Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Aishwarya Rai Bachchan rejects a movie opposite Shah Rukh Khan?

Aishwarya Rai Bachchan and Shah Rukh Khan have delivered blockbusters like Mohabbatein and Devdas. Once their on-screen pair was so popular that every filmmaker wanted to cast them for their projects. But both the actors had a fall-out on the sets of Shah Rukh Khan’s home-production Chalte Chalte and they did not work together for many years. However, they turned friends again and were even in Karan Johar’s Ae Dil Hai Mushkil. Shah Rukh was seen in a small cameo in the film.

After watching SRK and Aishwarya together in Ae Dil Hai Mushkil for a few moments, fans gauged that both still have the same spark and wished they could come together again in full-fledged roles. But it seems that both the superstars don’t want to do a movie together just for the sake of it.


Reportedly, Aishwarya has become very selective and is choosing her projects wisely. She does not want to be part of any project which is not worth her time. She is currently busy with the shooting of Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra’s upcoming directorial Fanney Khan.  She has not signed any project after Fanney Khan.

According to a source, “Aishwarya has turned down several offers. She wants to be doubly sure about the projects she wants to sign. She was offered a project opposite Shah Rukh Khan, and while she is very keen to collaborate with him again, the script was not convincing enough for her.”

Aishwarya Rai Bachchan was last seen in Ae Dil Hai Mushkil, a romantic-drama film which brought her a lot of appreciation.

More For You

porn ban

Britain moves to ban porn showing sexual strangulation

AI Generated Gemini

What Britain’s ban on strangulation porn really means and why campaigners say it could backfire

Highlights:

  • Government to criminalise porn that shows strangulation or suffocation during sex.
  • Part of wider plan to fight violence against women and online harm.
  • Tech firms will be forced to block such content or face heavy Ofcom fines.
  • Experts say the ban responds to medical evidence and years of campaigning.

You see it everywhere now. In mainstream pornography, a man’s hands around a woman’s neck. It has become so common that for many, especially the young, it just seems like part of sex, a normal step. The UK government has decided it should not be, and soon, it will be a crime.

The plan is to make possessing or distributing pornographic material that shows sexual strangulation, often called ‘choking’, illegal. This is a specific amendment to the Crime and Policing Bill. Ministers are acting on the back of a stark, independent review. That report found this kind of violence is not just available online, but it is rampant. It has quietly, steadily, become normalised.

Keep ReadingShow less