title
stringlengths 1
251
| section
stringlengths 0
6.12k
| text
stringlengths 0
716k
|
---|---|---|
Nirmal Mondal | Table of Content | Short description, Early life and education, Career, References |
1955 Russian Supreme Soviet election | Uncontested elections to the Supreme Soviet of the | Uncontested elections to the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR of the IV-th convocation were held on February 27 1955. |
1955 Russian Supreme Soviet election | Previous events | Previous events
The elections to the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR were held at the time of the beginning of the Khrushchev thaw, after the internal party power struggle between Khrushchev, Beria and Malenkov ended, but before the famous XX Congress of the CPSU, which marked the beginning of the de-Stalinization process. At the same time, the State Planning Committee raised purchase prices for collective farm products, abolished the ban on abortions and separate educationН.С. Хрущёв. Политическая биография. — М., Книга, 1990. — с. 113-114., which could not but have a positive effect on the mood of the population of the RSFSR. |
1955 Russian Supreme Soviet election | Election progress | Election progress
Elections to the IV convocation of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR were held in accordance with the Regulations on elections to the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR, approved by the decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the RSFSR of December 11, 1950.
Soviet propaganda actively covered the elections in its news outlets, contrasting them with the elections of the countries of Western Europe and North America, putting emphasis on their alleged transparency and honesty. |
1955 Russian Supreme Soviet election | References | References
Category:1955 elections in the Soviet Union
Category:Legislative elections in Russia
Category:One-party elections |
1955 Russian Supreme Soviet election | Table of Content | Uncontested elections to the Supreme Soviet of the, Previous events, Election progress, References |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | Short description | The South Africa A cricket team is scheduled to tour West Indies in May and June 2025 and to play against the West Indies A cricket team. The tour consisted of two first-class matches and three List A cricket matches. |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | Squads | Squads
West Indies A South Africa AFirst-classList AFirst-class and List A Marques Ackerman (c)
Okuhle Cele
Ruan de Swardt
Schalk Engelbrecht
Bjorn Fortuin
Jordan Hermann
Tristan Luus
Rivaldo Moonsamy
Tshepo Moreki
Mihlali Mpongwana
Nqaba Peter
Lhuan-dre Pretorius
Sinethemba Qeshile
Lesego Senokwane
Jason Smith
Prenelan Subrayen |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | List A series | List A series |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | 1st Unofficial ODI | 1st Unofficial ODI |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | 2nd Unofficial ODI | 2nd Unofficial ODI |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | 3rd Unofficial ODI | 3rd Unofficial ODI |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | First-class series | First-class series |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | 1st Unofficial Test | 1st Unofficial Test |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | 2nd Unofficial Test | 2nd Unofficial Test
|
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | References | References |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | External links | External links
Series home at Cricbuzz
Category:A team cricket
Category:International cricket tours of the West Indies
Category:International cricket competitions in 2025 |
South Africa A cricket team in the West Indies in 2025 | Table of Content | Short description, Squads, List A series, 1st Unofficial ODI, 2nd Unofficial ODI, 3rd Unofficial ODI, First-class series, 1st Unofficial Test, 2nd Unofficial Test, References, External links |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Free play (Derrida) | [[:Free play (Derrida)]] | :Free play (Derrida)
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Per WP:NOTDICT and not WP:Notable. Derrida was a philosopher and polymath with countless neologisms to his credit and many other unique connotations to existing expressions. A few of these, like Différance have broken out and achieved notability and have been studied on their own terms way beyond passing mentions and do deserve an article, but this is not one of them. In addition, the entire article consists of two Derrida quotations. Suggest transwikify content to :q:Derrida and perhaps redirect the page to one of these:
but honestly I don't which one. There is also Event (philosophy), but Derrida is not mentioned there; maybe could help out with this one.
Thanks, Mathglot (talk) 05:34, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the deletion sorting lists for the following topics: Literature and Philosophy. Mathglot (talk) 05:34, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
redirect I looked on Derrida and other than the link back to this article I don't see any mention of this concept even in the talk pages. If there is a meaningful difference between a neologism and a philosophical concept then I think this falls more in the latter camp. However, I would support redirecting this back to Derrida and if talk page consensus there suggests splitting it then it can be resurrected.
Czarking0 (talk) 06:08, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
delete, no merge/redirect , A couple of quotations which do not explain what the heck "freeplay" is. It appears there are no backlinks to the article which are not from Derrida's templates. So no evidence from secondary sources of the importance of this concept, neither in the wider philosophy, nor in the "Derrida Universe". So I see no need to clutter Derrida's bio. --Altenmann >talk 06:21, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
no transwiki to quote: no reason. Just as well you may transquote the whole book. Only for the quotes which some RS deemed notable it makes sense to transquote. --Altenmann >talk 09:19, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
comment: thanks for the ping! I'm not sure how to best handle this type of case. It's not Derrida's most influential concept, but there are some secondary sources, like and . I don't know whether they are sufficient to justify have a separate article rather than including the discussion in a parent article on Derrida or Derrida's philosophy. Maybe in principle, one could make an argument for notability. However, the current content, consisting of a minimal explanation and two quotes, does not really justify a separate article. Phlsph7 (talk) 08:43, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Outside the whole framework, the current article pretty much incomprehensible. Extensive cherry-picked quotes are of no help, because Derrida's writings are not for feeble minds. --Altenmann >talk 08:53, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
A bit o/t, but I couldn't help adding that whenever I read (or try to read) Derrida (not very often), I can't decide if I have a feeble mind, or he does. Mathglot (talk) 09:40, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Merge first paragraph into Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences and get rid of the gratuitous quotation. Not enough secondary coverage to warrant a separate article. -insert valid name here- (talk) 21:54, 1 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Free play (Derrida) | Table of Content | [[:Free play (Derrida)]] |
Maritime Provinces (Ceylon) | [[File:AMH-6104-NA Map of Ceylon, divided into districts.jpg | thumb|right|300px|Map of Ceylon, divided into districts between 1700 and 1800.
The Maritime Provinces was an administrative region of British Ceylon from 15 February 1796 to 1 October 1833, which consisted of the maritime districts of the former Dutch Governorate of Ceylon, which was ceded to the British following the Invasion of Ceylon.
The Colebrooke–Cameron Commission brought the Kandyan Provinces and the Maritime Provinces under an administrative system of a unified territory for the whole island. The reforms divided the colony into five provinces, with each province further subdivided into four or five districts on 1 October 1833. |
Maritime Provinces (Ceylon) | Districts | Districts
The 1766 Treaty between the King of Kandy and Dutch East India Company, defined the boundaries of the Maritime Provinces:
Yapapattanama (Jaffna)
Hettikulapattuwa (Chettikulam)
Mannarama (Mannar)
Kolamba Disawa (Colombo)
Galu Korale (Galle)
Puliyanduwa (Batticaloa)
Trikunamale (Trincomalee) |
Maritime Provinces (Ceylon) | References | References
Category:Geography of Sri Lanka
Category:British Ceylon
Category:Former subdivisions of Sri Lanka |
Maritime Provinces (Ceylon) | Table of Content | [[File:AMH-6104-NA Map of Ceylon, divided into districts.jpg, Districts, References |
Kerr Bovell | Short description | Sir Conrad Swire Kerr Bovell (9 September 1913 – 29 September 1973) was a senior British colonial police officer who served as Inspector General of Police of the Federation of Nigeria from 1956 to 1962. |
Kerr Bovell | Early life and education | Early life and education
Bovell was born on 9 September 1913 at St Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex, the son of Capt. C. W. K. Bovell (MBE) of the Colonial Police Service and Edith Bovell (née Haughton) of Worthing. He was educated at Bradfield College, Berkshire. |
Kerr Bovell | Career | Career
Bovell began his career teaching in preparatory schools. In 1934, he left the profession and joined the Colonial Police Service as a Probationary Assistant Commissioner of Police, Federated Malay States, and was attached to the police station in Kuala Lumpur. In the following year, he was appointed to act as Assistant Commissioner of Police. In 1940, he was transferred to Kulim as Officer Superintending Police Circle. From 1942 to 1945, he was interned by the Japanese army in Changi Prison, Singapore. After the Second World War, he returned to Malaya where he served in various posts including Officer-in-Charge at Segamat and Johore Bahru. He resigned from the Federation police service in 1956 with the rank of Deputy Police Commissioner, Federated Malay States.
After leaving Malaya, Bovell served as Inspector-General of Police of the Federation of Nigeria from 1956 until his retirement from the Colonial Police Service in 1962. In his final year, he had to tackle outbreaks of violence between political factions in Western Nigeria known as Operation Wetie. He is credited with the introduction a programme of Nigerianisation in the officer ranks of the police force through rapid promotion which led to the appointment of the first indigenous Inspector-General of Police in 1964.
From 1963 to 1968, he was employed as bursar of Worksop College, Nottinghamshire, and from 1968 to 1973, as bursar of Radley College, Berkshire. |
Kerr Bovell | Personal life and death | Personal life and death
Bovell married Ethne Perrin in 1941 and they had two daughters.He was a keen sportsman, playing cricket, rugby and football for state and club teams in Malaya.
Bovell died at Radley, Berkshire on 29 September 1973, aged 60. |
Kerr Bovell | Honours | Honours
Bovill was awarded the Colonial Police Medal and the Queen's Police Medal. He was appointed Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) in the 1958 New Year Honours. He was created a Knight Bachelor in the 1961 New Year Honours. |
Kerr Bovell | References | References
Category:1913 births
Category:1973 deaths
Category:People educated at Bradfield College
Category:Companions of the Order of St Michael and St George
Category:Knights Bachelor
Category:British colonial police officers |
Kerr Bovell | Table of Content | Short description, Early life and education, Career, Personal life and death, Honours, References |
Category:Achariaceae genera | [[Category:Achariaceae]] | Category:Achariaceae
Category:Malpighiales genera |
Category:Achariaceae genera | Table of Content | [[Category:Achariaceae]] |
David Goyette | Short description | David Goyette (born March 27, 2004) is a Canadian professional ice hockey player for the Coachella Valley Firebirds of the American Hockey League (AHL) as a prospect to the Seattle Kraken of the National Hockey League (NHL). |
David Goyette | Playing career | Playing career
Goyette was taken 11th overall in the 2020 Ontario Hockey League (OHL) priority selection draft by the Sudbury Wolves, and made his debut in the 2021–22 season. He appeared in 66 games, recording 33 goals and 40 assists. Goyette was then drafted by the Seattle Kraken at 61st overall in the second round of the 2022 NHL entry draft.
In the 2022–23 season Goyette was named an alternate captain for the Sudbury Wolves and improved his scoring by averaging 1.46 points per game, with 41 goals and 51 assists. He also agreed to a three-year, entry-level contract with the Kraken on April 10th, 2023.
Goyette enjoyed great success in the 2023–24 season, aided by Teammate Quentin Musty and the addition of St. Louis Blues prospect Dalibor Dvorský from the Swedish Hockey League. With the help of Musty and Dvorský he hit the 100-point threshold for the first time. He finished the regular season with 117 points in 68 games played. Goyette was named to the OHL's Third All-Star Team, before the Wolves were swept in the second round by the North Bay Battalion.
In the 2024–2025 season the Kraken decided not to return Goyette to the Sudbury Wolves instead opting to send him to the AHL affiliate the Coachella Valley Firebirds, where in his first AHL season he put up 5 goals and 12 assists in 54 games. |
David Goyette | Career statistics | Career statistics |
David Goyette | Regular season and playoffs | Regular season and playoffs
Regular seasonPlayoffsSeasonTeamLeagueGPGAPtsPIMGPGAPtsPIM2021–22Sudbury WolvesOHL6633407333—————2022–23Sudbury WolvesOHL6341519243413462022–23Coachella Valley FirebirdsAHL20000702222023–24Sudbury WolvesOHL684077117299551092023–24Coachella Valley FirebirdsAHL10002—————2024–25Coachella Valley FirebirdsAHL54612182020110OHL totals19711416828210513681415AHL totals57612182290332 |
David Goyette | International | International
YearTeamEventResultGPGAPtsPIM2022CanadaU185th41230Junior totals41230 |
David Goyette | Awards and honours | Awards and honours
AwardYearRefOHLThird All-Star Team2024 |
David Goyette | References | References
Category:Coachella Valley Firebirds players
Category:Seattle Kraken draft picks
Category:2004 births
Category:2004 births
Category:Living people |
David Goyette | Table of Content | Short description, Playing career, Career statistics, Regular season and playoffs, International, Awards and honours, References |
Dante Barnett (English American footballer) | about |
Dante Barnett is an English American footballer who plays as a defensive tackle. He signed for the Cincinnati Bengals in 2025 through the International Player Pathway. |
Dante Barnett (English American footballer) | Early life | Early life
He is from Birmingham, England, and played a number of sports growing up but took to American football and had successful try-outs at the NFL Academy located at Loughborough University in Leicestershire, England between 2019 and 2021. After three years at the NFL Academy, Barnett tried making the jump to American college football and received offers from schools in Texas such as Texas Christian University (TCU), Southern Methodist University (SMU), and the University of Houston, but did not have the grades, and instead went to a Division III school, Dickinson College in Pennsylvania, where he played for a year in 2022. He later became part of the NFL's International Player Pathway. |
Dante Barnett (English American footballer) | Career | Career
He is a 6-foot-1, 279 pound defensive tackle. During USF's pro day back in March, he was clocked running a 4.69 40-yard dash at 6-1 and 275 pounds according to Dane Brugler's "The Beast" NFL Draft guide for The Athletic. During USF's pro day in March 2025, he was clocked running a 4.69 40-yard dash at 6-1 and 275 pounds according to Dane Brugler's "The Beast" NFL Draft guide for The Athletic. In April 2025, he signed for Cincinnati Bengals as an undrafted free agent. |
Dante Barnett (English American footballer) | Personal life | Personal life
His father died when he was young. He previously worked at a Jaguar-Land Rover plant. He is of Jamaican descent. |
Dante Barnett (English American footballer) | References | References
Category:Date of birth unknown
Category:Living people
Category:English players of American football
Category:Sportspeople from Birmingham, West Midlands
Category:American football defensive linemen
Category:International Player Pathway participants
Category:English people of Jamaican descent
Category:English expatriate sportspeople in the United States
Category:Expatriate players of American football |
Dante Barnett (English American footballer) | Table of Content | about, Early life, Career, Personal life, References |
Draft:Tefilin Polyesters | AfC submission | |
Draft:Tefilin Polyesters | References | References |
Draft:Tefilin Polyesters | Table of Content | AfC submission, References |
Draft:Shivrajj J.D. Khuman | AFC submission |
Shivrajj J.D. Khuman (born May 18, 1990) is an Indian filmmaker, producer, and screenwriter. He is known for his work in Hindi and Gujarati cinema and is the founder of MRIDOOOH STUDIOS, a production company based in Gujarat. His feature film Ashwatthama: An Infinite Rider (2020) is available on Amazon MX Player. |
Draft:Shivrajj J.D. Khuman | Early life and education | Early life and education
Shivrajj J.D. Khuman, also known as Tipu, was born in Bhavnagar, Gujarat. He studied writing and directing at Explora Design School in Pune from 2011 to 2013. |
Draft:Shivrajj J.D. Khuman | Career | Career
Khuman began his film career as a trainee assistant director on Kamal Haasan's Vishwaroopam (2013) and Vishal Bhardwaj's Haider (2014). He later directed short films such as:
The Map (2016)
The Suicide Gang (2017)
Laptop for Sale (2017)
In 2020, he directed and produced his debut feature film, Ashwatthama: An Infinite Rider. The film was released digitally and received positive feedback for its narrative and execution.
He is currently working on two upcoming projects:
Andharani Ma – a Gujarati horror film
Jogidasbapu Khuman – a historical drama |
Draft:Shivrajj J.D. Khuman | Personal life | Personal life
Shivrajj married Ilaba Shivraj Khuman on January 20, 2020. The couple lives in Rajula, Gujarat. |
Draft:Shivrajj J.D. Khuman | Filmography | Filmography |
Draft:Shivrajj J.D. Khuman | As Trainee Assistant Director | As Trainee Assistant Director
Vishwaroopam (2013)
Haider (2014) |
Draft:Shivrajj J.D. Khuman | As Director and Producer | As Director and Producer
The Map (2016)
The Suicide Gang (2017)
Laptop for Sale (2017)
Ashwatthama: An Infinite Rider (2020) |
Draft:Shivrajj J.D. Khuman | Upcoming | Upcoming
Andharani Ma – Writer, Producer, Director
Jogidasbapu Khuman – Writer, Producer, Director |
Draft:Shivrajj J.D. Khuman | References | References
In 2021, Shivrajj J.D. Khuman announced his horror film *Andharani Ma*, as reported by The Times of India. |
Draft:Shivrajj J.D. Khuman | Table of Content | AFC submission, Early life and education, Career, Personal life, Filmography, As Trainee Assistant Director, As Director and Producer, Upcoming, References |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/ZTreeWin | [[:ZTreeWin]] | :ZTreeWin
– (View AfDView log | edits since nomination)
()
Nommed for PRODDEL in 2010 for "No evidence of notability. No references given." Tag removed. It's been 15 years and there's still no significant coverage. Article reads like an advertisement. Rcfische2 (talk) 05:41, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Note: This discussion has been included in the list of Software-related deletion discussions. Rcfische2 (talk) 05:41, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
This is a renomination, previous AFD was Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Altap_Salamander. Rcfische2 (talk) 05:43, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete googling does not lead me to believe there is something notable here
Czarking0 (talk) 06:00, 1 May 2025 (UTC)
Delete: Unable to find WP:SIGCOV in WP:RS. There's like a couple sentences in one PCMag issue and that's the best I could find. Schützenpanzer (Talk) 20:14, 1 May 2025 (UTC) |
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/ZTreeWin | Table of Content | [[:ZTreeWin]] |
File:South African Department of Tourism Logo.jpg | Orphaned non-free revisions | |
File:South African Department of Tourism Logo.jpg | Summary | Summary |
File:South African Department of Tourism Logo.jpg | Licensing | Licensing |
File:South African Department of Tourism Logo.jpg | Table of Content | Orphaned non-free revisions, Summary, Licensing |
Sasha Skool | distinguish | Sasha Skool (real name — Alexander Andreevich Tkach; born. June 2, 1989, Bratsk — June 17 2022, Moscow) was a Russian rapper, one of the founders of the group "Buchenwald Flava". During his musical career, he released five albums as a member of Buchenwald Flava and eleven solo albums. |
Sasha Skool | Biography | Biography |
Sasha Skool | Early years and early career | Early years and early career
Born on June 2, 1989 in Bratsk. During his school years, he became interested in Russian hip-hop and rock, listening to bands such as Ellipsis, «Lamp slaves"and "Red mold». In 2004, under the pseudonym Sasha Skul, he became a member of the Koba Chok group. Later, in 2009, together with Dmitry Gusev, he created a new collective — Buchenwald Flava, which included the albums My Friend Hitler (2009) and Clockwork Tomato (2011). The band's creative work was characterized by deliberate provocativeness of the content: musicians satirically they turned in their songs to Nazism, xenophobia, to patriotism and banditry.
Since 2011, he began to engage in solo work, releasing his debut album "Useless Fossil". In 2013, a new album "For Whom the Bell Tolls" was released. In 2014, after the release of the album "Delirium Tremens", the group "Buchenwald Flava" ceased to exist due to disagreements between the members. In April, he took part in the second season of the show Versus Battle against John Rai. In the same year, a new album was released, "Wine from Hemlock". In 2015, he recorded another CD "Kamo pryadeshi".
In 2016, the album "Flame" was released, produced by RipBeat and Dark Faders; the presentation took place on November 12 in St. Petersburg. The following year, also together with RipBeat and Dark Faders, three albums were recorded: "Solntsegrad", "Bogachka " and "1989", which became the ideological continuation of the 2016 release. |
Sasha Skool | Staged death and illness | Staged death and illness
In 2018, the album "Songs about You" was released, produced by the beatmaker duo Dark Faders. The release track list also includes a humorous cover version of Maxim's song.
In February, reports of the musician's death appeared on the social network VKontakte; a refutation from Skul himself was later published. In May 2019, Sasha Skul reported that he was hospitalized with suspected cancer. In support of Skool, his friends organized a five-hour charity concert, which took place on June 30. Initially, information was also spread that Skul was directly assisted by "his close friend Anna Shulgina", however, according to him, "the Chuvash bratva was engaged in the concert, from her information got to Yelka's social networks, and from her-to singer Shena, Valeria's daughter".
During his illness, Sasha Skul wrote daily notes about his condition on the social network VKontakte, and on November 1, 2019, he released his tenth album Nigredo, in which he documented his battle with cancer. On November 7, 2019, Sasha Skul announced the end of treatment on his social network page.
On February 21, 2020, the first release of Sasha Skula after his illness was released-a joint album with Murda Killa "Navi Tropy", inspired by Russian folklore. Guest versesHorus and Pyrokinesis. On July 13 of the same year, Murda Killa died due to an asthma attack caused by alcohol and antidepressants.
On April 10, the JAM label, which owns the rights to Skul's songs, sued the BOOM streaming service for 575 thousand rubles for copyright infringement of songs by Sasha Skul and composer Leonid Velichkovsky. The label found songs from Skool's Tagir Majulov album in BOOM's media library, but the copyright information was removed, and the artist did not receive any money from listening to the album. The streaming service could not confirm that it owns the rights to the content.
In July, Skool's second release in 2020 premiered. The album "Pestilence" is a topical rap to dance music, recorded during self-isolation. School himself describes the album as "Not a soundtrack to the end of the world, but a call to a new life-a reminder that the world did not perish". |
Sasha Skool | Death | Death
thumb|Sasha Skula's grave (right) at the New Cemetery in Bratsk
He died on June 17, 2022 in Moscow; information about the death of Sasha Skul was confirmed to the media by his sister Olga and his friend Nikita Khors.
On June 20, 2022, a funeral farewell was held in Moscow, after which the musician's body was transported to Bratsk, where his funeral was held on June 22, 2022.
On February 16, 2023, the tribute album "Death is Inevitable" was released in honor of Murda Killa, which was recorded by Sasha.
On February 24, the posthumous album "Easter of the Dead" was released with the participation of Metox, Pasha Technique and Murda Killa. |
Sasha Skool | References | References
Category:1989 births
Category:2022 deaths
Category:21st-century Russian male musicians
Category:21st-century Russian rappers
Category:Male hip-hop musicians
Category:Russian hip-hop musicians
Category:Russian male rappers |
Sasha Skool | Table of Content | distinguish, Biography, Early years and early career, Staged death and illness, Death, References |
Pillows (snack) | <!-- Please do not remove or change this AfD message until the discussion has been closed. --> | Pillows is a Filipino snack brand introduced in the 2000s. It is considered Halal. |
Pillows (snack) | Ingredients | Ingredients
It contains sugar, wheat, rice, and palm oil, as well as some Vitamin A. |
Pillows (snack) | Criticism | Criticism
It is popular among Filipinos, and as previously mentioned, it has a halal certificate due to not containing Haram. |
Pillows (snack) | Flavors and sizes | Flavors and sizes
Pillows comes in two flavors, chocolate and Ube. It also comes in two sizes, small and normal. |
Pillows (snack) | References | References
Category:Snack foods |
Pillows (snack) | Table of Content | <!-- Please do not remove or change this AfD message until the discussion has been closed. -->, Ingredients, Criticism, Flavors and sizes, References |
Draft:Shruti | AFC submission |
Jon Michail is an Australian executive coach, personal branding strategist, and founder and Group CEO of Image Group International (IGI), a consultancy based in Melbourne that provides leadership development and reputation management services. |
Draft:Shruti | Media and recognition | Media and recognition
He was profiled in the publication Neos Kosmos in 2011, which explored his early transition from fashion to corporate consulting and his influence on image leadership in Australia. |
Draft:Shruti | Selected Commentary and Mentions | Selected Commentary and Mentions
"The Brand is You: Image in the Age of First Impressions" – SmartCompany
"The Business of Authentic Personal Branding" – HRD America
"Why Australian retailers need to invest in personal branding" – Inside Retail Asia |
Draft:Shruti | Publications | Publications
Michail, Jon. Life Branding (2002) – A book on personal branding and career development. |
Draft:Shruti | External Links | External Links
Official website |
Draft:Shruti | Table of Content | AFC submission, Media and recognition, Selected Commentary and Mentions, Publications, External Links |
File:Alex Harris.jpg | di-no permission | |
File:Alex Harris.jpg | Summary | Summary
Received pic and permission directly from Colorado Rapids |
File:Alex Harris.jpg | Table of Content | di-no permission, Summary |
Aarii | Short description | Aarii is a 2025 Indian Bengali-language family drama film, written and directed by Jiit Chakraborty. Produced by Yash Dasgupta, Amitava Dey and Sreejit Mukherjee under YD Films, GSI Films and GP Entertainment, the film stars Moushumi Chatterjee as Jaya Sen, Yash Dasgupta as her son Joy Sen and Nusrat Jahan as Aditi, a writer who becomes involved in their lives. The narrative explores the sacrifices and emotional bonds between a widowed mother and her caregiver son. It was released theatrically on 25 April 2025. |
Aarii | Plot | Plot
After the death of her husband, Jaya Sen begins to suffer from a progressive illness that affects her memory and mental health. Her son, Joy Sen, abandons his own aspirations to become her full-time caregiver. The close-knit bond between them attracts the attention of Aditi, a writer researching real-life stories. When Joy finds himself in need of money, a local gang lord, Trilok, pressures him to join his criminal enterprise, and tensions rise as Joy’s friend Bubai (Unmesh and rival Lalon pull him in opposite directions. As the stakes escalate, the family must navigate loyalty, desperation and hope. |
Aarii | Cast | Cast
Moushumi Chatterjee as Jaya Sen
Yash Dasgupta as Joy Sen
Nusrat Jahan as Aditi Ghosh
Partha Bhowmick as Trilok Halder
Kamaleshwar Mukherjee as Barundeb Acharya
Debraj Bhattacharya as Lalon Halder
Unmesh Ganguly as Bubai Acharya
Sohini Sengupta as Phoolu
Debolina Biswas as Srimoyee Chatterjee
Ashim Roy Chowdhury as police
Abhijit Guha as Lokesh Samanta
Srabanti Chatterjee (cameo in "Dakat Poreche" song)
Somraj Maity as Pritam Sunpui (cameo)
Jiit Chakraborty (cameo) |
Aarii | Production | Production |
Aarii | Development | Development
The project was announced in late 2024, marking veteran actress Moushumi Chatterjee’s return to Bengali cinema after a 12-year hiatus. The film is the second production under actor Yash Dasgupta’s banner alongside Amitava Dey and Sreejit Mukherjee. |
Aarii | Filming | Filming
Principal photography commenced in December 2024 in South Kolkata. The shoot was completed rapidly, leveraging urban and suburban locales to depict the Sen family’s domestic and community settings. |
Aarii | Soundtrack | Soundtrack
The film’s score is composed collaboratively by Anindya Chatterjee, Keshab Dey and Lincon Roy Chowdhury, blending traditional Bengali motifs with contemporary orchestration to underscore the emotional arc of the mother-son relationship. |
Aarii | Track listing | Track listing
No. Title Lyrics Singer(s) Length 1. "Kichu Kotha" Lincon Roy Chowdhury Muhammad Irfan, Anwesshaa 4:18 2. "Aarii (Title Track)" Anindya Chatterjee Anindya Chatterjee 3:31 3. "Dakat Poreche" Badal Paul Iman Chakraborty 2:37 4. "Mon Pakhi" Amitabha Bhattacharya Syed Omy 2:52 Total length: 13:18 |
Aarii | Release | Release
Theatrically released across West Bengal and select national screens on 25 April 2025, Aarii opened to moderate box office collections, buoyed by positive word-of-mouth for its performances and emotional depth. |
Aarii | Reception | Reception
Aarii received generally positive reviews for its heartfelt storytelling and standout performances, particularly Moushumi Chatterjee’s nuanced portrayal of Jaya Sen.
Poorna Banerjee of The Times of India awarded the film 3 out of 5 stars, praising its exploration of elder care and family bonds while noting its deliberate pacing might challenge some viewers
IWMBuzz lauded the “high-EQ” screenplay and Moushumi Chatterjee’s presence, calling Aarii a “bitter-sweet tale that resonates with universal themes of love and duty.” |
Aarii | References | References |
Aarii | External links | External links
Category:2025 films
Category:Bengali-language Indian films
Category:Films about families
Category:Films shot in Kolkata |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.