
Flat and fabulous: Why UFO peaches deserve a bigger bite in India
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Hindustan Times
6 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Texas man shares why his village experience in India felt more memorable than city life: 'I really enjoyed it'
A Texas resident has captured widespread attention online after sharing his recent experience in India. The video, uploaded on the official Instagram account of Marvin Achi, has already garnered over 7.5 million views in just two days. A visitor from Texas described Indian village life with joy, saying it was more memorable than cities.(Instagram/marvinachi) (Also read: 'Hardly any American in sight': Video of Indians in Frisco store divides internet) In the clip, Achi posed a question to his followers: 'In India, between the city and the village, which did I like the most?' He went on to answer in a candid manner, saying, 'For me, I'm from the city. I live in the city. As you can tell, this is the city of Houston, Texas, and this is where I live, and I'm used to this. So having the experience of the village was really, really nice, and I really enjoyed it.' Embracing rural simplicity Achi described his stay in an Indian village with a sense of delight and humility. 'I slept on the bed. I pumped my water. I enjoyed the food. So I really enjoyed the village,' he explained. He also expressed his eagerness to return to the country and explore bustling metropolitan hubs, adding, 'I am looking forward to 10 million followers when I return to India to get to experience more of the city, like Mumbai or New Delhi.' Take a look here at the clip: The video was accompanied by a simple yet heartfelt caption that read, 'Thank you India.' Internet reacts with love The post has sparked widespread discussion, with users flooding the comments section to share their views. One user wrote, 'This is the most genuine appreciation I've seen for rural India in a long time.' Another remarked, 'So refreshing to see someone enjoy the small things we take for granted.' A third person commented, 'Villages are the true heart of India, glad you experienced it.' 'Most visitors only talk about big cities, but you embraced village life, that's amazing,' said one user. Another added, 'This is the kind of content we need, spreading positivity about rural culture.' 'Can't wait to see your adventures in Mumbai and Delhi,' one viewer said, while another wrote, 'You've shown respect for both worlds, city and village. That balance is inspiring.'


Time of India
9 hours ago
- Time of India
Netflix has a China problem, and it is called "China's Netflix"
Netflix may be staring at a huge problem, and it is China. Chinese streaming giants are reportedly quickly gaining ground on their American rivals in the booming Southeast Asian market. According to a report in Nikkei Asia, companies like iQiyi and Tencent are making major plays, shifting their focus to producing original content tailored for local audiences. Referred to as " China's Netflix ," iQiyi, a subsidiary of Baidu, has been expanding across Southeast Asia since 2019, with a strong presence in Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaysia. The company has attracted 36 million monthly subscribers in the region by offering a mix of free ad-supported viewing and affordable subscription fees. In Thailand, iQiyi's library features over 9,000 titles, with more than 60% being Chinese productions. iQiyi hosts a plethora of content from Chinese period dramas to blockbuster Hollywood films. Moving forward, iQiyi is investing heavily in local content, says the report. The company plans to spend up to 1.54 million dollars ($1.54 million) per production and release four to six Thai titles annually, specifically targeting popular genres like "boys' love" and "girls' love" dramas. In Indonesia and Malaysia, iQiyi is partnering with local studios and carriers like Telkomsel to produce original content for the carrier's 170 million subscribers. iQiyi vies with Tencent Holdings and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd to rank among the biggest video-streaming platforms in China, with an estimated 400 million-plus monthly active users. Tencent's approach: WeTV and original productions Tencent launched its WeTV service in Southeast Asia in 2019 and is also prioritizing original content. Since 2024, the company has been producing local idol programs, which has led to the formation of successful groups like the seven-member boy band NexT1de. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like The 5 Books Warren Buffett Recommends You To Read in 2025 Blinkist: Warren Buffett's Reading List Undo iQiyi to open theme park Earlier this year, iQiyi said that it plans to open its first theme park this year, based on characters from its own shows. The forthcoming 'iQiyi Land' is set to open in the city of Yangzhou in Jiangsu province, just over two hours from Shanghai by high-speed train. iQiyi's market share and regional dominance While U.S. services like Netflix and Amazon Prime Video entered the region around 2016 and hold a dominant share in some areas—nearly 60% in Singapore—Chinese companies are rapidly closing the gap. In Thailand, Chinese providers command about 40% of the market, surpassing the roughly 30% held by U.S. services. This is partly attributed to the large ethnic Chinese population in Southeast Asia and the popularity of Chinese content. The fierce competition in the domestic Chinese market is also a driving factor for this expansion. With domestic revenue and profits falling, Southeast Asia's young population and rising incomes present a significant growth opportunity. The region's streaming market is projected to reach 6.8 billion dollars by 2030, a 49% increase from 2024. AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now


Time of India
10 hours ago
- Time of India
Flat and fabulous: Why UFO peaches deserve a bigger bite in India
Like many Indians, I struggle to see the point of peaches. Yes, they look lovely, golden-red, suggestively curved and with that faint fuzz, but the taste of the varieties we usually get here is more sour than sweet. And why eat peaches when you can get mangoes? But people in temperate climates adore them. 'Shall I part my hair behind? Do I dare to eat a peach?' TS Eliot's lovelorn J Alfred Prufrock asked. 'Life is better than death, I believe, if only because it is less boring and because it has fresh peaches in it,' Alice Walker wrote. Then there's the peach scene in Call Me By Your Name (2017). All of which left me wondering how these feelings would have been much more intense with true that peaches are better for cooking. I have never tasted a mango dessert that hasn't seemed like a waste of perfectly ripe fruit. Mango jam destroys the fruit's flavour, but in peach jam, the acid wonderfully balances the sugar. Peaches are also good gently poached with sugar and a few cloves, preserved with brandy or baked in a pie. Frustrated with some dull peaches, I asked Urmila, who cooks for us, to use them for sansav , the Goa fruit curry made with sour mangoes or pineapples. The peach sansav was amazing, which reinforces my point: Mangoes are perfect, but peaches need then, I bite a flat peach and my certainties collapse. These are also called Saturn peaches , UFO peaches or doughnut peaches because of their bulbous disc shape. Another name came from a vendor in Mumbai's Crawford Market, where I first discovered them years ago. ' Woh jalebi peach dena ,' he called to his helper. That really captured their startling juiciness, an almost shocking gush of tangy sweetness that floods your mouth when you bite it. Your next feeling is: 'Why aren't all peaches like this?' Most articles about flat peaches ask this question, with no clear answer. I recently found them in Goa, which is a hopeful sign that they are spreading, but it still seems slow for such splendid fruit. They are imported and very expensive, but when people pay huge amounts for a trendy dessert, like the socalled Dubai chocolate bar, they could pay for something as good (and healthy) as flat it's true, are unwilling to pay high prices for fruits other than mangoes, but flat peaches are worth it. They are certainly better than other novelty fruits like dragonfruit or kiwi, which are also strikinglooking, but have no great scarcity of flat peaches is strange because the Chinese have grown them for centuries. In Edward Shafer's The Golden Peaches of Samarkand , he studies the Chinese trade in exotic fruits: 'Twice in the seventh century, the kingdom of Samarkand sent formal gifts of fancy yellow peaches to the Chinese court.' These were round, but later texts refer to flat ones called pai pien tau or 'peento peaches'. A US Bureau of Plant Industry bulletin from 1911 notes several excellent varieties, with red, yellow and white flesh, but laments the 'great difficulty in shipping bud wood of peaches…' Flat peaches are finallysuccessfully grown outside China, but for the fruit trade, that's not enough. What also matters is the ability to last well in transport and shops. The real secret to the success of Alphonso mangoes isn't just taste, but also their thick skin. Flat peaches were fragile, but recent breeding efforts have improved this. The growth of refrigerated transport, capable of handling delicate produce, has also are hand-picked and Western countries are cracking down on the migrant labour that does most of this work. I recently heard of US fruit farmers switching to nuts, which are easily mechanically harvested. Perhaps there's an opportunity for Indian hill farmers here. Less wedded to existing varieties and with better access to labour, could we start producing these truly perfect peaches?