death. Lady Lucan believed that he took a ferry from Newhaven and threw himself into the Channel.

    In 2016, his son George Bingham said he believed his father had been dead since 1974, and that it was time to find “another Loch Ness monster out there”.

    Neil Berriman, son of Sandra Rivett

    Neil Berriman, son of Sandra Rivett.

    Picture:
    Alamy


    Why are people still fascinated by the case?

    There has been a real human cost in this case and tragically people often forget that Sandra Rivett is the real victim

    The BBC is to air a documentary series looking to solve the mysterious disappearance of Lord Lucan following the murder of his children’s nanny Sandra Rivett almost 50 years ago.

    The three-part series follows Ms Rivett’s son, Hampshire builder Neil Berriman, who has been consumed by the case since he discovered his mother’s identity at the age of 40, having been put for adoption as a baby.
    In 2016, Lord Lucan’s son Lord George Bingham inherited his title as the eighth Earl after he applied for a death certificate 42 years after his father vanished, under the Presumption of Death Act, which came into effect in 2014.

    Lady Lucan was estranged from her children and lived as a recluse, before killing herself in 2017.

    Source link

  • Takeaways from AP story on Ukrainian schools built underground to guard against bombs and radiation

    Takeaways from AP story on Ukrainian schools built underground to guard against bombs and radiation

    ZAPORIZHZHIA, Ukraine — Most of the Russian weapons that hit the Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia kill in an instant: the drones, the ballistic missiles, the glide bombs, the artillery shells. But Russian soldiers control another weapon they have never deployed, with the potential to be just as deadly: The nearby Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.

    The NPP, as it’s known, once produced more electricity than any other nuclear power plant in Europe. It fell to Russian forces in the first weeks of the full-scale invasion, and Russia has held its six reactors ever since. The plant has come under repeated attacks that both sides blame on the other.

    These twin dangers – bombs and radiation – shadow families in Zaporizhzhia. An Associated Press team spent nearly a week in the city to learn about its building binge for its future: an underground school system.

    Here’s what AP found:

    About 50 kilometers (31 miles) away, the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant has been in in cold shutdown for two years after intense negotiations between the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Russian government. The IAEA has rotated a handful of staff on site ever since.

    There are risks even in cold shutdown, when the reactor is operating but not generating power. The main danger is that its external electrical supply, which comes from Ukrainian-controlled territory under constant Russian bombardment, will be cut off for a longer period than generators can handle.

    The nuclear plant needs electricity to keep crucial backups functioning, including water pumps that prevent meltdowns, radiation monitors and other essential safety systems. Russia has repeatedly struck at Ukraine’s grid, attacks that have intensified this year. Highlighting the constant danger, electricity to the NPP was cut yet again for three days as emergency workers struggled to put out the fire.

    The Zaporizhzhia plant has a safer, more modern design than Chornobyl, known in Russian as Chernobyl, and there’s not the same danger of a large-scale meltdown, experts say. But that doesn’t reduce the risk to zero.

    Most of the youngest residents of the city have never seen the inside of a classroom. Schools that had suspended in-person classes during the COVID-19 pandemic nearly four years ago continued online classes after the war started in February 2022.

    Construction has begun on a dozen subterranean schools designed to be radiation- and bomb-proof and capable of educating 12,000 students.

    The cost to build a subterranean school system is enormous — the budget for the underground version of Gymnasium No. 71 alone stands at more than 112 million hryvnias ($2.7 million). International donors are covering most of it, and the national and local governments have made it a priority on par with funding the army.

    But most parents say bombs, which strike the city daily, are a far more tangible fear than radiation.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy accuses Russia of targeting nuclear plants deliberately. Russian forces seized control of the Chornobyl area in the first days of the invasion, only to be driven back by Ukrainian forces.

    Since the start of the war, Russia has repeatedly alluded to its nuclear weapons stockpile without leveling direct threats. In September, Russian President Vladimir Putin said that Russia would consider any attack by a country supported by a nuclear-armed nation to be a joint attack and stressed that Russia could respond with nuclear weapons to any attack that posed a “critical threat to our sovereignty.”

    Ukrainian officials fear that the Russian attacks on Chornobyl and the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plants may be just a start. During his speech in late September to the U.N. General Assembly, Zelenskyy warned that Russia was preparing strikes on more nuclear plants, which generate a large portion of Ukraine’s electricity.

    ___

    The Associated Press receives support for nuclear security coverage from the Carnegie Corporation of New York and Outrider Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

    ___

    Additional AP coverage of the nuclear landscape: https://apnews.com/projects/the-new-nuclear-landscape/

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  • What Is The Story Behind Chicken Taka-Tak And How To Make It

    What Is The Story Behind Chicken Taka-Tak And How To Make It

    Chicken Takatak (Tak-a-Tak or Taka-Tak) is a popular street food dish in Lahore, Pakistan. In this flavourful dish, chicken is prepared in a thick gravy with the addition of Lahori spice mix and served with lachcha paratha, naan, tandoori roti or roomali roti. The chicken has a thick, keema-like consistency which is achieved not from grinding the meat but from breaking it down into pieces while cooking. This dish is generally cooked on roadside dhabas on big tawas. The savoury chicken dish is an indulgent treat, with lots of spices and oil. But do you know what exactly ‘taka-tak’ is in this dish? Let’s find out! 

    Where Does ‘Taka-Tak’ Come From?

    The nomenclature “Takatak” comes from the style of cooking chicken for this dish. This dish is cooked with the use of a cooking spoon called tabeta or ulatni – a flat metallic spatula with a slight edge. This spoon is used continuously during the cooking of this dish to crumble the chicken. The sound while using this spoon is something like “tak tak tak taka tak”. This sound is what gives this dish the name – Chicken Takatak.

    Also Read: Lights, Cards, Action! How To Host The Best Diwali Card Party

    Unlike other dishes where the chicken might taste plain from the inside, in this dish the chicken is completely covered in the masala, thanks to the cooking technique. Cooking chicken on the tawa gives it a unique taste where the chicken is roasted with the masala all over. Want to learn how to make this fantastic dish at home? Here is the recipe.

    Latest and Breaking News on NDTV

    How To Make Chicken Takatak | Spicy Lahore-Style Chicken Takatak Recipe

    Begin by heating oil in a kadhai. Now, add chopped onion, garlic, ginger, and green chilli. Saute till onion is soft and a little pink. Add all the dry spices including turmeric powder, red chilly powder, crushed coriander seeds, crushed black pepper, garam masala powder and salt to taste. Saute and then add the chopped tomato. Once the oil separates, add chicken cubes and mix with the edgy flat spatula to break the chicken. Do not forget to make the special “taka tak” sound! Add coriander and green chillies. Cover and cook till the chicken is ready. Garnish with mint leaves and ginger julienne. Serve with lachcha paratha or tandoori roti. Click here for a detailed recipe with all the ingredients.

    Also Read: Fried Chicken Pulao: This Delicious And Hearty Dish Is Perfect For Impromptu Gatherings

    Did you find this recipe interesting? Try it at home and share your experience in the comments section.

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  • New Opening: The Atrium At The Plaza Begins Its Story With DIVA By Chef Ritu Dalmia

    New Opening: The Atrium At The Plaza Begins Its Story With DIVA By Chef Ritu Dalmia

    Jio World Plaza in BKC has a charming new dining destination called the Atrium at The Plaza. Suffused with natural light and Europen-inspired decor, this space aims to capture the spirit of a holiday and whisk you away from the worries of hectic city life. The Atrium at the Plaza has been envisioned as a spot that will bring together various cuisines for guests to choose from. Individual establishments will not have their own seating. Instead, tables are set up in the open space in between. The design makes it stand out from similar spaces in other malls. Here, it’s more of a chic courtyard for culinary delights rather than a regular ‘food court.’ The idea is to eat well and relax in a quiet corner replete with artistic touches – lampposts, floral arrangements, a grand aquarium and more. 

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    Photo Credit: DIVA at the Atrium

    The initial stage of the Atrium’s launch has been marked by the opening of DIVA by Chef Ritu Dalmia. Guests at Jio World Plaza can now dig into Chef’s signature treats, including (her own favourite) Mac & Cheese and DIVA’s classic tiramisu. But the menu here goes beyond Italian dishes and features Pan-Asian and Indian comfort food too. We had the chance to check it out for ourselves a few days ago. Explaining the idea behind DIVA’s cafe-style offerings, Chef clarifies, “This is a place where you don’t come for long lunches. If you want to catch up with a friend and grab a quick bite, this is the sort of spot you would come to. For us, the food ethos is very clear: simple, non-pretentious, high-quality and delicious.”

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    Photo Credit: DIVA at the Atrium

    We began our brunch with the yummy Chicken Katsu Bao and the satisfying Root Vegetable, Almond & Japanese Ginger Dimsum. The real show-stealer was the Sourdough Sandwich with Mini Sharp Cheddar, Onion Marmalade and Sriracha. We couldn’t stop ourselves from taking extra portions of this one! Our meal was complemented by refreshing sips of Peach and Apricot Iced Tea and Passion Fruit Bubble Tea. Beverage choices include mocktails, teas and coffee drinks – no alcohol is served.

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    Photo Credit: DIVA at the Atrium

    Chef Ritu explains that the food at DIVA at the Atrium is meant to be “non-intimidating”, which is a hallmark of a good cafe for her. The focus is on the familiar, the casual and the comfortable. The main course has accordingly been presented in the form of “Meal Bowls in the World”. Expect Asian staples like Blue Pea Fried Rice with Pan Seared Tofu and Sambal, alongside Italian delights like Lasagna Meat Ragu and Dainty Potato Gnocchi, Forest Mushrooms and Pecorino. Those who are still craving “ghar ka khana” will also find options like chole kulche, subz pulao and other desi classics. No outing should be wrapped up before savouring a sweet indulgence. At DIVA, options range from decadent tarts, pastries and cheesecakes to lighter desserts like the gluten-free rosemary and almond torta.

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    Photo Credit: DIVA at the Atrium

    Exciting future developments at the Atrium at The Plaza are in the works, we are told. Till then, you can drop by for scrumptious treats curated by one of India’s most celebrated chefs and enjoy the leisurely ambience.

    Where: Jio World Plaza, Gate 6 & Gate 12, G Block Rd, G Block BKC, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra East, Mumbai

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    Photo Credit: DIVA at the Atrium

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    Photo Credit: DIVA at the Atrium

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  • Recreating Aaron Hernandez’s New England in “American Sports Story”

    Recreating Aaron Hernandez’s New England in “American Sports Story”

    After Aaron Hernandez and his friend, Alexander Bradley, gunned down two men in a car near the intersection of Shawmut and Herald streets in July 2012, they sped off in Hernandez’s Toyota 4Runner.

    As recreated in the latest episode of “American Sports Story,” the FX series based on The Boston Globe’s Spotlight series and accompanying podcast, it was a frantic scene: Hernandez races through Boston’s deserted streets in the wee hours as an agitated Bradley wipes the weapon of prints and tosses it out the window.

    Is that really the way it went down? Eh, maybe. It’s worth remembering that the 10-episode series, produced by Ryan Murphy, is show business; it’s a dramatization, not a documentary. While it’s inspired by actual events, most of the dialogue and some of the characters are imagined or invented.

    Also, none of “American Sports Story” was shot in Boston — or Foxborough or North Attleborough, for that matter. The series chronicles the arc of Hernandez’s 27 years — from his childhood in Bristol, Conn., to the University of Florida, to Gillette Stadium, to the Souza-Baranowski Correctional Center in Shirley, where the former Patriots tight end died by suicide – but “American Sports Story” was shot almost exclusively in New Jersey.

    FX’s American Sports Story: Aaron Hernandez — “Herald Street” — Episode 6 (Airs Tuesday, October 15) Pictured: (l-r) Jake Cannavale as Chris, Josh Rivera as Aaron Hernandez.Michael Parmelee/FX

    The aftermath of the 2012 double murder, for instance, when Hernandez and Bradley are hurtling through the darkness in the silver 4Runner, was shot in Newark. Is the scene believable as downtown Boston after midnight? Sure – at least enough that no one’s going to complain.

    “Is Newark Boston? No,” said Tyson Bidner, one of the show’s producers. “But are there bones of these cities that work? Yes.”

    Bidner, whose producing credits include the film “The Whale” and the acclaimed FX series “The Bear,” said the show’s creative team worked hard to replicate locations in Massachusetts that played an important part in the Hernandez story: the locker room at Gillette Stadium; the North Attleborough home the football player shared with his fiancée Shayanna Jenkins; the Fall River courtroom where he was convicted in April 2015 of murdering Odin Lloyd; and the prison cell where he died two years later.

    Another location featured in this week’s episode is Cure Lounge, the now-closed Tremont Street nightclub where Hernandez and Bradley had been partying before the murders of Daniel de Abreu and Safiro Furtado. One of the two men had spilled a drink on Hernandez inside Cure, which enraged the football player and prompted him to pull up alongside the victims’ car later. (In court, Bradley claimed Hernandez did the shooting, while Hernandez blamed Alexander; a jury ultimately acquitted Hernandez.)

    “We used actual clubs in Jersey City,” said Bidner. “But you also have to make it feel real. What was the experience for a Patriots player in their heyday? It would be a bouncer who recognized them and said, ‘come right through, right through.’”

    What Stu Zicherman, the creator and writer of “American Sports Story,” didn’t do was use drone shots of familiar Boston landmarks – Bunker Hill Monument, Fenway Park, Faneuil Hall – to establish setting. “Stylistically, I think it was decided not to do that in the same way you would during the broadcast of a game,” Bidner said. “You don’t want to hit the audience over the head.”

    Bidner said it was critical to faithfully recreate the house in North Attleborough because the moment when Hernandez was arrested and marched out of the residence in handcuffs was so remarkable. It was the first time that many in the public, at least those who don’t pay attention to the Patriots or the NFL, saw Hernandez.

    Once a reasonable facsimile of the house was found in a suburban New Jersey neighborhood, Bidner said the show’s crew went to work on the landscaping.

    “What do we remember about his arrest? We remember Hernandez outside in a T-shirt and those long shorts,” Bidner said. “But it was the greenery, the shrubbery that, essentially, makes it that house.”

    For the show’s football sequences, producers had to leave the Garden State. They didn’t have access to MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., where both the New York Giants and New York Jets play, and no college stadium in the area was a convincing stand-in for Gillette, with its 65,000 seats.

    So toward the end of production, Bidner said, the cast and crew of “American Sports Story” moved to Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Fla., a city-owned venue where the Citrus Bowl and Pop-Tarts Bowl are played. Hundreds of extras were hired to fill seats and stand on the sideline while former college players and members of the Canadian Football League filmed scenes on the field.


    Mark Shanahan can be reached at mark.shanahan@globe.com. Follow him @MarkAShanahan.



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  • Recap of ‘American Sports Story: Aaron Hernandez’ episode 5

    Recap of ‘American Sports Story: Aaron Hernandez’ episode 5

    It’s all downhill from here. That’s the impression one gets watching episode 5 of “American Sports Story: Aaron Hernandez,” which aired Tuesday night on FX.

    The latest chapter of the Ryan Murphy-produced show dramatizes Hernandez’s arrival in Foxborough, where he quickly learns that coach Bill Belichick has no interest in keeping tabs on his team’s new offensive weapon, and no ability to keep Hernandez on the straight and narrow once it’s clear he’s coming undone.

    “This is a man’s team, be a man,” Belichick tells the player at one point.

    It doesn’t take long for Hernandez’s lackadaisical approach in practice to bother his coach. In one scene, Belichick appears to punish Hernandez for lining up incorrectly, ordering up a series of plays that puts the tight end in the running-back position. As a result, Hernandez takes a series of huge hits that leave him dazed, underscoring the effect repeated blows to the head may have had on his behavior.

    “I’m getting my head beat in. I’m not a running back,” Hernandez pleads.

    “I’ll tell you what you are,” Belichick barks.

    The episode ends with Hernandez at the wheel of an idling car at night, staring at a traffic light as if in a trance.

    Belichick is portrayed in the show, which is based on The Boston Globe’s Spotlight series and accompanying podcast, produced by The Boston Globe and Wondery, as a social misfit whose only interests are football and … Bon Jovi. There’s an amusing scene in which the coach (played by Tony-winning stage actor Norbert Leo Butz) gets hyped for practice by listening to “It’s My Life” with the volume turned up.

    In episode 5, we’re also introduced to two characters who may play the most pivotal roles in Hernandez’s last few years. One is Shayanna Jenkins, a former high school flame with whom Hernandez reconnects after he’s drafted by the Patriots. (The pair eventually get engaged and have a daughter.)

    The other is Alexander Bradley. While Jenkins is portrayed as a stabilizing force in Hernandez’s life, Bradley is the opposite. A drug dealer who’s spent time behind bars, Bradley tells Hernandez that the NFL and prison are more similar than it might seem.

    “Ain’t no difference between the warden and the owner of that team,” Bradley says. “White dudes overseeing a whole bunch of Black folk. … They snap their finger and take everything away. You only think you free.”


    Mark Shanahan can be reached at mark.shanahan@globe.com. Follow him @MarkAShanahan.



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