One of the many exciting things that bands get to do is the tour the world and India’s fabulous four Sanam, recently gave a concert in Israel. In case you are still wondering who exactly Sanam are: they are a four-piece band consisting of brothers Sanam (lead vocalist) and Samar Puri (lead guitarist), bass guitarist Venky S and drummer Keshav Dhanraj. The band releases their melodious songs at their YouTube channel, which has an extremely strong fan base of 2.7 million fans and counting! They regularly release their original compositions, as well as recreations of retro and modern hits, plus regional songs too.
As well as performing in their home country India, Sanam have been touring internationally and have performed in various locations such as Rotterdam, Trinidad and more recently Israel. They are taking their love for music, on an international level, and this is a very exciting new phase for them!
As well as performing in their home country India, Sanam have been touring internationally and have performed in various locations such as Rotterdam, Trinidad and more recently Israel. They are taking their love for music, on an international level, and this is a very exciting new phase for them!
- 11/8/2017
- by Jem Raj
- Bollyspice
Wayward Pines, Season 1, Episode 7, “Betrayal”
Written by Rob Fresco
Directed by Steve Shill
Airs Thursdays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
There’s been an interesting shift that’s taken place in Wayward Pines since the events of “The Truth.” Before the real nature of the town was revealed, so much of the drama and intrigue was based on the odd way that all of its inhabitants were behaving, with a prevailing Stepford Wives or Twilight Zone aura. Everyone in town felt as though they were making an effort to imitate real behavior, but didn’t quite grasp it beyond surface mechanics. Since the big reveal, the curtain has pulled back to reveal that the town’s inhabitants are indeed very human. And being human makes them all the more problematic: they’re not easy to control, don’t like not knowing what is going on, and are willing to fight for what they want.
Written by Rob Fresco
Directed by Steve Shill
Airs Thursdays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
There’s been an interesting shift that’s taken place in Wayward Pines since the events of “The Truth.” Before the real nature of the town was revealed, so much of the drama and intrigue was based on the odd way that all of its inhabitants were behaving, with a prevailing Stepford Wives or Twilight Zone aura. Everyone in town felt as though they were making an effort to imitate real behavior, but didn’t quite grasp it beyond surface mechanics. Since the big reveal, the curtain has pulled back to reveal that the town’s inhabitants are indeed very human. And being human makes them all the more problematic: they’re not easy to control, don’t like not knowing what is going on, and are willing to fight for what they want.
- 7/3/2015
- by Les Chappell
- SoundOnSight
Falling Skies commences its ten-episode final season with an entertaining uptick in violence...
This review contains spoilers.
5.1 Find Your Warrior
In season four of Falling Skies, Battlestar Galactica veteran David Eick took over as showrunner and producer, and the show shifted subtly from a Revolutionary War parallel to a more traditional war story. Now, with the final season locked in for ten episodes, Eick is promsing even more chaos and carnage, transitioning from the Revolution to Vietnam. He's even gone as far as to call the last season of Falling Skies 'Apocalypse Now on crystal meth'. The family drama is getting put by the wayside for some good, old-fashioned alien murder, or so we're promised.
That remains to be seen, but after watching the first episode of the season, I can say that there is a very high body count and for once, Falling Skies doesn't trade bloodshed for speeches—you get both,...
This review contains spoilers.
5.1 Find Your Warrior
In season four of Falling Skies, Battlestar Galactica veteran David Eick took over as showrunner and producer, and the show shifted subtly from a Revolutionary War parallel to a more traditional war story. Now, with the final season locked in for ten episodes, Eick is promsing even more chaos and carnage, transitioning from the Revolution to Vietnam. He's even gone as far as to call the last season of Falling Skies 'Apocalypse Now on crystal meth'. The family drama is getting put by the wayside for some good, old-fashioned alien murder, or so we're promised.
That remains to be seen, but after watching the first episode of the season, I can say that there is a very high body count and for once, Falling Skies doesn't trade bloodshed for speeches—you get both,...
- 6/29/2015
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
Under The Dome is back with a ponderous double-length season 3 opener, which is already squandering its sci-fi potential...
This review contains spoilers.
3.1 Move On & 3.2 But I’m Not
Credit where it’s due. There were decent sci-fi ideas in Under The Dome’s season three opener: the cocoons, the alternate world, the strangle-happy alien disguised as a mild-mannered dead teen. Granted, they weren’t original sci-fi ideas, but they had potential. More potential at least than the tedious romances and ‘I love you/I’ve shot you!’ familial conflicts that pass for emotional drama round these parts.
But like a toddler first learning how to tell a joke, this show just can’t stop fluffing its punchlines. Under The Dome squandered every bit of promise the fake world concept had in record-breaking time, by a line uttered in the episode’s opening minutes. “We hope it takes us home,” said...
This review contains spoilers.
3.1 Move On & 3.2 But I’m Not
Credit where it’s due. There were decent sci-fi ideas in Under The Dome’s season three opener: the cocoons, the alternate world, the strangle-happy alien disguised as a mild-mannered dead teen. Granted, they weren’t original sci-fi ideas, but they had potential. More potential at least than the tedious romances and ‘I love you/I’ve shot you!’ familial conflicts that pass for emotional drama round these parts.
But like a toddler first learning how to tell a joke, this show just can’t stop fluffing its punchlines. Under The Dome squandered every bit of promise the fake world concept had in record-breaking time, by a line uttered in the episode’s opening minutes. “We hope it takes us home,” said...
- 6/27/2015
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
The Brit is coming! The Brit is coming (in March 2015)!
Indeed, CBS has set a premiere date for The Late Late Show With James Corden: Monday, March 9, at 12:37/11:37c.
Corden is succeeding Craig Ferguson, who in April announced his intention to leave Late Late Show after 10 years and will sign off on December 19, 2014.
In announcing Corden’s official premiere date, CBS also revealed that producer, director and writer Ben Winston (The X Factor, One Direction’s “Best Song Ever”), a friend of Corden’s since their teenage years, will serve as the Late Late Show‘s executive producer.
Indeed, CBS has set a premiere date for The Late Late Show With James Corden: Monday, March 9, at 12:37/11:37c.
Corden is succeeding Craig Ferguson, who in April announced his intention to leave Late Late Show after 10 years and will sign off on December 19, 2014.
In announcing Corden’s official premiere date, CBS also revealed that producer, director and writer Ben Winston (The X Factor, One Direction’s “Best Song Ever”), a friend of Corden’s since their teenage years, will serve as the Late Late Show‘s executive producer.
- 10/23/2014
- TVLine.com
Of all the questions posed by Monday’s Under the Dome — and there were many — the one that prevailed was an issue of science versus faith.
Well, maybe that wasn’t only the important question. There’s also, “Why is the dome shrinking?” “How will the folks in Chester’s Mill ever get out?” and “What could a third season of this show possibly entail?”
But I’m getting ahead of myself. Here’s a brief recap of Season 2’s penultimate episode, “Turn”:
Related Fall TV Preview: Who’s In? Who’s Out? Your Guide to 100+ Casting Moves
Size Matters | Joe,...
Well, maybe that wasn’t only the important question. There’s also, “Why is the dome shrinking?” “How will the folks in Chester’s Mill ever get out?” and “What could a third season of this show possibly entail?”
But I’m getting ahead of myself. Here’s a brief recap of Season 2’s penultimate episode, “Turn”:
Related Fall TV Preview: Who’s In? Who’s Out? Your Guide to 100+ Casting Moves
Size Matters | Joe,...
- 9/16/2014
- TVLine.com
Warning: If you have yet to watch the Mistresses Season 2 finale, please skip this recap and head to another TVLine story. Everyone else, dive right in — the water is perfect!
Her long white gown flutters in the Pacific Ocean breeze. She runs to him, reckless and breathless, and God (or perhaps a really astute stylist) intervenes, making his tattered old t-shirt magically disappear, revealing a torso smoother and sturdier than the Quartz kitchen countertop of your home-design fantasies.
Related Mistresses Ep Talks Shocking Season 2 Finale: ‘Soap Operas Live and Die on Unforgivable Acts’
Suddenly, she is astride him — their lips locked,...
Her long white gown flutters in the Pacific Ocean breeze. She runs to him, reckless and breathless, and God (or perhaps a really astute stylist) intervenes, making his tattered old t-shirt magically disappear, revealing a torso smoother and sturdier than the Quartz kitchen countertop of your home-design fantasies.
Related Mistresses Ep Talks Shocking Season 2 Finale: ‘Soap Operas Live and Die on Unforgivable Acts’
Suddenly, she is astride him — their lips locked,...
- 9/2/2014
- TVLine.com
The proverbial (emotional) rollercoaster is careening off its rails and heading over a cliff as Season 2 of Mistresses heads into tonight’s penultimate installment and next Monday’s finale (10/9c, ABC).
And while executive producers Rina Mimoun and K.J. Steinberg can’t guarantee that every one of its leading ladies’ storylines will be wrapped up as gorgeously as a Maison Sur Mer bauble, they are promising a religious experience for Karen, an escalation of Joss’ abs-olutely gut-wrenching choice and the possible rekindling of Daniel’s status as an (FBI) agent provocateur.
Related Emmys 2014: We Pick Who Should and Will Win — Plus: Reader Poll Results!
And while executive producers Rina Mimoun and K.J. Steinberg can’t guarantee that every one of its leading ladies’ storylines will be wrapped up as gorgeously as a Maison Sur Mer bauble, they are promising a religious experience for Karen, an escalation of Joss’ abs-olutely gut-wrenching choice and the possible rekindling of Daniel’s status as an (FBI) agent provocateur.
Related Emmys 2014: We Pick Who Should and Will Win — Plus: Reader Poll Results!
- 8/25/2014
- TVLine.com
Being one of ABC’s Mistresses isn’t as easy-breezy as a stroll through the candle section at Maison Sur Mer.
I mean, imagine getting an unexpected marriage proposal from a bronzed, swoon-inducing, ridiculously sweet M.D., then heading to lunch with your three closest gal-pals and finding yourself stuck at No. 4 on the list of most gasp-inducing conversation-starters?
Video | Watch ABC’s Selfie Pilot Put a #2014 Twist on My Fair Lady
Such is the plight of poor Joss, whose sister Savi is caught up in a high-stakes game of “Pin the Blackmail on the Bitchface,” while buddy April discovers...
I mean, imagine getting an unexpected marriage proposal from a bronzed, swoon-inducing, ridiculously sweet M.D., then heading to lunch with your three closest gal-pals and finding yourself stuck at No. 4 on the list of most gasp-inducing conversation-starters?
Video | Watch ABC’s Selfie Pilot Put a #2014 Twist on My Fair Lady
Such is the plight of poor Joss, whose sister Savi is caught up in a high-stakes game of “Pin the Blackmail on the Bitchface,” while buddy April discovers...
- 8/19/2014
- TVLine.com
Under the Dome has finally entered its seasonal end game, with “Exigent Circumstances” presenting a culmination of weeks worth of careful chess piece maneuvering. Okay, that’s a lie: chess makes for far too intricate a board game metaphor. And it’s not like the show has setup an elaborate Rube Goldberg apparatus over the course of the season either, so there goes the Mousetrap analogy (cause and effect don’t really go well together in Chester’s Mill anyway). It would be tempting to finally draw the Trouble comparison I promised back in the pilot, but the team of pegs the player has control over moving in that game convey to great a sense of individual agency for this show to match.
So why don’t we just say that Under the Dome has set up its Candyland board wonderfully, each week flipping over a new colour card telling...
So why don’t we just say that Under the Dome has set up its Candyland board wonderfully, each week flipping over a new colour card telling...
- 9/10/2013
- by Sam Woolf
- We Got This Covered
This weekend sees the debut of a brand new Saturday night entertainment show with a twist - it has puppets!
To mark the launch of BBC One's That Puppet Game Show on Saturday night (August 10), Digital Spy compiles a list of just some of TV's greatest ever puppets.
Andy Pandy
One of the leading children's characters of the early 1950s, Andy Pandy's 26 episodes were shown continuously until 1970, when a new series was made. The sweet marionette and his friends Teddy and Looby Loo lived in a picnic basket, and chilled out to the dulcet tones of Maria Bird. A new stop-motion series returned in 2002.
Animal
One of the best-loved Muppets, Animal is a drummer for the band Dr Teeth and the Electric Mayhem. He's surely up there with Dave Grohl, John Bonham and Ringo Starr as also one of the best-loved drummers of all time. Despite having a limited vocabulary,...
To mark the launch of BBC One's That Puppet Game Show on Saturday night (August 10), Digital Spy compiles a list of just some of TV's greatest ever puppets.
Andy Pandy
One of the leading children's characters of the early 1950s, Andy Pandy's 26 episodes were shown continuously until 1970, when a new series was made. The sweet marionette and his friends Teddy and Looby Loo lived in a picnic basket, and chilled out to the dulcet tones of Maria Bird. A new stop-motion series returned in 2002.
Animal
One of the best-loved Muppets, Animal is a drummer for the band Dr Teeth and the Electric Mayhem. He's surely up there with Dave Grohl, John Bonham and Ringo Starr as also one of the best-loved drummers of all time. Despite having a limited vocabulary,...
- 8/9/2013
- Digital Spy
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
Honestly, with 11 million people reportedly watching this show each week, and the fact that there’s been little to no development on an explanation for the dome, why does every single episode need to open with the same voice-over re-establishing the premise? We get it, the town like any other is now different because it’s Under The Dome (cue faux spooky voice) – and now things are crazy! Except they’re not at all. In fact they’re pretty boring and I don’t know what these 11 million people are thinking each week.
It looks like the theory Julia and Dodie postulated at the end of the previous episode – that the dome is sentient and attempting to provide its inhabitants with what they need, like a kid putting a twig and leaf into a mason jar for the bugs he’s caught, or a psycho locking...
Honestly, with 11 million people reportedly watching this show each week, and the fact that there’s been little to no development on an explanation for the dome, why does every single episode need to open with the same voice-over re-establishing the premise? We get it, the town like any other is now different because it’s Under The Dome (cue faux spooky voice) – and now things are crazy! Except they’re not at all. In fact they’re pretty boring and I don’t know what these 11 million people are thinking each week.
It looks like the theory Julia and Dodie postulated at the end of the previous episode – that the dome is sentient and attempting to provide its inhabitants with what they need, like a kid putting a twig and leaf into a mason jar for the bugs he’s caught, or a psycho locking...
- 8/6/2013
- by Joseph Kratzer
- Obsessed with Film
Maybe there’s no magical secret to having the high ratings CBS regularly trounces other networks with. From where I’m sitting, their most successful shows have at least one common factor: making sure that somebody gets killed every week. It works for NCIS, it works for Survivor and Big Brother (with exile being about as close to death as reality TV allows…for now) and it’s worked well enough for Under the Dome to earn it a second season. Cable dramas like The Walking Dead and Breaking Bad might get all the attention for the violence inherent to their vision, but death is no stranger to the FCC-regulated networks either.
All these other shows have natural methods for filling the spaces left by those characters that wind up biting the dust, the transition being more or less organic depending on the premise. So long as there’s murder in the real world,...
All these other shows have natural methods for filling the spaces left by those characters that wind up biting the dust, the transition being more or less organic depending on the premise. So long as there’s murder in the real world,...
- 8/6/2013
- by Sam Woolf
- We Got This Covered
It's almost impossible to compare a small, independent film with today's no-holds-barred superhero blockbusters. However, if there's one thing that Noah Baumbach's "Frances Ha" manages to have in common with, say, "The Avengers," is secrecy. For the film -- which was shot in secret during 2011 and 2012 -- Baumbach decided to withhold parts of the script from the cast, providing them with only the scenes in which their characters appeared. This method appears to have paid off, as critics have been swooning over "Frances" since it premiered at Telluride Film Festival last fall. Of course, the secrecy factor is where the blockbuster comparisons end for "Frances Ha." The black-and-white movie follows Frances (Greta Gerwig), an aspiring 27-year-old dancer who is looking to come to grips with adulthood as she struggles to keep a job in New York City. Here, Baumbach offers some tips on shooting a secret film, talks about...
- 5/17/2013
- by Alex Suskind
- Moviefone
It's hard to feel charitable towards Richard Curtis's malaria drama. There was more bite in Simon Cowell's dog's dinner
Mary and Martha (BBC1) | iPlayer
Lightfields (ITV1) | ITVPlayer
Food Glorious Food (ITV1) | ITVPlayer
Heading Out (BBC2) | iPlayer
Drama in aid of a worthy cause is not always more a pleasure than a duty, and Richard Curtis's feature-length Mary and Martha – an early curtain-raiser for Red Nose Day – was no exception. If its aim was to draw attention to the thousands of African children who die needlessly each year from malaria, all I can say is, it felt like it. I hope that doesn't sound too uncharitable. But I would have been as happy with a decent documentary as with this glossy weepie about two mums – one American, one English – having the bad luck to have a beloved son bitten to death by a mosquito in Mozambique and then...
Mary and Martha (BBC1) | iPlayer
Lightfields (ITV1) | ITVPlayer
Food Glorious Food (ITV1) | ITVPlayer
Heading Out (BBC2) | iPlayer
Drama in aid of a worthy cause is not always more a pleasure than a duty, and Richard Curtis's feature-length Mary and Martha – an early curtain-raiser for Red Nose Day – was no exception. If its aim was to draw attention to the thousands of African children who die needlessly each year from malaria, all I can say is, it felt like it. I hope that doesn't sound too uncharitable. But I would have been as happy with a decent documentary as with this glossy weepie about two mums – one American, one English – having the bad luck to have a beloved son bitten to death by a mosquito in Mozambique and then...
- 3/3/2013
- by Phil Hogan
- The Guardian - Film News
Now that the Winter 2013 Television Critic’s Association Press Tour is finally over, it seemed like a good time to recall some of the choice moments over the 14-day star-studded event. Since it would be nearly impossible to recount all the stand-out moments and all the cool shows upcoming this year, we have selected only a few to showcase.
The Kiss
Nothing was more buzzed about than the unexpected kiss between stars Kevin Bacon and James Purefoy at the Fox panel for The Following. It has been said that a picture is worth a thousand words, but truly you had to have been there for the impact of that memorable moment to be felt. The ease with Kevin Back just casually leaned over and planted a kiss on his co-star was a testament to the strong bond between them. Viewers may be buzzing about the underlying sexual energy between their...
The Kiss
Nothing was more buzzed about than the unexpected kiss between stars Kevin Bacon and James Purefoy at the Fox panel for The Following. It has been said that a picture is worth a thousand words, but truly you had to have been there for the impact of that memorable moment to be felt. The ease with Kevin Back just casually leaned over and planted a kiss on his co-star was a testament to the strong bond between them. Viewers may be buzzing about the underlying sexual energy between their...
- 1/18/2013
- by Tiffany Vogt
- The TV Addict
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