Latest news with #Krishnasamy


Business Insider
18-07-2025
- Business
- Business Insider
FedEx parts ways with CTO Sriram Krishnasamy
According to a regulatory filing, on July 17, 2025, FedEx (FDX) Corporation announced that FedEx and Sriram Krishnasamy have mutually agreed that, effective July 17, 2025, Krishnasamy will step down as the company's Executive Vice President – Chief Digital and Information Officer and Chief Transformation Officer. Krishnasamy will remain employed by the company as an Executive Advisor until October 31, 2025, or such earlier date as agreed to by the company and Krishnasamy. FedEx and Krishnasamy are finalizing the compensation and other terms regarding Krishnasamy's departure. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Make smarter investment decisions with TipRanks' Smart Investor Picks, delivered to your inbox every week.


Axios
01-07-2025
- Business
- Axios
Exclusive: Walmart dives into testing free pool installs
Starting Tuesday, Walmart will offer its Dallas metro area customers free installation with the purchase of an above-ground swimming pool, a value of $400. The big picture: It's an example of a loss-leader test for the retailer as it continues to look for ways to connect with its customers through technology and services that ultimately drive sales. State of play: The pool was selected as a test product because it's big and bulky, and it could provide insight into expansion of other items and categories, Walmart vice president of OMNI customer growth Karthicka Krishnasamy, told Axios. "It's a natural customer demand when it comes to convenience and time," she said. "So is there an opportunity here? And, if this works, then we want to expand it to all brands and nationally, wherever it is applicable." Case in point: The Dallas pilot is limited to a 22-foot Coleman pool that retails for $500. Logistics and service company GoConfigure will do the assembly and installation. The kit weighs about 220 pounds, Krishnasamy said, and YouTube videos show it takes about a day for at least two people to assemble. What they're saying: "Our broader philosophy in our service offering is an extension of our purpose: Save money, live better," Walmart Vice President of OMNI Customer Growth Karthicka Krishnasamy, told Axios. The company also is working to add convenience and " remove friction" for customers by expanding delivery services via drone, from its pharmacy and with high-touch in-home delivery in some markets. "Delivery speed continues to help drive our business. We'll soon reach 95% of the population in the U.S. with delivery options of three hours or less," CEO Doug McMillon said in the company's first quarter earnings call in May. What's next: Krishnasamy told a group of journalists in early June the company would soon be launching an "auto care center of the future" requiring no contact with another person.

The Hindu
03-06-2025
- Entertainment
- The Hindu
When Kamal Haasan changed his movie's title after finding no support from Jayalalithaa
On May 29, 2025, while some Kannada activists had just stepped up attacks on versatile actor Kamal Haasan for his controversial remark that 'Tamil gave birth to Kannada', the Thug Life star faced a mild salvo in his home State, Tamil Nadu. Puthiya Tamilagam party founder K. Krishnasamy objected to the film's title. The politician contended that the term 'Thugs' has been used historically to describe criminals, violent rogues and gangsters. The 'Thugs and Pindaris' were violent criminal gangs during the 18th and 19th century, he said adding, naming a film with the title 'Thug' in a way glorifies such rogue way of life. Therefore, he urged the actor to avoid naming his upcoming film Thug Life. Mr. Krishnasamy's appeal had little resonance. But, there was a time when opposition from him had forced the actor to change the original title of his film. In the summer of May 2003, when the actor's name was spelt Kamal Hassan, he had unveiled his next venture with much fanfare in Madurai – Sandiyar. The film's posters featured an aruval (machete). Mr. Krishnaswami objected to the title and accused the actor-producer of trying to inculcate an aruval culture in Tamil Nadu. He wanted Hassan to abandon the project. 'I will lead the agitation against the shooting of this controversial movie,' he declared. The film's shooting was halted. Initially, the actor tried to meet the then Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa hoping to sort out the issue. However, she did not grant him an audience immediately. Instead, Jayalalithaa told journalists 'protracted' police protection cannot be given to a film unit, which, according to her, 'deliberately chooses a controversial subject.' The duty of the police was to protect the law and order and the lives of the people and not provide protection for a protracted period for shooting a film, she said. The Chief Minister added, if the police had a 'justified apprehension' that film shooting would create a law and order problem, they were well within their rights to refuse permission. 'Asked about the role of the State in protecting artistic freedom, Ms. Jayalalithaa, herself an ex-actress, said the police were not concerned with it,' a report in The Hindu on June 14, 2003 said. However, three days later, her Secretary – I, Sheela Balakrishnan, wrote to The Hindu, denying this. 'I would like to categorically state that no such remark was made by the Chief Minister,' she said. Questioning the Puthiya Tamilagam leader's action, The Hindu in an editorial posed: 'The question at this point is, will it not be premature, even immature, to judge a work even before the cameras have begun rolling, and the first scenes have been framed?' Around that time, Mr. Krishnasamy contended his party's protest against the shooting of Sandiyar was not aimed at Kamal Hassan, or a single movie but was against the decadence that had set in in the Tamil film industry. The title, Sandiyar, he said, had wrong connotations and villagers, especially in southern districts, were aware of the behaviour of certain elements who called themselves so. According to him, Sandiyar meant a 'terrorist at the village-level'. He said the actor had not attempted to justify or explain the title and it was not proper on Kamal Hassan's part to have attempted to meet Jayalalithaa to seek security for the shooting. Incidentally, Thol. Thirumavalavan (then known as T. Thirumavalavan), the leader of Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi (at that time, Dalit Panthers of India), welcomed Jayalalithaa's stand and appealed to the State government to take steps to ban films which tended to incite caste clashes. Caught in a spot, Kamal Hassan and his team, which was camping in a hotel in Theni, wound up and returned to Chennai. A court set erected at Chettiyar Hall in Uthamapalayam was also removed. A few days later, on June 20, 2003, the actor had a 25-minute meeting with Jayalalithaa at the Secretariat. Emerging from the Chief Minister's office, Kamal Haasan dramatically declared that the title Sandiyar was being dropped. 'The problems are over. The shooting will begin in Tamil Nadu,' he told journalists. Insisting that he had not yielded to pressure, he said, 'If the title was the cause of the problem, I would change it.' Asked about the new title, he said, 'I have not yet decided. But it could be given any title. Even a name like Sakalakalavallavan — the title of an earlier blockbuster, would do for the film. For the story is strong and would work under any title.' Asked whether the Chief Minister had advised him to scrap the title, he said it was his own decision, and she said it was a 'good idea', a report in The Hindu said. When a journalist asked him about attempts by politicians to politicise the film, he merely said: 'What I feel I need not say here. It is enough if I convey it through the film.' The shooting of the film resumed but again was halted in mid-September. But this time, the actor said the location was shifted from Dindigul not for political reasons, but because the lakes in the district were dry and there was a delay in obtaining 'necessary equipment.' The film then got a new title, Virumaandi. During its audio cassette launch in December 2003, ace film director K. Balachander, a mentor to Kamal Hassan, had this to say: 'Kamal has emerged unscathed from the ordeal. In fact, he has to be grateful to the people who were causing him all that misery. But for them, this film would not have had this wonderful title — Virumaandi — which is an unusual name.' The crowd rose as one man in applause. Footnote: In August 2014, a Tamil film titled Sandiyar was released. At that time, there was hardly any whisper of a protest.


South China Morning Post
12-02-2025
- South China Morning Post
Malaysia's Kuala Lumpur airport targeted by exotic animal traffickers: watchdog
Malaysia 's main airport in Kuala Lumpur has resurfaced as a major transit hub used by global traffickers of exotic animals in the growing illegal trade, according to a wildlife trade watchdog. The assessment comes after two smuggling attempts were foiled last week at Mumbai's Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport, where Indian customs officers intercepted five critically endangered baby siamang gibbons that were flown in via the Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA). The seizures highlighted the KLIA's emergence as a key stop for wildlife smuggling, with traffickers using it to move a diverse array of species, from Malaysian primates like the endangered siamang to rare tortoises and iguanas, said Kanitha Krishnasamy, Southeast Asia director of the UK-based wildlife trade watchdog Traffic. While the trade of exotic animals between Southeast Asia and South Asia was not new, there had been a shift toward selling live species, Krishnasamy said. ' What's become more prominent in recent years is the influx of live exotic animals into India where there seems to be a growing fad of acquiring exotic species for the pet trade,' Krishnasamy told This Week in Asia on Wednesday. 'This is a fairly new evolution of the market in the past couple of years, which needs to be scrutinised.'