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In Pics: 5 Crazy Facts About Ayodhya’s Ram Mandir

February 3, 2024 by humorouz Leave a Comment

The Ayodhya Ram Mandir Temple holds a profound historical and religious significance in India. The history of this sacred site is deeply rooted in the Ramayana, an ancient Indian epic that narrates the life and adventures of Lord Rama, one of the incarnations of the Hindu god Vishnu. Ayodhya, believed to be the birthplace of Lord Rama, became a place of reverence and pilgrimage for millions of devotees over centuries. The controversy surrounding the site emerged during the medieval period when a mosque, known as the Babri Masjid, was constructed in the 16th century by Mughal Emperor Babur. Over time, conflicting claims emerged regarding the actual birthplace of Lord Rama and the validity of the mosque’s construction on the purported site. This led to a long-standing dispute and legal battles between Hindu and Muslim communities over ownership of the land. Tensions escalated in 1992 when the Babri Masjid was demolished by a mob, leading to widespread communal riots across India. Subsequently, legal battles ensued to determine the rightful ownership of the site. In 2019, the Supreme Court of India issued a historic verdict, granting the disputed land to Hindu groups for the construction of a Ram Temple. The court also directed the allocation of an alternate piece of land to the Muslim community for the construction of a mosque. Following the court’s verdict, the construction of the Ayodhya Ram Mandir Temple commenced in 2020. The temple’s design draws inspiration from ancient Indian architecture and is envisioned to be a grand structure dedicated to Lord Rama, symbolizing faith, cultural heritage, and a unifying symbol for millions of Hindus. Also Read: ED VoxPop: We Ask Gen Z If Ayodhya Ram Temple Matters To Them Also Read: ED VoxPop: We Ask Gen Z If Ayodhya Ram Temple Matters To Them
The Ayodhya Ram Mandir Temple’s construction signifies the resolution of a longstanding legal dispute. It holds immense significance for millions of devotees, signifying a cultural, religious, and historical milestone in India’s rich tapestry of beliefs and traditions. On January 22, the Ram Mandir was inaugurated. Addressing thousands of attendees outside the temple complex, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi celebrated Monday’s consecration ceremony as the “ commencement of a new era .” Expressing joy over the installation of the Lord Ram idol in the divine temple, Modi remarked, “ After centuries of anticipation, our Ram has arrived, no longer residing in a tent but in this sacred temple .”  Emphasizing the historical significance of January 22, 2024, he envisioned it as a date that would be discussed for generations to come. Breaking an 11-day religious fast just before his speech, Modi unveiled a statue of Lord Ram, a revered Hindu deity, in a ceremony witnessed by millions. While not directly mentioning the Babri Masjid or the Muslim community’s sentiments, Modi asserted, “ Ram is not a dispute; Ram is the solution ,” pledging to forge ahead in building a capable, successful, beautiful, and divine India. Here are some interesting facts about Ayodhya’s Ram Mandir. Did you know about these facts? Tell us in the comments below. Image Credits : Google Images Feature image designed by Saudamini Seth Sources : The Times Of India, Hindustan Times, Times Now Find the blogger:  Katyayani Joshi This post is tagged under:  Ayodhya Ram temple, Ayodhya, Ram mandir, religion, belief, complexities, politics, Babri Masjid, Ram Temple, religious beliefs, crazy facts, inauguration ceremony, Narendra Modi, celebration, Shri Ram, Thailand, twin Disclaimer: We do not hold any right, copyright over any of the images used, these have been taken from Google. In case of credits or removal, the owner may kindly mail us. Other Recommendations: Other Recommendations:
ED VOXPOP: WE ASKED INDIAN GENZ WHAT THEY THOUGHT OF THE ISRAEL-HAMAS WAR

Filed Under: Articles - World

Nathan Cleary finally goes Instagram official with Mary Fowler with hilarious post

February 2, 2024 by humorouz Leave a Comment

Nathan Cleary finally goes Instagram official with Mary Fowler with hilarious post James Dampney from News.com.au Nathan Cleary has spent the better part of six months trying to keep a lid on his relationship with Matildas star Mary Fowler. Professional sport’s newest power couple has rarely been seen in photographs together and typically made blushing denials when asked about the budding romance. Stream Over 50 Sports Live & On-Demand with Kayo. New to Kayo? Start Your Free Trial Today > But it seems the Panthers halfback has caved in and is finally prepared to make clear what most have known for some time now – he is happily in a relationship with the 20-year-old striker. And Cleary has done it in hilarious fashion. One of the earliest situations that publicly linked the two stars was a supposed date sharing ice cream. So Cleary’s post featured only two words, “That’s life”, along with an ice cream emoji. Among the six-photo post that features shots of him in his Penrith training gear, hanging with mates and a sunset, 26-year-old Cleary also added a shot of himself lying on Fowler at the beach, with the latter beaming a huge smile. The post quickly took off, with over 32,000 likes within 45 minutes of being published and almost 300 comments. The first to comment was teammate Brian To’o, who has been adding cheeky comments about the couple for months, who wrote “Mr and Mrs Cleary” with a diamond ring emoji. There were also a number of gifs of Fowler playing for the Matildas. Another Panther, Daine Laurie, added: “Love always wins my brother.” Last month, the pair were getting in some bonding time during the festive season and became the talk of the sporting world with their unexpected romance. They were snapped sharing a kiss at Sydney Airport for an Aussie couple that hasn’t had this level of fanfare since Lleyton Hewitt and Bec Hewitt in the early 2000s. The star striker and Panther’s player had been tight-lipped about their new relationship and hadn’t been up for answering questions about it prior to Cleary’s post. Cleary fronted up at the GQ awards, looking suave in a black suit, and snagged the Sportsman of the Year award in December. Confidential’s Jonathon Moran inquired if the sporting star had brought a date, but Cleary informed him he had attended the event alone. When pressed about Fowler’s whereabouts, Cleary looked flustered but stuck to his guns … well, kind of. “I knew this was coming,” he said with a grin. “She’s busy.” Cleary added he was very “grateful” to be invited to the event but admitted it wasn’t his usual thing. “No sneakers. It’s a bit different for me, but I don’t mind dressing up every now and then,” he quipped. The pair melted hearts with their airport reunion after Fowler returned home in time for Christmas. Cleary was seen with a huge smile as he picked the Matildas star up at the arrivals gate after she touched down on an Emirates flight from Dubai. It was the first time the pair had seen each other since November 2 when Cleary farewelled Fowler at Perth Airport after watching her score a goal in Australia’s 3-0 win over Taiwan the previous night. Their relationship was confirmed just one day earlier when they were pictured cuddling together in a Perth park. The loved up couple made the most of their time together as they were spotted mucking around at an oval near Cleary’s Penrith home. The two spent an hour getting hands on learning the crafts of each others respective codes as Fowler showed off her NRL passing skills while Cleary displayed his soccer skills. Rumours of a relationship between the pair first kicked off in July, when Fowler was spotted out and about enjoying an ice cream with Cleary in Penrith. The pair are believed to have met at a promotional event for Adidas, which sponsors both athletes. Cleary expressed his annoyance at the heavy interest into his personal life last year. “It is what is, it’s a little bit annoying to not have a private life but I like to not talk about it too much and keep anything I can private,” he said in September. “Things take off pretty quick with social media but I’ll try to keep a private life if I can.” It seems Cleary is finally happy to soften that stance.

Filed Under: Articles - World

The Making Of… “Wardance” by Killing Joke

February 2, 2024 by humorouz Leave a Comment

This article originally appeared in Uncut Take 310 (March 2023) While Killing Joke’s “Wardance” – an ominous groove warning of nuclear destruction – makes its point in a couple of unforgettable minutes, a conversation with singer Jaz Coleman takes many twists. Coleman, who is calling from Prague where he’s writing a symphony, peers intensely at the screen while delivering an erudite monologue that takes in topics as diverse as archaeologist Sir Mortimer Wheeler’s excavation of Mohenjo Daro, the World Economic Forum, Roger Waters, Indian epic Mahabharata, digital enslavement, the Taurid meteor system, Plato, Mussolini and nuclear annihilation. “And that brings us to the significance of ‘Wardance’,” he concludes with a demonic grin. Coleman formed Killing Joke with guitarist Kevin “Geordie” Walker , bassist Martin “Youth” Glover and drummer Big Paul Ferguson in the squats of West London at the end of the 1970s. “Wardance” emerged early on as an example of the band’s ability to match propulsive energy, heavy vibes and a fierce groove with a singalong chorus. Selected as a single and recorded at Gooseberry Studios with Mark Lusardi , it was released in February 1980, but the band weren’t entirely satisfied so had another go when they recorded their debut album at the Marquee Studio with engineer Phil Harding , who later worked with Stock, Aitken & Waterman. This time Jaz Coleman’s vocals were heavily distorted, and the song was given a more portentous tone in keeping with the album’s mood and the tune’s apocalyptic lyrics. It became a mainstay of the set and remains so today. Killing Joke have come a long way from those Ladbroke Grove days, but they’ve never been ones to compromise: “Wardance” is now heavier and more intense than ever. “‘Wardance’ became a big anthem quite quickly,” says Youth . “It wasn’t an end-of-set song like ‘Pssyche’, but it’s what gave us this reputation of having this bludgeoning assault. We were teenagers when we did this. We didn’t know what we were doing, it was intuitive. I am very proud of how those songs have become part of the vocabulary of resistance to autonomous 1984 governments that feel all-powerful and justified at keeping the public in chains. When we started, people were shocked. They didn’t know how to react. But now they get it, and they know what it means and what we represent.” JAZ COLEMAN: I have this lasting memory of Youth at 8 Templeton Place, his palatial apartment in Earls Court. He was 18 and was playing the bassline of “Wardance”. I love that bassline and every time I hear it, it takes me back to that time. YOUTH: I am still staggered at the bassline on “Wardance”. I shouldn’t be blowing my own trumpet, but it’s incredible, the sound of it, the dirtiness. There’s nothing like it, even today. COLEMAN: When we formed the band, everybody believed we wouldn’t last long. Nuclear war would occur sooner rather than later. PAUL FERGUSON: We were squatting in a depressed area of London in Maggie Thatcher’s Britain. The Cold War was in full effect and the future looked very bleak indeed. YOUTH: We spent the first few months rehearsing in Cheltenham. At the end, we had a 20-minute set and I am pretty sure “Wardance” was in there. Once we started gigging, we rehearsed at the People’s Hall on Latimer Road where we shared a rehearsal room with Motörhead. FERGUSON: We rehearsed in a couple of studios. One in a basement off Portobello Road owned by Ace, who had a hit with the song “How Long (Has This Been Going On)”. The other was Ear Studio, in a rundown neighbourhood that the locals took to calling The People’s Republic of Frestonia. They made an attempt to separate themselves from the UK by filing a charter with the UN. COLEMAN: The Clash were upstairs and we were downstairs. Paul and I would get our lyrics out, Geordie would have some riffs and we’d rehearse three or four times a week, more sometimes. GEORDIE: It’s a collaboration, but it begins with the riffs. It has to. We don’t do it the other way. Everybody contributes, and that pushed us. We had a rule: don’t criticise an idea if you can’t put a better one on the table. YOUTH: Every time we came to rehearse, we’d hear Motörhead finishing up and this enormous filthy bass. I wanted to get my bass as loud as Lemmy. The first time I took mushrooms we came out rehearsal and walked down to the Nashville to see The Cramps, which was an amazing introduction to psychedelia. They didn’t have a bass player, of course – just a dirty fuzzy guitar, but it was so loud you didn’t notice. There was an element of that Cramps/Motörhead in “Wardance” basically. I was trying to do what they were doing in a different way. COLEMAN: I don’t really remember about the moments those lyrics appeared. What Big Paul and I normally do is agree on a theme and then go and write independently and synthesise. I like doing that because that’s what being in a band is about. It’s total collaboration. You have to sacrifice your ego if you are going to make it work properly. YOUTH: We recorded it at Gooseberry with Mark Lusardi, who had been trained by Dennis Bovell. First we did the EP “Turn To Red” and we went back for “Wardance”. On things like “Nervous System” we were experimenting with funk and disco, and that morphed into a harder edge for “Wardance”, which was more of a pagan thunder tribal stomp. COLEMAN: We weren’t happy with the first recording, to be honest. YOUTH: We couldn’t get the vocal sound right. We distorted it but it kept sounding wrong. FERGUSON: We recorded “Wardance” three times. Once as a single, once at the Marquee studios and then for John Peel. They are each radically different-sounding recordings, although the structure itself didn’t change. We always had difficulty placing the bass riff in the mix of the choruses with the floor toms I was playing. YOUTH: The single is now my favourite version. FERGUSON: The “Wardance” single, more up-tempo, is perhaps a more exciting take on the song. The drums are more compressed, Youth’s bass guitar more present, Geordie’s buzzsaw guitar cutting away, Jaz sings with more snark and my vocal is forward in the crowd choruses. YOUTH: When we came to the album, we recorded the song again at the Marquee with Phil Harding. HARDING: The band were producing themselves, so I kept my suggestions to the technical side. If there was any instruction, it was to capture the rawness. Once we got a balance and everybody was comfortable it really did flow. But it was chaotic because there was no producer, so nobody would take the lead. COLEMAN: Phil suffered terribly. He was a fresh-faced engineer right at the start of his career and a very good referee for that first record. YOUTH: Phil was great. We had distinct respect because he was the engineer. We wouldn’t give Phil any crap, we treated him as a professional. HARDING: I’d have one or other of them screaming at me from the other side of the mixing desk. They’d stand opposite me, glaring and shouting about the mix during a full-volume playback. That happened on pretty much every track. COLEMAN: We were all smoking vast amounts of hashish and in a state of complete paranoia and violence would break out frequently. HARDING: I’d come across bongs before but never one like this Caribbean one, a massive jug that sat on the floor. I knew it was dangerous for me to get anywhere near it and that became a running joke until we were having the playback and Youth talked me into finally having a blast. YOUTH: I remember Paul punching the window in the studio toilet. He was struggling to get the drums and was so frustrated, he punched a window. I also remember him punching one of the managers one day because he was late bringing the weed. There was an aura of violence, but we stopped short of punching each other – that came later. HARDING: Paul was a real softy underneath it all and I have total respect for the way he played. “Wardance” is a great example of his talent, because I love a drum rhythm based around tom-toms rather than snare. Geordie was the same. He must have spent hours getting his sound together, impeccable matching of guitar and amp settings. YOUTH: Again with “Wardance” we weren’t happy with the vocal sound. We kept going round in circles. We wanted a really fucked-up vocal sound and there was nothing on record that we could refer to. It seems churlish to say we weren’t happy as that vocal has influenced so many singers, but I still think we didn’t quite get it. HARDING: Jaz was the most difficult to please. I’d had seven years’ training in not to distort things and now I had Jaz screaming at me to distort his vocal. What we did to get somewhere near what Jaz was describing is that it’s not so much distorted as going through an outboard effect called an Eventide Harmoniser. I am pretty sure the vocal was processed through the Eventide with this modulator effect and distorted through the box. It was all about the intensity that Jaz wanted to get across. FERGUSON: The first album was ground-breaking for us because we’d never heard a record like it. It had a weird dissonance. It sounded heavy but actually it wasn’t, when you listened more carefully. YOUTH: Geordie and I get off on ’60s pop songwriting and production style. That came out on things like “Wardance”. The chorus is pure pop. I still try and push for that as I love that element and the counterpoint with the dirty energy of the verses. HARDING: They were always more commercial than people imagine. “Wardance” is a stand-out track as it’s a little more experimental. It has those effects at the front, and the echo and backing vocals on the chorus. That doesn’t happen elsewhere on the first album except on “Change”, where we doubled Geordie’s guitar. GEORDIE: My favourite gig was the CND rally at Trafalgar Square in 1980. Jaz told them, “Margaret Thatcher has bought all these Cruise missiles and all you can do is stand there with a fucking placard. You deserve what you are going to get. This one’s called ‘Wardance’.” Then it kicked off. I’ve got my suspicion that’s why we never did Glastonbury. YOUTH: I’m sure Jaz and Paul were writing about nuclear war and the prevailing paranoia of existential destruction – we all thought about that all the time and it’s what give us a big creative surge. But for me it’s a reference to the wardance of the Native American Indians as a way of banding together and resisting the encroachment of their land by colonial forces. COLEMAN: Resist. “Wardance” is saying resist, resist, resist. YOUTH: I’ve been told it was used in the first Iraq war by soldiers going into battle. That was weird for us because it’s an anti-war song. COLEMAN: There are two things that separate Killing Joke and our generation from other musicians. The first is that we are probably the last generation that believe you can change things through music. That counterculture aspect has always been there. The second is that our entire existence has been lived under the stress of total extinction. When we perform “Wardance”, it seems to have more meaning, more intensity, more relevance and [be] more menacing than ever before. FERGUSON: “Wardance” is still very much part of our live repertoire and I still love playing the song. YOUTH: It’s great playing at the Royal Albert Hall. We’ve outgrown our detractors and are able to appropriate the Albert Hall to make our noise. And why not? COLEMAN: We’re doing both LPs at the Albert Hall and I’m looking forward to it as both albums seem to suit the period we’re living through. They are the ultimate Cold War-turning-hot records. We are right here, 30 seconds to midnight on the Doomsday Clock and “Wardance” is more relevant than ever because it’s about how we psychologically deal with living in this perpetual tyranny and fear of extinction.

Filed Under: Articles - World

‘Maybe it’s chartered’: Netizens joke after bus makes wrong turn and gets stuck in Bedok HDB carpark

February 2, 2024 by humorouz Leave a Comment

January 23, 2024 9:14 AM By Neo Shaocong Has Singapore’s public transport finally achieved full home accessibility? That’s what some Singaporeans have been talking about following an incident involving an SBS Transit bus which made an unexpected turn into a HDB carpark. According to Shin Min Daily News, the incident occurred on Jan 22 at 2.40pm when members of the public noticed one SBS bus service 8 stranded right in front of a gantry leading to the carpark of HDB blocks 701 to 705 along Bedok North Road. Some passers-by were also seen helping to direct the bus out of the estate carpark. A video shared on social media showed the bus captain attempting to reverse the vehicle, only to be blocked by a white sedan behind it. Eventually, several passers-by helped to direct the sedan away, and the bus captain subsequently reversed his vehicle out onto the main road. “When I passed by, I saw the bus turn into the carpark, and there were still passengers on it. The bus driver must have taken the wrong route!” a witness commented.

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‘Maybe it’s chartered’ The video has since garnered plenty of comments from online netizens, with many of them making fun of the incident. A few jokingly called it a new “service”, labelling it a “Grab bus” in reference to the popular ride-hailing service Grab. “Now you can drop off or take off from your doorstep,” one commenter wrote. Others came up with reasons as to why this occurred, jesting that someone could have booked the bus, or that there was a new bus interchange in the area. “Maybe it’s chartered,” one comment suggested. In response to AsiaOne’s queries, a spokesperson from SBS Transit told AsiaOne that the bus captain made a wrong turn at Bedok North Road. “We are thankful to the three gentlemen who came forward to assist her and the bus resumed its journey within five minutes with no bus stops skipped,” said Grace Wu, a spokesperson for SBS Transit, adding that disciplinary action will be taken against the bus captain. ALSO READ: Too itchy? Bus captain seen scratching chin while steering wheel with elbows to be disciplined shaocong.neo@asiaone.com

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‘Daily Show’ Trolls Jon Stewart Over Return With Hilarious Reminder

February 1, 2024 by humorouz Leave a Comment

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