Latest news with #AashiqBanayaAapne


India.com
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- India.com
Meet star who quit engineering to become an actor; from playing villains to becoming the 'messiah of the poor', he is…
Bollywood star Sonu Sood is no less than a hero in real life. His commendable work during the nationwide lockdown in the Corona period made headlines all over the world. He also keeps helping the poor and needy on social media. Very few people know that he was studying engineering. But fate brought him to acting. Why Sonu Sood left engineering? Sonu Sood lives in the hearts of his fans today. But once he was studying engineering. He has obtained an engineering degree. But he always wanted to become an actor. Fate also made him an actor. He started his career from the South Industry.. then his first Hindi film was 'Aashiq Banaya Aapne'. His film proved to be a hit in the year 2005 itself. He got real recognition from 'Jodha Akbar' and 'Dabangg'. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Sonu Sood (@sonu_sood) Who is Sonu Sood's wife? He is married to South Indian Sonali Sood. Sonu and Sonali got married in 1996. The couple has two sons. Sonali likes to stay away from the glamour of Bollywood and neither does she ever appear in front of the media. Sonu and Sonali first met during their studies. When they were doing engineering in Nagpur. Today Sonu and his wife Sonali Sood are also successful producers. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Sonu Sood (@sonu_sood) Let us tell you that Sonu is always seen helping the poor and stands up for the needy. Sonu Sood is as brave in his personal life as he is in real life. It is worth noting that Sonu Sood has played the role of a villain in most of the films in the beginning of his career. But people have loved him wholeheartedly in negative roles.


Scroll.in
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Scroll.in
The Himesh Reshammiya comeback is a rebellion against polished, curated celebrity culture
I was five when Himesh Reshammiya dropped his era-defining hits, Aashiq Banaya Aapne and Jhalak Dikhla Ja. So no, I am not part of his original millennial fanbase that was losing their minds at his recent comeback 'Cap Mania Tour'. But nostalgia? It hit me in the stadium like a tidal wave. In July, Reshammiya – the cap-wearing hit machine who ruled our playlists somewhere between 2005 and 2014, with high-pitched hooks, sometimes absurd lyrics and characteristically nasal vocals – packed out his first Delhi show so quickly that another date was added at the same stadium. That sold out too. I was probably in Class 1 when the big rumour hit town: that singing the verse 'ek baar aaja aaja' from Jhalak Dikhla Ja would summon ghosts. I was convinced. Reshammiya tracks haunted every birthday celebration and dinner with my parents' friends. His songs weren't optional, they were the party. But then, sometime around 2014-'15, Reshammiya all but disappeared from the playlist. Perhaps audiences felt they'd had too much of the elements that defined his style. His 'so bad, it's good' appeal had worked in films like Aap Kaa Surroor (2007) and Karzzzz (2008), where he tried his hand at acting. But it carried him only so far. By the time Happy Hardy and Heer, featuring him in a double role, hit the screens in 2020, it barely made a ripple. From my chaotic early memories to this wild 2025 comeback, whatever this revival says about Reshammiya, I am just glad to witness it. Because honestly, it is nothing short of spectacular. Leaning into the memes The Reshammiya revival didn't begin with film studios or entertainment conglomerates. Like everything else in this era of virality, it began in chaotic corners of the internet. Instagram pages like Surroorgasm reintroduced him not as a dated remnant of the early 2000s but as a postmodern puzzle. Was he cringe or did he possess accidental brilliance that we simply hadn't recognised before? With the flood of memes, everyone was suddenly nostalgic about his aesthetic excesses – the nasal vocals, the leather trench coat, the signature snapback cap. Reshammiya managed to carve out a space for a fandom fueled both by irony and guilty nostalgia. Another part of Reshammiya's appeal was the unabashedly raunchy music videos, often featuring Emraan Hashmi, the actor who could seduce a camera lens without even blinking. With music videos such as Aashiq Banaya Aapne, subtlety quietly left the building. What you got was smouldering glances, slow-motion romances and barely-there outfits that raised eyebrows tartly at the time. The thrill of rediscovering a secret pleasure has played a major role in turning Reshammiya into a full-blown cult icon once again. But his comeback is not just about nostalgia wiping away the cringe he was once tagged with. While he's been proudly owning his trademark style for years, it's his fans who have only recently learned to embrace it – fully and unapologetically. Songs that were once dismissed as the soundtrack of autorickshaw drivers and nightclubs with questionable taste are now celebrated as camp, iconic and timeless. Gayetri Mitra, who grew up in Kolkata, recalls that rickshaw drivers would deck out their autos with flashing lights, microphone-shaped charms and own their love for HR as they blasted out his songs at full volume – often while speeding well beyond the limit. 'It was an experience, it was epic,' the 31-year-old accountant asserted. She added that she still knows most of the lyrics by heart because autos were her main mode of transport back then. With Instagram accounts like Himesh Doing Things, the artist's mundane moments were transformed into shareable memes. This reshaped Reshammiya's image from just an artist with a cap and microphone into a cult favorite embraced by a post-ironic fanbase. Gradually, Reshammiya evolved into a kitschy icon, revered almost like a quirky deity among fans and affectionately dubbed 'Lord Himesh'. And that has meant his comeback tour that began on May 31 in Mumbai is not only about nostalgia, but is almost a form of resistance against polished, curated celebrity culture. Reshammiya, for his part, did not try to reinvent the wheel. He stuck to what he knew best. Instead of toning down his nasal voice, he turned it up. In the early years, he batted away the critics by describing his sound as 'high-pitched'. He even claimed that RD Burman had a similar twang. But a few hits in, he leaned into it and proudly admitted: yes, it is nasal, and it sells. He didn't shy away from the very things that were once mocked or whispered about. Take the snapback cap, the same one he admitted on Koffee With Karan in 2007, he wore to hide hair loss, now proudly front and centre. At the Delhi concert, the cap wasn't just a fashion statement – it was a spectacle. A massive, floating, glittering red snapback stamped with HR initials hovered above the stage. And then, out came Himesh. The energy was electric and the entire stadium shimmered with thousands wearing matching red, glittery HR caps that were handed out by the organisers. A month and a half before the Delhi show, a standout moment from the Mumbai leg of his tour came when he asked the crowd, 'Thoda regular gaaun, ya naak se gaaun?' Should I sing in my regular voice or with my nasal twang? Without missing a beat, the audience picked the latter. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Filmfare (@filmfare) To understand why this works and why 'cringe' now feels cool, we have to unpack what cringe really means. On the surface, cringe is secondhand embarrassment. But socially, it often reflects discomfort with sincerity, emotion and expressions that don't follow acceptable – and often elitist – norms. Cringe is rarely just about taste, it's about power. It tells us who is allowed to perform, what aesthetics are respectable and who gets to be taken seriously. Seen through that lens, enjoying Reshammiya's music is its own quiet form of rebellion. In 2025, Reshammiya is back, louder, weirder and more self-aware than ever. By staying unpolished and sincere to what defines him, Reshammiya has given concert-goers something rare: the freedom to enjoy themselves without irony or shame.


India.com
4 days ago
- Entertainment
- India.com
Meet actress, who did 13 films in 5 years, gave only one hit, quit Bollywood for spirituality, is now..., name is...
Meet actress, who did 13 films in 5 years, gave only one hit, quit Bollywood for spirituality, is now..., name is... It has been over a decade since Tanushree Dutta stepped away from the entertainment world, but people still remember her as the actress opposite Emraan Hashmi in Aashiq Banaya Aapne. Though her career was short-lived, but her performances left an indelible mark on audiences. Tanushree comes from a typical Bengali Hindu family. She completed her schooling from D.B.M.S. English School, and later attended Savitribai Phule Pune University for higher studies.


Hindustan Times
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Hindustan Times
Tanushree Dutta says her crying video was due to ‘fear she faced over last 5 years': Dangerous things happened around me
Actor Tanushree Dutta, the OG MeToo whistleblower, has opened up about the emotional video she recently shared on her social media. In the now-viral clip that she shared on Tuesday, the actor can be seen sobbing and talking about being allegedly "harassed" inside her home. Tanushree Dutta gained fame with Aashiq Banaya Aapne in 2005. "I am being harassed in my own house. I just called the cops, and they have asked me to come to the police station to lodge a proper complaint. I will probably go tomorrow or the day after. I am not well. I have been harassed so much in the past five years that I have fallen sick," she said in the video. Tanushree has alleged that the video was a result "pain, stress, and fear she faced over the last five years". Speaking to ANI, Tanushree said her video was not a stunt or drama, but a real "emotional response after enduring repeated traumatic events since MeToo allegations in 2018". "First of all, I want to say that it was my emotional response," she said. "A lot of strange things have happened to me in the last five years. After MeToo, serious and dangerous things started happening around me. It took me time to understand that all of this was actually happening to me," she said. "I was in an accident; my brakes failed. There were also attempts to mix something in my food to make me sick. Strange things started happening outside my house, too," Tanushree added. When asked if anyone from the film industry reached out to help, she said, "I don't have any friends. And when all of this started happening to me, the few contacts I had also disappeared." About people calling her a drama queen after her video, Tanushree said, "People always say such things. They said I was acting in 2008, they said the same in 2018. And who are these people anyway?" She also responded to the accusations that her viral video was a publicity stunt saying, "There are many ways to go viral. I don't need to do all this. I am Tanushree Dutta. Miss India Universe," she said. Tanushree first gained fame when she won the Femina Miss India Universe title in 2004. She later acted in popular films such as Aashiq Banaya Apne, Dhol, and Bhagam Bhag.


Mint
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Mint
Tanushree Dutta to file police report detailing five years of harassment after emotional video outburst
Actor Tanushree Dutta has revealed that her recent emotional video on Instagram was a spontaneous outburst triggered by years of distress and harassment. Speaking to the media about the widely circulated video, Dutta said, "It was an outburst of the incidents happened in the last five years." While the specific incident that prompted her to contact the police was not major in isolation, Dutta explained that it was simply the tipping point. 'That video was spontaneous. But what I have been facing for the last almost five years, especially since 2020… That video was a culmination of what I have faced in the past five years,' she said. She further added, 'The incident that happened that day was not a very big one, but in the past five years so much has happened with me, that maybe it was time for it all to come out. Maybe it was all transpired by Mahadev. I was crying, thinking why is all this happening to me.' According to Dutta, after the video, she called the police who arrived for a brief inspection. 'I told them that this incident isn't the only thing and that lots of strange things have been happening with me for the past five years.' The police, after their preliminary visit, advised her to present her full account to senior officials. 'The police advised her to meet with the senior officials and to tell them everything in detail. So basically, the police has been informed but the details are yet to be given,' she shared. Dutta confirmed she plans to visit the station on Monday, July 28, to file a comprehensive report. 'I will go on Monday (July 28), along with my advocate and some friends. I will write down everything that has happened in the last five years, so that I don't forget anything.' Bollywood actress Tanushree Dutta, known for sparking India's #MeToo movement in 2018, has once again raised serious concerns about her safety. In a heart-wrenching video shared on Instagram on Tuesday, the 'Aashiq Banaya Aapne' star was seen visibly distraught and tearful, claiming she is being harassed in her own home. In the video, Dutta can be seen wiping away tears as she pleads for help. Speaking both in English and Hindi, she revealed, 'Guys, I am being harassed in my own home. Mujhe mere hi ghar mein pareshaan kiya jaa raha hai. I just called the cops. They came and asked me to come to the police station to launch a proper complaint. I will probably go tomorrow or day after. I am not well.'