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'Our military action targeted...': What MEA said on ‘nuclear' questions around Pakistan
'Our military action targeted...': What MEA said on ‘nuclear' questions around Pakistan

Hindustan Times

time13-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Hindustan Times

'Our military action targeted...': What MEA said on ‘nuclear' questions around Pakistan

Randhir Jaiswal, spokesperson for the ministry of external affairs, on Tuesday addressed questions about alleged damage to Pakistan's nuclear facility in Kirana Hills during the recent conflict that followed Operation Sindoor. He indicated that it was for the Pakistani side to respond to such claims. 'Talk of Egyptian American aircraft etc — those questions are for them to answer, not for us... In the defence briefing our side became very clear... As far as your question, the Pak minister also had made some comments on that,' he said. Clarifying India's position, he stated, 'The military action from our side was entirely on the conventional domain... There were some reports, however, that Pak National Command Authority will meet... It was denied by them... Pakistan GM has himself denied on record.' He also reiterated India's broader policy approach: 'As you know, India has a firm stand that it will not give to nuclear blackmail or allow crossword terrorism to be conducted, invoking it in conversations with various countries, we've also cautioned that they subscribing to such scenarios would hurt them in their own region.'

The Best New TV Shows of April 2025
The Best New TV Shows of April 2025

Time​ Magazine

time30-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time​ Magazine

The Best New TV Shows of April 2025

The natural world is finally blooming, and spring TV is starting to look pretty vibrant, too. If there's one thing that unites the best new shows of April 2025, it is an irrepressible liveliness. We've got a relatively hot-blooded Agatha Christie adaptation, a high-spirited sitcom set in the northernmost reaches of Canada, a madcap animated comedy about a Muslim family negotiating their Americanness after 9/11, and a fast-talking ballet epic that pings back and forth across the Atlantic. Even the series that's about a woman dying of cancer is fun, sexy, and bursting with life. #1 Happy Family USA (Amazon) On Sept. 10, 2001, Rumi Hussein is just a regular Egyptian American kid—living in the suburbs, grieving his grandfather, making horny mix CDs for the teacher he's hoping to woo into becoming the next Mary Kay Letourneau. Then comes 9/11. Suddenly, neighbors urged to 'say something' when they 'see something' are treating the Husseins like terrorists. Rumi's dad responds with a frantic performance of patriotism to prove they're the safest, most secular family in town. His mom veers in the opposite direction, embracing her given name, Sharia; donning a hijab; and trying to connect with fellow Muslims at a local mosque. Meanwhile, Rumi's older sister Mona is struggling to come out as queer. Then an FBI agent moves in across the street. This is some heavy material for adult animation. But if anyone can be trusted to make a light but not glib show about post-9/11 Islamophobia work, it's Ramy Youssef, the creator behind two great dramedies that capture the experience of being Muslim in 21st century America: Hulu's Ramy and Netflix's Mo. A collaboration with South Park vet Pam Brady, #1 Happy Family USA is a funny and insightful kid's eye view of growing up in a society that forces you to choose between constantly code-switching to appease bigots and being openly hated for who you are. Led by Youssef, who plays Rumi as well as his dad, the voice cast also features Alia Shawkat, Mandy Moore, Chris Redd, Kieran Culkin, and Timothy Olyphant. The lively animation was designed by Pulitzer-winning illustrator and journalist Mona Chalabi, also an executive producer. Agatha Christie's Towards Zero (BritBox) Sometimes a project adds up to precisely the sum of its parts—and there's absolutely nothing wrong with that if those parts are all solid. Here we've got a three-episode BBC miniseries adapted from an undersung Agatha Christie novel, set in 1930s England, at the seaside mansion of the imperious, housebound Lady Tressilian (Anjelica Huston). Her beloved nephew Nevile Strange (Oliver Jackson-Cohen), a dashing tennis player, and his gorgeous new wife, Kay (Mimi Keene), are visiting the estate on their honeymoon. Also there for an extended stay: Nevile's first wife, Audrey (Ella Lily Hyland), with whom he's obviously not yet finished, even after a messy public divorce. The holiday household is rounded out by a fractious assemblage of relatives, employees, and lovers played by great actors like Clarke Peters, Jack Farthing, and Anjana Vasan. So there's plenty of interpersonal friction happening long before the murder takes place. About that murder: the conceit of Towards Zero is that it doesn't happen until more than halfway through the series, allowing us to get to know the cast of characters before they're split into victims and suspects. The premiere opens with Peters' Mr. Treves, a lawyer, giving a dinner-table speech about how a murder is the end of a story that begins much earlier. This isn't as groundbreaking as it might've been in Christie's time; the result is just a more chronological version of the archetypal whodunit, with less need for flashbacks. The show's real draw is its cast, which expands to include Matthew Rhys as a troubled detective, and a skillful adaptation that highlights the glossiest, cleverest elements of classic Christie—and adds a pinch of eros. Dying for Sex (FX) The title Dying for Sex evokes trashy reality series like Sex Sent Me to the ER, but the show takes its name from the acclaimed podcast that the real Molly Kochan recorded with her best friend, Nikki Boyer (an executive producer of the adaptation), about Kochan's radical response to her Stage IV diagnosis. Rather than resign herself to a chaste marriage with a husband who treated her as a patient more than a lover, she left him and embarked upon a sexual odyssey. By the time she died, in 2019, she had explored her desires with more partners than most people would rack up in 10 lifetimes. [ Read the full review.] Étoile (Amazon) You know you're living in tumultuous times when even the biggest names in comfort TV feel compelled to get topical. Étoile is the latest project from Gilmore Girls and The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel creator Amy Sherman-Palladino and her husband and frequent collaborator, Daniel Palladino. Sherman-Palladino is known for making chatty, witty, compulsively referential, female-focused shows that take a special interest in the arts; she previously spotlighted ballet in her short-lived but beloved series Bunheads. The voice behind all of the above titles is certainly recognizable in Étoile. But the show also represents a novel attempt to marry escapism with engagement. It's just one of the many ambitious juxtapositions that make this vindication of high art in a world on fire as fascinating—and fun—as it is messy. [ Read the full review.] North of North (Netflix) What is it about Canadian comedies? From Schitt's Creek to Sort Of, the CBC never stops cranking out funny shows that feel gentle, wholesome, and family-oriented but also contemporary. Fans of those imports—and, really, anyone who could use a pick-me-up—should add another title from the public broadcaster to their Netflix queue: North of North. Created by Stacey Aglok-MacDonald and Alethea Arnaquq-Baril, both Arctic locals and members of the Inuit community, the sitcom is set among the mostly Indigenous residents of a fictional town in the country's extreme north. Anna Lambe gives a wonderfully charismatic performance as Siaja, a 26-year-old Inuk wife and mother who has come to realize she doesn't want to spend her life with Ting (Kelly William), the self-absorbed heartthrob she married after high school. The rest of the cast is delightful as well, from Maika Harper as Siaja's spitfire mom to comedy stalwart Mary Lynn Rajskub (It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Larry Sanders Show) as Siaja's exacting boss, the town manager. Bonus: the region's sunlit snowscapes make a gorgeous backdrop.

Ramy Youssef stars in new film by ‘Succession' creator
Ramy Youssef stars in new film by ‘Succession' creator

Arab News

time23-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Arab News

Ramy Youssef stars in new film by ‘Succession' creator

DUBAI: Ramy Youssef, Steve Carell, Jason Schwartzman and Cory Michael Smith play four billionaires in 'Succession' creator Jesse Armstrong's HBO film, 'Mountainhead.' For the latest updates, follow us on Instagram @ As they enjoy their trip, the world erupts in chaos with headlines such as 'Sectarian Violence Escalates in India' and 'President of Uzbekistan Forced to Move to Secret Location' interrupting their downtime. In the trailer, the billionaires receive a call from the President of the United States. 'What could he possibly have to say?' asks Smith. Youssef responds: 'That your platform has inflamed a volatile situation, circulating unfalsifiable deepfakes, massive fraud, market instability.' Armstrong wrote and directed the film, which is a parody of the lives of the ultra-wealthy. Filming began on 'Mountainhead' in March, giving the crew a tight turnaround time before the film's release on May 31. In a recent interview with Variety, Youssef teased the film, saying it's 'funny in the same way 'Succession' is.' Egyptian American comedian, writer, actor and director Youssef is known for creating and starring in 'Ramy' on the US streaming platform Hulu, which won him a Golden Globe in 2020 in the category Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series, Musical or Comedy. His animated series '#1 Happy Family USA' had world premiere at the South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas, in March.

Nothing's funny about scared immigrants, unless it comes from Ramy Youssef
Nothing's funny about scared immigrants, unless it comes from Ramy Youssef

Los Angeles Times

time18-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Los Angeles Times

Nothing's funny about scared immigrants, unless it comes from Ramy Youssef

What happens when the political satire of 'South Park' collides with a Muslim kid's coming-of-age story in post-9/11 New Jersey? You get the animated sitcom '#1 Happy Family USA.' Cocreated and coshowrun by Ramy Youssef and Pam Brady, the A24 production, which premieres Thursday on Prime Video, follows Rumi Hussein (voiced by Youssef) and his family as they navigate the 'see something, say something' paranoia of the early 2000s. The semi-autobiographical story of Egyptian American comedian, actor and director Youssef is at the center of this period comedy where Michael Jordan, music piracy and Britney Spears still dominate the news. Everything is normal in 12-year-old Rumi's world on Sept. 10. He's crushing on his teacher Mrs. Malcolm (voiced by Mandy Moore — who happened to rise to fame in the 2000s). He's tolerating the cluelessness of his Egyptian immigrant parents, father Hussein (also voiced by Youssef) and mother Sharia (Salma Hindy). He's fighting with his oh-so-perfect/closeted sister, Mona (Alia Shawkat). His devout grandparents also live at home, always on hand to make whatever Rumi's doing feel haram. But within 24 hours, the Al Qaeda attacks turn the Husseins from an average dysfunctional family with unfortunate names into a suspected terror cell. Rumi's father, a doctor turned halal cart owner, goes into assimilation overdrive to prove his family is 110% American and absolutely not associated with anyone named Osama. Old Glory, Christmas decor and Easter trimmings suddenly pop up in their front yard. He shaves his beard off. He insists that his wife stop wearing her hijab, which makes Sharia, who is a receptionist for an eccentric dentist (Kieran Culkin), all the more determined to don her headscarf. Meanwhile, Rumi's classmates now eye him suspiciously despite his attempts to fit in with the other boys by wearing his new basketball jersey. But the bootleg 'Bulls' shirt reads 'Balls' instead. It's also three sizes too big and looks like a dress. Clearly he's not like the others. Elements of the storyline mirror Youssef's childhood montages in his Hulu series 'Ramy,' but the medium of adult animation allowed him to 'go wild' with the story and characters. He also got to work with Brady, an authority on pushing animated satire to hilarious extremes. 'Animation became the vehicle for how this idea should live. I wanted to look at a wholly unexplored period outside of the lens of a cop drama or the news … and go to the wildest extremes with premises,' said Youssef. 'I definitely had the desire to make something stupid in a really great, sophisticated and almost Commedia dell'arte way. Just dumb and loud [laughs]. You can put 'Ramy' in a dramedy category and you could, to an extent, put 'Mo' there, but here it's really bursting open in a medium with no limits. Then Pam's name came up and it was a no-brainer.' Brady collaborated with Trey Parker and Matt Stone on 'South Park' from the show's start, going on to cowrite with them the film 'Team America: World Police' and cocreating the Netflix comedy series 'Lady Dynamite.' 'As soon as I saw 'Ramy' and I saw his stand-up, I was a fan,' said Brady. 'I kept begging my manager: 'Please, can I meet Ramy?' So I came at it honestly as a fan, knowing that this guy's doing some next-level stuff. I keep joking with my friends that Ramy's a real writer. He explores characters. That's why this experience has been so amazing because it's pushed me. It's like, 'Oh, this is how you do it.'' Illustrator and executive producer Mona Chalabi designed the characters, each harkening back to animation styles of the late '90s and early 2000s shows like 'Futurama' or 'Daria.' 'I wanted it to feel like a found tape,' said Youssef. 'You pop it in and it looks like it could have been on Comedy Central or MTV [back then]. It's hand-drawn animation and we made it with an animation studio in Malaysia [called Animasia]. It's an all-Muslim animation house, which is so crazy. They were so happy to draw hijabs and all these characters. They were like, 'We relate to it!' But we even downgraded our computers here in order to make it like it would have been made. Whatever we did took a while and it was like the opposite of AI.' Adds Brady, 'We wanted to make sure, especially with the visuals and the direction and the pacing, that the show felt familiar. That you'd seen a show like this before. We didn't want to reinvent the form, but we also didn't want to make it look like 'Family Guy.' So it's like, 'Oh, this show existed in 1998. You remember it, right?'' Though the show takes place some 25 years ago, it's not hard to see the plot's resonance today in the wake of the deportations and roundups of immigrants and students. The Husseins are up against a wave of Islamophobia, triggered by the 9/11 attacks. They embody the very real fear of being profiled by the outside world, including FBI agent Dan Daniels (voiced by Timothy Olyphant), who happens to live across the street. A dark period, to be sure, but also one rich in comedic value if you're willing to go there as '#1 Happy Family USA' does. Its characters break out into song while on the verge of being swept up by Homeland Security, or inadvertently cause a widespread panic by dropping on the carpet at the airport to pray when they learn of the terror attacks. 'We were trying to kind of create this time capsule, like around the old DHS of this moment,' said Youssef. 'But right now is a time when an immigrant family, and surely a Muslim family, would feel the need to shout, 'We're No. 1! Happy Family USA!' Pam and Mona and I have all been looking at each other with like, 'Whoa.' Of all the times this thing could have dropped, it's dropping right now, when [it's hard] to joke about this stuff in any other medium.' At a time when everything feels like a cruel joke, '#1 Happy Family USA' bites back with the satire we need.

Ramy Youssef's latest show finds absurdity in post-9/11 Islamophobia
Ramy Youssef's latest show finds absurdity in post-9/11 Islamophobia

Washington Post

time17-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Washington Post

Ramy Youssef's latest show finds absurdity in post-9/11 Islamophobia

The Husseins are in trouble. The Egyptian American household, central to the new animated series '#1 Happy Family USA,' faces rampant Islamophobia in the immediate aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Everyone copes differently: The paranoid patriarch, whose first name is also Hussein, waves American flags and pretends to chug beer in desperate attempts to prove he belongs. His proud wife, Sharia, forms a stronger connection with her faith and starts wearing a hijab in public. Their teenage daughter, Mona, hides her queer relationship and flatirons her curly hair to better assimilate with her peers, while her younger brother, Rumi, focuses most of his energy on getting his middle-school teacher to fall in love with him.

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