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Suhana Khan shows her real side in fun game with comedian Rohan Joshi: 'If you do something with confidence, people will believe it...'
Suhana Khan shows her real side in fun game with comedian Rohan Joshi: 'If you do something with confidence, people will believe it...'

Time of India

time10-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Suhana Khan shows her real side in fun game with comedian Rohan Joshi: 'If you do something with confidence, people will believe it...'

After making her much-anticipated debut with The Archies in 2023, the young starlet has been steadily carving her path, both onscreen and off. From candid appearances on YouTube to intense prep for her rumoured big-screen collaboration with father in King, Suhana is showing fans a refreshingly real and grounded side of stardom. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now In a fun and light-hearted video on Tira's YouTube channel, Suhana teamed up with comedian for a game of 'Call My Bluff.' The two sat across from each other, separated by a partition with a small window so they could see each other's expressions. The challenge? Describe an object placed in front of them while the other guessed if they were bluffing or being truthful. While Rohan managed to hold his own, Suhana's reactions gave her away—making it hilariously clear that bluffing might not be her strongest suit. As the game kicked off, the star kid held her own for a while, but by the end, Rohan clinched a clear win. Playfully teasing her, he called her a 'lovely person but a terrible liar.' Suhana, in good spirits, responded with a laugh, saying, 'Someone told me if you do something with confidence, people will believe it.' Suhana's performance in The Archies sparked mixed reactions from critics and audiences alike. However, her dedication hasn't gone unnoticed. In a recent interview with Bollywood Hungama, filmmaker Karan Johar—who shares a close bond with Shah Rukh Khan—spoke highly of Suhana's work ethic. He also praised SRK's son , who is set to make his debut as a showrunner with the upcoming Netflix series The Ba**ds of Bollywood. shared heartfelt praise for Suhana and Aryan Khan in a recent chat with Bollywood Hungama, expressing admiration for their dedication and humility. He revealed he was 'awestruck' watching Suhana train for King, noting how both siblings are focused on carving their own identity beyond their father Shah Rukh Khan's towering legacy. Calling them well-mannered, hardworking, and grounded, Karan said they are aware of their privilege but never misuse it. Despite being born into immense fame and luxury, both Suhana and Aryan are determined to earn their place on merit—a trait Karan said he deeply respects.

The cunning meanings of quant
The cunning meanings of quant

Spectator

time25-06-2025

  • General
  • Spectator

The cunning meanings of quant

The FT headline said: 'Man Group orders quants back to office five days a week.' I didn't know what quants were and all my husband could say was: 'Complete quants', as though it were funny. Of course I kept thinking of Mary Quant, and I suppose her name was French in origin. There was a Hugo le Cuint in 1208 and a Richard le Queynte in Hampshire in 1263. The name would relate to quant or quaint, meaning 'clever' or 'cunning', and derived from Latin cognitus. The varied spelling overlapped with the word Chaucer used for a woman's private parts, which comes from a completely different Latin word. Such is the elasticity of language, where words of distinct meaning can have exactly the same form, that another word quant has been in use for 600 years to mean a sort of punt pole with a flanged end to avoid being caught in the mud of the Norfolk Broads. The same pole-like element called a quant is found in windmills to transmit drive to the upper millstone. This all sounds like something from Call My Bluff, but the funny thing about the pole-like quant is that in Latin, as Thomas Shadwell noted in his translation of Juvenal, contus means a bargepole, as kontos does in Greek. Yet today's etymologists refuse to fall for the casual resemblance. I would like to imagine that, in the context of the FT headline, City workers were to be punted by quant-power down the river every working day. But the City quants are nothing but quantitative analysts, no doubt given to fits of quantitative easing. Quant as an abbreviation of quantitative was first observed among chemical scientists in the 19th century, but was applied to financial analysts only in the late 1970s. The abbreviation has something of the flavour of cit, popular from the 17th century as a name for an inhabitant of a city – 'in an ill sense' as Samuel Johnson put it, 'a pert, low townsman'. But be they never so high, they'll be coming in five days a week.

Pebble Mill recalled in look back at West Midlands' TV
Pebble Mill recalled in look back at West Midlands' TV

BBC News

time08-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Pebble Mill recalled in look back at West Midlands' TV

"You'd go into the canteen, and the next table would be a load of wounded soldiers from a Poldark film."Midlands Today presenter Nick Owen MBE has been sharing his memories of Birmingham's Pebble Mill Studios."So many dramas came out of there… Pebble Mill was an absolute hub of activity in broadcasting. Both in gameshows, dramas and documentaries and all, of course, all of the radio shows that came out of there as well," he former studios were located on Pebble Mill Road in Edgbaston and were opened by Princess Anne on 10 June 1971. It closed in 2004. Many shows, including Call My Bluff, Telly Addicts, All Creatures Great & Small and Good Morning With Anne & Nick, were recorded there."It was a brilliant place to be, and it was very sad that that contracted into a much smaller operation," Owen said."Pebble Mill At One, I think, was the first ever proper daytime programme, and that was really special."When I first came to Birmingham… it used to be great to watch Pebble Mill at lunchtime. The fantastic music, helicopters seemed to be landing all around, and there seemed to be explosions and things going on. And big, big names on that show."Presenters over the years included Bob Langley, Tom Coyne, Marian Foster, Gloria Hunniford, Fern Britton and Alan Titchmarsh. Owen met a lot of famous faces while working on Good Morning With Anne & Nick."We had Margaret Thatcher on and Tony Blair. We had Tom Jones, Elton John – the list was fantastic. "I did some wonderful filming with Cher. Spent an afternoon on a bed at The Savoy with Cher. Me dressed in leather trying to be raunchy."So the memories of that are absolutely brilliant."When Owen first started working on BBC Midlands Today in 1997, the regional news programme was based at the Pebble Mill first aired on 28 September 1964, broadcast from a tiny studio on Broad 1971, it moved to the newly opened Pebble Mill Studios, and the first episode was presented by Tom Coyne. Dr Vanessa Jackson, who specialises in TV production at Birmingham City University, started her career at Pebble had three studios, but one of its' most famous locations was the bar – located in the BBC Club."That was a very important place because many a programme idea was brought to life at the BBC Club. Many a job offer was made. And they used to do a wicked cheese toastie," she said."It's the place where most BBC staff – after working on a programme like Pebble Mill At One – would come over the little bridge over the Bourn Brook and make their way into the club, which used to serve a lot of alcohol and very good food."Early in his career, Walsall-born Bob Warman, who presented ITV's Central News for 40 years, worked at BBC Radio Birmingham (now BBC Radio WM), which was broadcast from the Pebble Mill studios."The BBC Club was a pretty desperate place… When I came for an interview at the BBC with the then station manager – who was a chap called Jack Johnson, a wonderful Glaswegian man… He gave me a brief interview in his office and then said, 'Well, it's lunchtime, we better go to the bar.'"We went into this bar which was absolutely nose-to-nose – it was rammed with people – all drinking furiously at lunchtime. And I thought, 'Well, I better do the honours here…' so I said to Jack 'Can I get you a drink?' and he said 'Aye, I'd like a Bells please'."And I thought 'Gosh, Bells whiskey, at lunchtime', and I said, 'Anything with it?' And he said, 'Aye, another one!'"History Of TV In The West Midlands is available on BBC Sounds now. Follow BBC Birmingham on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Wine-tasting fundraiser to be held in Northallerton
Wine-tasting fundraiser to be held in Northallerton

Yahoo

time01-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Wine-tasting fundraiser to be held in Northallerton

A wine-tasting fundraiser in aid of a children's cancer research charity will be held in Northallerton. The 'Call My Bluff' wine-tasting evening will take place at the Golden Lion Hotel on Saturday, March 29. Starting at 7pm, the event will include wine, cheese, and biscuits, all for a ticket price of £15. Teams of four to six people will compete in a friendly competition. Each round will feature an unmarked bottle of wine described by a panel of three experts, two of whom will be bluffing. Participants will try to determine the correct answer to each tasting, with a prize for the team with the highest score at the end of the evening. Hosted by the Rotary Club of Northallerton, the event welcomes everyone. All proceeds will go to Neuroblastoma UK, a children's cancer research charity supported this year by the Rotary Club. Tickets can be obtained from 07487 732286 or by emailing lynproud@

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