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Not just fans, host Salman Khan is also loving Shilpa Shinde in Bigg Boss 11!

It was a big day in the Bigg Boss house for popular television actor Shilpa Shinde. While she has been fighting her battle with co contestant Vikas Gupta in her own way, she has truly learnt how to play the game well. The actor has been singing songs, offering food and doing everything in her right to irritate Vikas, and it seems to be working. Vikas almost jumped outside the house and also appealed to Bigg Boss to take him out of the game, citing that he could not take anymore from Shilpa.

Well, her efforts have not gone unnoticed, and her antics have been very entertaining for the rest of the housemates and for her fans. The icing on the cake is that superstar host Salman Khan also said that he is loving her in the house, in the recent episode. The guest on the show, actor Tanishaa Mukerji, also agreed with him, saying that it's commendable how she is coming up with unique ways to trouble Vikas. Shilpa surely seems to have become one of the strongest best contenders and will certainly go a long way in the show.

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Samir Zaidi

Two Sinners marks Samir Zaidi’s striking directorial debut

Samir Zaidi, director of 'Two Sinners', emerges as a powerful new voice in Indian film

Indian cinema has a long tradition of discovering new storytellers in unexpected places, and one recent voice that has attracted quiet, steady attention is Samir Zaidi. His debut short film Two Sinners has been travelling across international festivals, earning strong praise for its emotional depth and moral complexity. But what makes Zaidi’s trajectory especially compelling is how organically it has unfolded — grounded not in film school training, but in lived observation, patient apprenticeships and a deep belief in the poetry of everyday life.

Zaidi’s relationship with creativity began well before he ever stepped onto a set. “As a child, I was fascinated by small, fleeting things — the way people spoke, the silences between arguments, the patterns of light on the walls,” he reflects. He didn’t yet have the vocabulary for what he was absorbing, but the instinct was already in place. At 13, he turned to poetry, sensing that the act of shaping emotions into words offered a kind of clarity he couldn’t find elsewhere. “I realised creativity wasn’t something external I had to chase; it was a way of processing the world,” he says. “Whether it was writing or filmmaking, it came from the same impulse: to make sense of what I didn’t fully understand.”

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