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[21 Apr 2009 | No Comment | ]

TweetIndian Fusion In Minutes
Looking for a quick and easy way to spice up everyday meals? Pick up food writer Monica Bhide's latest, Modern Spice: Inspired Indian Flavors for the Contemporary Kitchen. Bhide, who has written for the New York Times, Bon Appetit, Food & Wine and the Washington Post, blends old school spices and techniques with fresh, vibrant flavors, like pomegranate and mango, in both sweet and savory dishes.

Bhide offers a clear, illustrated front-of-the-book primer for those dabbling with Indian cuisine for the first time, explaining how to play …

entertainment, reviews »

[12 Oct 2007 | One Comment | ]

TweetLast week, on TV, I saw Rani Mukherji quite cockily say that for her to be involved in a film, it has to be something really special. (And I thought Aishwarya was full of herself!) Still, as irritatingly obnoxious as it may sound, the Bengali-born actress has picked a slate of above-par projects since committing herself to more serious, thoughtful Bollywood fare like 2002′s Saathiya, 2004′s Yuva and 2005′s Black and Paheli. Still, she’s also had her big Bollywood clunkers (recall Ta Ra Rum Pum). And after seeing Rani’s latest …

entertainment, reviews »

[15 May 2007 | No Comment | ]

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Provoked
East West
May 2007
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You have to hand it to Aishwarya Rai—she is a stunner. But that doesn’t always work to her advantage. Take her role as Kiranjit Ahluwalia, the real-life, Brit-Asian banner for abused women, in Rai’s second English-language crossover, Provoked (in theaters May 11). It could be considered Rai’s most un-glam turn to date: virtually no make-up hiding her still-flawless complexion, traditional Punjabi clothes and effectively broken English. But then there are her coveted blue-green eyes, her best feature, both physically and in the sense of craft. …

entertainment, freelance writing, reviews »

[1 Aug 2002 | No Comment | ]

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Coldplay: A Rush of Blood to the Head
People
August 2002
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Fame is treating Coldplay well: gigs opening for U2, celebrity fans like Gwyneth Paltrow and Grammy for best alternative music album for the Brit quartet’s shimmering 2000 debut, Parachutes. Luckily, as this textured, understated follow-up demonstrates, success hasn’t gone to the heads of former University City College London chums Chris Martin, Will Champion, Guy Berryman and Jonny Buckland.
Toning down the Radiohead-iness, Coldplay creates moments of absolute poetry on Rush, blending moody guitars and bass, subtle percussion and emphatic keyboards …

entertainment, freelance writing, reviews »

[15 Jun 2002 | No Comment | ]

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Korn: Untouchables
People
June 2002
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On this follow-up to 1999’s multi-platinum Issues, Korn remains the cream of the genre it pioneered: an emotionally cathartic brand of alt-metal incorporating hip-hop influences. “Here to Stay,” the disc’s feedback-heavy first single, already dominating rock charts with its goth choruses and angry lyrics, belongs on the soundtrack of an Anne Rice film adaptation. Which is fitting, considering front man Jonathan Davis scored for last year’s Queen of the Damned.
Davis, a former assistant coroner, has been the guiding force behind Korn’s raging confessionals about alienation …

entertainment, reviews »

[15 Jun 2002 | No Comment | ]

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Avril Lavigne: Let Go
People
June 2002
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Thanks to her catchy, guitar-driven single “Complicated,” Lavigne, 17, is poised to be the next teen-pop princess. But unlike her more mature counterparts Michelle Branch and Vanessa Carlton, she’s not in any big hurry to ditch adolescence. Lavigne laces this fun debut with charming punk attitude on youthful cuts like “Sk8er Boi,” about not judging a boy by his clothes.
While Lavigne may be young, she’s not that innocent. One moment she’s coyly sexy, the next she’s irreparably wounded. With a malleable alto that slips …

entertainment, freelance writing, reviews »

[15 Sep 2000 | No Comment | ]

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Amanda Ghost: Ghost Stories
People
September 2000
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Make way for the protégée. Everyone from buddy Boy George to UK record exec Andrew Wickham (who signed Joni Mitchell) is claiming credit for discovering Ghost (nee Gosein), a London-based singer-songwriter of Indian and Spanish descent. And with good reason.
Ghost, 25, is a wunderkind of the Fiona Apple variety, with a throaty, aggressive alto and eclectic songwriting style that reflects her sense of displacement. On the club-ready “Filthy Mind” she spits out bitter come-hither commands (“Could you make a suggestion/ For an act …