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Sarika says she was told industry ‘won’t take her back’ if she goes on a break: ‘I thought if I am offered buddhi ka role…’

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There has never been a moment in actor Sarika’s career, which involves moving away from acting and taking three sabbaticals, that she has operated from a space of fear. Not when she took her first break at 25, not when she ran out of money during the lockdown, not even when there were well-meaning friends, who were worried if she will ever get work in the industry.

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Sarika, who started working at the age of five, took a sabbatical in 1986 when she became mother to Shruti Haasan. The actor says she could not see herself juggle work and raising a child like other women do successfully.

“When I conceived Shruti, I told myself, ‘That’s it from movies now’ because I like to give my 100 percent. My admiration and respect for women who can juggle bringing up a child and their career. I am not that smart.

“By then, I had worked for so many years. What people start in 20 and finish at 50, I had finished it by the time I was 25. I was not exhausted; I had done it all. I was ready for bringing up kids, focusing on my family,” Sarika told indianexpress.com.

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The actor then ventured into sound and costume designing and went on to assist cinematographer PC Sreeram. She was away from acting, but never out of work. She eventually returned to the screen in the mid 2000s with films like Parzani and Bheja Fry, only to realise that good roles for her were drying up. After Baar Baar Dekho in 2016, Sarika took another break.

“I was done waiting. When actors say they are waiting but good roles are not coming, at least 80 percent of them are telling the truth, may be the rest are making excuses. I thought I was just wasting my life. I would wake up, wait, go to sleep. It was rubbish. I consciously stopped acting. I decided that for a year I won’t work. My friends panicked, told me, ‘Don’t be stupid! This industry is such that they will not get you back.’ I was like, it is ok, if I am offered ‘buddhi’ (old woman) ka role, I would happily take that up as well. I just wanted to act,” she added.

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Sarika eventually moved to theatre, not to act, but in the backstage. The experience was so fulfilling that the one-year break turned into five years, with her even backing a major production, until things came crashing in 2020.

“I also produced my own play then. We had a crew of 25 people, with 18 actors. But then COVID hit. When we came out of the lockdown, zyada tar logo ke paise khatam hogaye the, mere bhi hogaye the (most of the people didn’t have money, even I didn’t have it). No one gets paid more than artistes, so I came back to acting!”

This year, Sarika returned to the screens with Prime Video’s anthology Modern Love and is currently awaiting the release of her feature film, Uunchai. Directed by Sooraj Barjatya, the film also stars Amitabh Bachcha, Boman Irani and Anupam Kher.

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“It was just sheer blessing, that Modern Love and Uunchai came to me. I feel so fortunate with the work that came my way. This has been a good year and I am so happy to be back, again,” she added.

Jointly produced by Rajshri Productions, Boundless Media and Mahaveer Jain Films, Uunchai also stars Neena Gupta, Parineeti Chopra, Nafisa Ali and Danny Denzongpa. The film is scheduled to release on November 11.

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Fans petition for Pedro Pascal to be 2023 Calgary Stampede parade marshal | Globalnews.ca

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An online petition is hoping to see one of the stars of The Last of Us named the 2023 Calgary Stampede parade marshal.


A Change.org petition wants Pedro Pascal, who plays Joel in the TV show, to lead the charge.

The parade marshal is usually announced at the end of May or early June.

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‘The Last of Us’: All the Alberta locations that got a dramatic makeover

Pascal spent time in Calgary and across the province filming the hit Crave series, including the Alberta legislature, the Bow River, the Ranchland Inn in Nanton, the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT), Canmore Engine Bridge and Waterton Lakes National Park.

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In fact, in episode 1, When You’re Lost in the Darkness, Calgary’s downtown is used as a stand-in for Boston, and a specially designed set situated in the industrial area behind the Calgary Stampede grounds serves at the show’s Boston Quarantine Zone (QZ.)

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Pascal has also spoken about his love for Alberta, like exploring the mountains and seeing the northern lights.

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As of 8 a.m. Monday, March 20, the petition had about 4,700 names.

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Academy Award winning actor Kevin Costner named 2022 Calgary Stampede parade marshal

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Actor Kevin Costner was parade marshal in 2022.


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Bruce Willis’ wife shares tearful message about grief on actor’s 68th birthday – National | Globalnews.ca

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Emma Heming Willis, the wife of Bruce Willis, said the actor’s 68th birthday celebrations caused her to feel “grief and sadness” amid his dementia diagnosis.


In an emotional video posted to Instagram on Sunday, Heming Willis, 44, said she “started the morning by crying.”

“I think it’s important that you see all sides of this,” she told her followers, referring to the struggles of dealing with Willis’ frontotemporal dementia (FTD).

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In February, Willis’ family shared an update that the actor’s aphasia has progressed into FTD, a condition that often strikes younger patients than other forms of dementia. Symptoms include difficulty with speech and movement and gradual memory loss.

Heming Willis said people always call her “strong” for supporting her husband.

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“I’m not given a choice,” she insisted. “I wish I was.”

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She continued: “But I’m also raising two kids in this, so sometimes in our lives we have to put our big girl panties on and get to it, and that’s what I’m doing.”

Willis and Heming Willis share two daughters, 10 and eight years old. Willis also has three other daughters with ex-wife Demi Moore.

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Heming Willis said she experiences “times of sadness” and “grief” every day, but they were especially strong on Willis’ birthday.

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She grew teary eyed as she spoke about editing another Instagram post that included several clips of Willis and his family over the years. Heming Willis called the videos “a knife in my heart.”

Alongside the video, also posted Sunday, Heming Willis wrote: “My birthday wish for Bruce is that you continue to keep him in your prayers and highest vibrations because his sensitive Pisces soul will feel it. Thank you so much for loving and caring for him too.”

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‘The Last of Us’: All the Alberta locations that got a dramatic makeover

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Willis’ ex-wife Moore, 60, also shared a video, this one from Willis’ birthday party. In the video, Willis, who is missing a tooth, is seen blowing out his birthday candles atop a pie.

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“Right at it!” Willis declared, stumbling slightly. Thrice his family chanted “Hip-hip-hooray!” before they embraced Willis.

Willis retired from acting in March 2022. At the time, his family said he was “experiencing some health issues … which are impacting his cognitive abilities.”

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According to the Alzheimer Society of Canada, FTD is an umbrella term for a group of rare disorders that most often affect the parts of the brain associated with personality and behaviour. Approximately five to 10 per cent of all diagnosed dementia cases are FTD, but the condition accounts for about 20 per cent of all young onset dementia cases diagnosed in people under 65.

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Alan Cross: How much longer will we be able to buy digital downloads of songs? – National | Globalnews.ca

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When Steve Jobs made the rounds of major record labels in 2000, he knew he had them over a barrel.


Music piracy, kicked into high gear by the original Napster the previous June, was a threat to the recorded music industry. The new frontier for music was online and the labels were completely ill-equipped to deal with the greatest shift in music distribution in a century. They had to get in on the business of selling music digitally, but how?

Oh, the labels tried to build their own download stores, but Pressplay (originally called Duet and owned by Universal and Sony) and Musicnet (all the other majors) were miserable failures. First, they were expensive. For $15 a month, fans could stream 500 songs each month, get 50 song downloads and the ability to burn each of those songs to CD 10 times.

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Second, it was chaotic for the consumer. You needed to know what label a song or artist was on before. The terms of use were confusing and digital rights management (DRM) locks on the files made moving them around difficult and frustrating. It was much, much easier to just steal music.

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Third, the labels couldn’t work together on a unified platform because that would have violated all kinds of anti-trust rules, a legal situation that also help scupper the labels’ proposed purchase of Napster.

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The labels had all the digital products but no way to distribute and sell them. Apple’s iTunes offered a way out of this bind.

Jobs convinced the labels that allowing him to sell individual songs for 99 cents each was the way to go. And because the labels had no idea what they were doing — and because Apple was committed to spending millions on marketing (not to mention they had this new gadget called an iPod) — the labels all signed on with the iTunes Music Store.

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His pitch worked, and boom — the music industry changed forever.

There had been other attempts at creating digital music stores. Cductive was founded in 1996 and sold MP3 downloads for 99 cents (it was acquired by eMusic in 1999). Sony debuted Bitmusic in Japan in 1999, offering mostly singles from Japanese artists (it failed). Factory Records launched Music33, which offered downloads for 33 pence each (ditto). There was even a Canadian digital music store called Puretracks that lasted for about a nanosecond.

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Nothing beat iTunes, especially when the labels agreed to remove all DRM locks in 2007. (I still have songs on my computer in the old .mp4a format that are locked up and can’t be freely transferred from one place to another.) It soon became de rigueur for all releases to be available through iTunes.

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And because the iTunes Music Store was so easy to use on all computers (offering a Windows version was a huge deal), it became the favourite destination for buying digital albums and tracks. At one point, iTunes was responsible for 70 per cent of all digital music sales. Almost every would-be challenger was crushed. Hey, anyone remember hmvdigital.com?

But the whole shift from selling pieces of plastic to digital tracks left a bad taste in the mouths of the labels. They’d completely ceded distribution of their product to an outsider who charged a 30 per cent commission on each file sold. They vowed never to let that happen again.

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Fast forward to today. Streaming, not downloads, is king and the labels have firm control over how streamers may do business. They made more than US$10 billion from streaming in 2022. They also continuously receive petabytes and petabytes of data on how music fans consume music.

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And because streaming is so cheap — or even free — music piracy is a fraction of what it used to be.

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As a result, sales of digital tracks and albums continue to plummet. In Canada, the sales of digital albums are down 15.9 per cent from this time last year and digital track sales have fallen by 7.5 per cent. Meanwhile, streaming is up 13.9 per cent from a year ago as Canadians reliably stream somewhere around 2.3 billion songs a week.

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I can make the situation sound even more dire. In 2012, we bought 1.3 billion digital tracks. Last year, we bought 152 million. That’s a crash of 88.6 per cent in a decade. These numbers obviously aren’t good. Paid downloads are quickly becoming the next cassette.

Sales were once front-and-centre on the iTunes home page. Now you have to hunt a bit for the iTunes Music Store when you open the app. If you go to Amazon, a search for MP3s takes you to a page that pushes streaming and physical product. Neither company breaks out how much digital music they sell in their financial reports.

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So here’s the question: How long will Apple support iTunes? Heck, how much longer do all digital tracks/albums sales have? Let me issue a plea that this never happens.

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I desperately need iTunes to continue because of my work. I need to gain full and legal access to songs to produce my radio show, The Ongoing History of New Music, so I buy up to a dozen songs a week. My Mac tells me I have 79,655 items taking up 564.65 gigabytes in my library. A non-insignificant number of those songs are iTunes downloads.

There are many uses for downloads. DJs need files they can mix as part of their sets. Older music fans brought up on a diet of purchasing CDs and vinyl also like iTunes because it offers permanent ownership instead of renting music from streamers. Insiders know that if downloads for an artist increase, it may show that the artist has crossed over to an older demo.

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Artists can also see decent revenue from iTunes, especially after they’re in the news for something. Paid downloads spike up and they pay out far, far more than streams. Artists, labels and managers also monitor iTunes for songs that may pop on iTunes’ charts, a possible indication that something interesting is happening.

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How did the Canadian music industry do in 2022? The year-end stats are out

What are the options if iTunes goes away as Google Play Music did? Well, there are other digital music storefronts. There’s the aforementioned eMusic, which came online selling DRM-free MP3s in January 1998, three years before iTunes debuted. It has contracts with the major labels and dozens of indies. Unlike iTunes and Amazon Music, it’s a download-to-own site that requires the purchase of a monthly membership. Its library isn’t as deep as iTunes (15 million songs vs at least 60 million) but it can do the job for some people.

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The most interesting digital music storefronts are those selling hi-res lossless files for people who demand the highest in audio quality. For example, 7 Digital will sell you all kinds of digital music, including plenty of 24-bit FLAC files. That’s fantastic — if you have the necessary hardware.

The same goes for Pro Studio Masters (I used it quite a bit for buying FLAC files). If that’s your jam, be sure to check out HDTracks and France’s Qobuz. which will debut in Canada later this year.

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DJs and dance music fans have long known about Beatport. If you’re into the indie side of things, you’ve probably purchased a download or two from Bandcamp. And then there’s Bleep, which focuses on independent artists and labels.

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Still, though, it’s hard to beat iTunes for selection and functionality. I really, really hope Apple doesn’t do something stupid like kill it. But with each week’s music industry sales numbers, you have to wonder how far things can drop before it’s time to move on.

If that day comes, it will be very, very sad.

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Alan Cross is a broadcaster with Q107 and 102.1 the Edge and a commentator for Global News.

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Subscribe to Alan’s Ongoing History of New Music Podcast now on Apple Podcast or Google Play

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