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Tejas: Kangana Ranaut meets real-life Air Force officers while shooting for the film

Tejas: Kangana Ranaut meets real-life Air Force officers while shooting for the film

Kangana Ranaut is currently busy shooting for her movie Tejas. The actress will be seen playing the role of an Indian Air Force officer and recently while shooting for the movie, she met a few real-life Air Force officers.

The actress took to Instagram to share pictures with them. She posted, “My herogiri turned in to total fangiri when asli Air Force officers/ soldiers landed in the same hangar as we are shooting our movie Tejas …. They already knew about this upcoming movie and showed eagerness to watch it … this brief meeting was absolutely pleasant and encouraging…. Jai Hind.”


Kangana Tejas 3

Tejas was announced last year, and Kangana started shooting for the film in August this year. On the first day of the shoot, the actress had posted, “On to my next mission #Tejas Starting today … Josh is soaring high thanks to my fabulous team @sarveshmewara @rsvpmovies.”

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Kangana was last seen in Thalaivii which got a theatrical release on 10th September 2021 and started streaming on Netflix a few days ago. The movie has received a mixed response, but Kangana’s performance in it is being appreciated a lot.

Apart from Tejas, Kangana will be seen in movies like Sita: The Incarnation, Dhaakad, Emergency, and Manikarnika Returns: The Legend of Didda.

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TroyBoi

TroyBoi’s latest EP bridges generations by fusing South Asian heritage sounds with global trap and electronic production

Instagram/troyboi

TroyBoi returns to his Indian roots with Rootz EP using Lata Mangeshkar’s voice to redefine British diaspora music

Highlights:

  • TroyBoi’s five-track EP Rootz is a personal return to the sounds of his childhood, released via Ultra Records in September 2025.
  • The single Kabhi uses an officially cleared sample of Lata Mangeshkar’s vocal from Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham.
  • Collaborations with Amrit Maan, Jazzy B and BombayMami plug Punjabi, Bhangra and south-Asian textures directly into modern trap and bass production.
  • This EP is part of a wider wave: British artists born into diasporas are using heritage not as garnish but as foundation.

Some albums hit you in ways you don’t see coming. Rootz is one of them. Not just another trap EP. TroyBoi, the London-born producer known for global bass and trap, has made something that’s also deeply personal. He didn’t just want to make music that bangs in clubs; instead, he wanted to reach back to the India of his childhood. And he did it with Rootz.

The track everyone’s talking about is Kabhi. Because it’s not just sampling Bollywood. Lata Mangeshkar’s voice was officially cleared for use on a non-Bollywood release, a milestone reported by multiple outlets. It’s history. It’s memory. And it’s a bridge.

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