Friday 16 August 2013
Tuesday 13 August 2013
UPTET 2013 RESULT
UPTET 2013 RESULT DECLARED . PLZ CHECK RESULT IN BELOW LINK
http://upbasiceduboard.gov.in/tet_regno.aspx
http://upbasiceduboard.gov.in/tet_regno.aspx
Monday 12 August 2013
UPTET 2013 Result upbasiceduboard.gov.in UPTET Results 2013
UPTET Results 2013 upbasiceduboard.gov.in Official Website UPTET June Exam Result Link / Utter Pradesh Teacher Eligibility Test 2013 Results.
UPTET 2013 Result : Utter Pradesh Teacher Eligibility Test for this year is going to be conducted on 27 June and 28 June 2013 by Uttar Pradesh Basic Education Board and UP Govt. A lot of centers have been organized to keep candidate's facility in mind. This exam is conducted every year for graduated candidates of Uttar Pradesh who wish to be teacher in their UP State. As the UPTET 2013 is going to be held in the last of June 2013,
So we can expect the UPTET Results 2013 in the starting of September or last of August 2013.
UPTET 2013 Results - UP TET Exam Result
UPTET 2013 Results - UP TET Exam Result :- Uttar Pradesh Basic Education Board and UP Govt. are responsible to conduct this exam. Official web portal for UPTET 2013 is upbasiceduboard.gov.in. Candidates are working hard for their exam as the exam date is very near. UPTET 2013 Results will be available on official website after 2 month of exam date.
Whenever declared, UPTET Results will be available on the official website : upbasiceduboard.gov.in.
We will also add the direct link here to see the UPTET Results, Once the UPTET 2013 Results are declared officially. So best of luck for your UPTET Exam. Keep visiting www.iUGC.in for latest Indian Education Updates.
Update : We came to know that UPTET 2013 Result will be available on official website upbasiceduboard.gov.in
Friday 9 August 2013
UPTET 2013 Result
UPTET News 2013 - UPTET 2013 Exam was conducted on 27th and 28th June andUPTET 2013 Results will be declared very soon. Large number of students appeared in the UP Teachers Eligibility Test 2013 and now they are eagerly waiting for the result to be declared by the board. UPTET 2013 Result will be declared in last week of August or first week of September.
UPTET 2013 NEWS - Declaration of UPTET 2013 Result
UPTET 2013 exam was conducted at 872 centres across the state of Uttar Pradesh for which almost 6.5 lakh candidates appeared. The exam was conducted online and after a month, board is going to declare the UPTET 2013 Result. You may follow the steps mentioned below to check your UPTET Result successfully -
- Click here to go to the official website of UPTET 2013
- Click on the link that says, “UPTET 2013 Result“
- Enter your registration number/application number and date of birth
- Click on the submit button
You UPTET Result 2013 will be displayed on the screen by now. Please take a printout of your UPTET 2013 Result. Your result will display your ALL India Rank, State wise rank and category wise rank. By qualifying UPTET 2013 Exam, students will be able to apply for some teaching jobs in Government schools.
Please note that UPTET 2013 Result published on the website will not be considered as final result. A hard copy of your UPTET 2013 Scorecard will be sent to your residential address. This will be the legal document representing your origianl marks scored in UPTET 2013 Exam.
Chennai Express Review: Chen-nahin!
Chennai Express is, in a way, full
circle for that very lady as she — enervated by box-office success and
increasingly self-aware as an actress — holds up her end of the film far
better, and more consistently than her leading man. She makes an effort; he
makes faces. And he’s never seemed more at sea.
Rohit Shetty’s Chennai
Express is a curious
beast, a film it seemed would lampoon the South Indian blockbuster — those
films we claim are cheesier and sillier than our own (and then remake with much
fanfare) — but happens to be, in fact, the diametric opposite. This is, in many
ways, a full-throated tribute, a Sun TV Strikes Back statement of a film, where
a typically cliched example of Southern style masala chugs along normally (and
unironically) but is disrupted by a Bollywood actor who has no business there.
Khan’s Rahul plays the freak while the locals around him look at him dazed,
befuddled by his buffoonery.
All the other actors in this
enterprise, despite their one-note roles, conform to the universe of this film,
to its reality, but Khan’s having nothing of it. He performs in an inexplicably
bizarre pitch, as if the filmmakers (and himself, the producer) decided that he
should play it like a rejected 40s cartoon, like Daffy Duck gone awry. Khan
yelps and squeaks and shrieks and bares fangs and pouts and, well, exhausts
himself overcompensating at every step, despite nobody else in the film
following this template so inanely animated it’d make Jim Carrey think twice. A
looney out of tune, then.
It’s a shame because Chennai
Express is built on a
simple enough bit of fluff, something that would truly have sparkled brightly
in the hands of, say, an Imtiaz Ali, but something that would itself have been
inherently more entertaining had Khan not been intent on looking an imbecile.
In sum: Rahul, entrusted with his grandfather’s ashes to be immersed down
south, decides instead to hotfoot it to Goa and party with friends who have
“arranged” NRI girls. He gets on to a train to throw his sweet, unsuspecting
grandmother off his scent, and it is here he runs into Padukone’s Meena, a
pretty girl with an accent thicker than Mehmood. She’s being kidnapped, he
tries to speak up, and they’re both frogmarched down to her village where her
gangster father is told that our hero is her daughter’s suitor. There, see?
Simple, fun and the ensuing hijinks pretty much write themselves. Even with a
few too many airborne jeeps, this could have been a daftly enjoyable lark. (But
alas, we underestimate the power of a common Khan.)
Padukone, as said, pulls off
her bit with panache. So confident is she that even her outlandish accent seems
normal after a bit, and she commits to the role most enthusiastically. I’d
comment on her comic timing if this film had any well-written gags, but by
herself (and especially in comparison to her hero here) Padukone is a delight.
She’s visibly having a blast and her glee is infectious. She delivers a
Bachchan line with elan, and is particularly awesome in a scene where — in a
nod to the southern horror cliche — she’s casually possessed by a ghost. This
may not be the most demanding of roles, but the actress revels in the madness
around her and shines through like a bonafide star.
The first half of the film,
with Khan monkeying about unfettered, is relentlessly awful. (Somebody
confiscate his Steve McQueen t-shirt.) It is also ear-splittingly loud, with
everyone seemingly yelling and the background score choosing not to background
itself very much after all. The writing is bad enough to make a Priyadarshan
film look subtle. In the second half, things get less asinine — this is
directly in proportion to Khan shutting up for a stretch — but then the film
takes turns rolling through many a overused filmi cliche without ever managing
to spoof them. Shah Rukh goes from being Daffy Duck to Ram
Jaane, suddenly all melodramatic and quivery-voiced and so damned
earnest that his character forgets that he doesn’t know a word of Tamil,
climactically rattling off complicated lines in the language.
There is one genuinely clever
moment in the film. It is the one bit of self-referencing that works, when Shah
Rukh — with the Dilwale Dulhaniya Le Jaayenge music playing — stretches out his arm
and yanks Deepika onto a moving train, before doing the same, complete with
music, for each of the gigantic kidnappers chasing her. Super. For the rest of
the film, Rohit Shetty made me feel more like a lovelorn Kajol than anybody
should, and it had nothing to do with Simran: but damn, I missed Ajay Devgn.
Scariest English films of all time
The Conjuring
The Conjuring racking up
phenomenal reviews around the world, we decided to ask you, dear reader, which
English horror film scared you the most and the results are gratifyingly
diverse.
Your list contains everything from classics to current scares,
from gore to genre-defying greatness.
Here, then, in descending order, are your ten scariest films of
all time:
exorcist
William Friedkin’s 1973 classic is perhaps the most
popular film about possession and exorcism in all of cinema, and the film —
starring a young Ellen Burstyn as the possessed and Max von Sydow as the
exorcist — remains chilling.
The Ring
The Ring, based on
Japanese horror film Ringu, created a worldwide
scare in 2002. The film was about a cursed videotape that would cause the
viewer to die in seven days.
The American remake, by Gore Verbinski, was effective enough but
purists swear on the original Ringu.
Evil Dead
Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead had a group of youngsters holidaying
in a cabin and finding an audiotape that leads to demons and gore.
Wildly original, often funny and devastatingly gory, this
low-budget cult classic changed and revitalised the horror genre when it
released back in 1981
Top 5 shows on Television
Diya Aur Baati Hum
TRP: 4.5
Balika Vadhu
TRP: 3.9
Taarak Mehta Ka Ooltah Chashmah
TRP: 3.8
Qubool Hai
TRP: 3.6
Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai
TRP: 3.0
Comedy Nights with Kapil s
TRP: 3.1
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)