BLOGGER POSTERS
how to create a blogger posters as professional blogger poster as to create a poster in different blogger on matter but only you have to think about you poster as blogger main think when you are create a blogger if looking as you poster to attracting poster on blogger pages like this blogger poster you want to do one think that want to a looking very good poster and create you own or you can try on online sites ......
WHAT IS A BLOGGER POSTERS ?
Blogger is an American blog-publishing service that allows multi-user blogs with time-stamped entries. It was developed by Pyra Labs, which was bought by Google in 2003. The blogs are hosted by Google and generally accessed from a subdomain of blogspot.com. Blogs can also be served from a custom domain owned by the user (like www.example.com) by using DNS facilities to direct a domain to Google's servers. A user can have up to 100 blogs per account.
Up until May 1, 2010, Blogger also allowed users to publish blogs to their own web hosting server, via FTP. All such blogs had to be changed to either use a blogspot.com subdomain, or point their own domain to Google's servers through DNS. |
MOVIE OF THE DAYS AND BEST POSTERS
ANDHADHUN
" THIS POSTER GOT A BEST POSTER AWARDS IN YEAR OF 2018 "Plot
"Design Agency: Marching Ants"
Aakash Sarraf is a great pianist, who fakes being blind to improve his piano skills. While crossing the street, he is knocked over by Sophie. Sophie takes care of Aakash and soon they begin an intimate romantic relationship. Sophie is impressed by Aakash's talent and gets him an engagement at her father's diner. At the diner, a retired actor, Pramod Sinha, notices Aakash and invites him to perform for his wedding anniversary. Akash arrives at the Sinhas' flat and Pramod's wife Simi opens the door. Simi, convinced that Aakash is blind, lets him play the piano. Aakash sees Pramod's dead body nearby but feigns ignorance and continues to play; he also sees Manohar, Simi's affair interest, hiding in the bathroom. Simi and Manohar clean the body and stuff it into a suitcase while Aakash plays.Aakash tries to report the murder to the police, but discovers that Manohar is a police inspector. Meanwhile, Simi overhears her elderly neighbour, Mrs. D'Sa, talking to a police officer about Pramod's murder. Simi later kills Mrs. D'Sa by pushing her off the ledge of their apartment. Aakash sees the murder but is forced to continue feigning blindness. Later when Simi brings poisonous offerings for him after her husband's last rites and pulls out a gun, Aakash admits to faking his blindness as an experiment to help his piano playing. He says he will leave for London and will keep Simi's secret, but she drugs him.
A neighbour's child, suspicious of Aakash's blindness, records a video of Aakash fully able to see and shows Sophie. As Sophie arrives, Simi arranges things to look like she and Aakash are having sex. Furious and heartbroken, Sophie leaves Aakash. When he wakes up, he realizes he has been blinded from the drug Simi gave him. Manohar comes to Aakash's home to kill him. Aakash barely escapes, but he faints after hitting a telephone pole.
Aakash wakes up in an illegal organ harvesting clinic. Dr. Swami and his assistants Murli and Sakhu decide to spare Aakash when Aakash reveals he has information that will make them millions. They kidnap Simi, stage a suicide scene, and blackmail Manohar. However, Murli and Sakhu double-cross Aakash, tie him up with Simi, and plan to take the money themselves. Manohar shoots Murli but is trapped in an elevator and accidentally shoots and kills himself. The money is revealed to be counterfeit. Simi helps Aakash free himself and he removes Simi's blindfold. He tries to escape, while Simi frees herself and attacks him. Dr. Swami enters; after a brief fight, he and Aakash knock Simi out, tie her up in the boot of a car, and drive away. Dr. Swami reveals that Simi has a rare blood type and that her organs would sell for millions; he also plans to use her corneas to restore Aakash's sight.
When Simi awakes in the car boot and begins making noise, Dr. Swami stops the car to kill her, but she overpowers him and seizes the wheel. Aakash, thinking Dr. Swami is still driving, tries to persuade him to release Simi. She drops Aakash off and tries to run him over. A nearby farmer who is trying to kill a hare misses, causing the hare to jump and hit the windshield. Simi loses control of the car and is killed.
Two years later at a gig in Kraków, Sophie finds Aakash, who still appears to be blind. After Akash tells her the whole story, Sophie tells Akash he should have accepted Dr. Swami's offer to restore his sight as well as part of the reward money of ten million dollars. Silently, Aakash leaves and uses his cane to knock a can out of his path.
Mahinder Watsa (11 February 1924 – 28 December 2020) was an Indian sexologist known for his sex columns in newspapers and magazines. His contributions to promote sex education in India earned him the 2014 Dr. Ved Vyas Puri Award.
Death
Awards
- 2014 Dr. Ved Vyas Puri Award: On 17 June 2014, he was given this award by the Family Planning Association of India (FPAI)
Life and work
Mahinder Watsa's father was a military physician. Watsa was Punjabi. When he was around 7 years old, his family spent some time in Rangoon.
During his time at a medical college in Mumbai, Watsa stayed with friends of his family. Through them, he met his future wife, Promila. Despite coming from different backgrounds and castes (he was Punjabi, she was originally from Sindh), and going against a tradition of arranged marriages, the two wed after being friends for a number of years. The couple had a son and lived for a while in the 1950s in the United Kingdom, during which time Watsa worked as a hospital houseman and registrar. The family returned to India after his father fell ill and Watsa found work in Glaxo as a medical officer, while simultaneously running a private practice as a gynecologist and obstetrician.
Watsa began a career as a columnist in the 1960s when, in his late 30s, he was asked to start writing a medical advice column for a women's magazine. He continued authoring health columns for several women's magazines, such as Femina, Flair, and Trend, into the 1970s until he encountered resistance from an editor who insisted upon censoring queries about sexual health. Watsa however maintained his writing through numerous alternative outlets including men's magazines (such as 'Fantasy') and, later, websites.
One of the readers of the Femina column had filed an obscenity lawsuit claiming that the publishers were fabricating the letters to increase readership. The editor, Sathya Saran, managed to convince the judge to drop the case by delivering a sack of unopened letters to him.
Through his work as a columnist he became aware of the lack of sex education in India. In 1974, while working as a consultant for the Family Planning Association of India (FPAI), Watsa proposed that a sexual counselling and education program should be introduced. Despite oppositions, FPAI accepted his advice and started India's first sex education, counselling and therapy centre. In 1976, he organised India's first workshop on human sexuality and family life. The workshop was also addressed by Ashok Row Kavi, a notable LGBT rights activist in India. In the early 1980s, Watsa left his practice to work full-time in counselling and education.
Ask the Sexpert column
In 2005, aged 80, Watsa began writing a column called Ask the Sexpert for the newspaper Mumbai Mirror, which is noted for its witty replies to queries. The newspaper has subsequently been threatened with lawsuits and accusations of obscenity. Suchitra Dalvie, a gynaecologist, conducted a study by analysing more than 500 letters sent to the column. According to her, the study revealed a lack of sex education even among urban and relatively well-educated Indians. In August 2014, his editor estimated that he had received more than 40,000 queries for the column.
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