Stream Mantra

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Comedy Circus is the best

The show Shakeel Made In China is now renamed as Comedy Circus- Chinchpokli to China as Shakeel is no more going to be a part of the show. Along with the format the launch date is also going to be changed. As Shakeel was supposed to be the main element of the show therefore now major changes will be made in the format of the show as he is no longer going to be a part of it.

Reportedly all Pakistani artistes have flown back to Pakistan and it seems will not return back to India, therefore all the shows that had Pakistani artists in them had to think of something different. The show Shakeel made In China had to therefore undergo certain changes before its launch.

According to sources,”Shakeel Made in China is renamed as Comedy Circus –Chinchpokli to China. The format of this show has been changed drastically, it seems the show does not have any anchor in it as Shakeel was said to be anchoring the show earlier. The show had a segment in it named Izzat where Shakeel had an important role to play; even this segment has been chucked out. Our segments which had Shakeel in them are also undergoing changes. The launch date of the show has been postponed from December 6 to January 3.”

Producer Vipul Shah was not available for any comment.

Posted at 3:38 PM

The Celestial Show of 2009

A delightful display of planets and the moon will occur on New Year's Eve for anyone wishing to step outside and look up just after sunset.

Venus, brighter than all other planets and stars, will dangle just below the thin crescent moon in the southwestern sky. It'll be visible -- impossible to miss, in fact -- just as the sun goes down, assuming skies are cloud-free.

Soon thereafter, Mercury and Jupiter will show up hugging the south-southwestern horizon (just above where the sun went down) and extremely close to each other. Jupiter is very bright and easy to spot; Mercury is faint and harder to see, but it'll be apparent by its location just to the left of Jupiter.

Jupiter and Mercury will set less than an hour after the sun, so timing your viewing just after sunset is crucial. You'll also need a location with a clear view of the western horizon, unobstructed by buildings, trees or mountains.

All the planets, along with the moon and sun, traverse an arc across our sky called the ecliptic, which corresponds to the plane in space that they all roughly share. For this reason, you could draw an imaginary line from the general location of Venus and the moon, down through the other two planets, and the line would point to where the sun went down. This line could also initially help you find Jupiter and Mercury.

Weather permitting, you can get a preview of the sky show on Tuesday, Dec. 30. On this evening, the planets will be in nearly the same place they'll be on Dec. 31, but the moon will be midway between Venus and the Mercury-Jupiter pairing.

Venus is so bright you can see it during daylight if you know where to look. Given Venus' proximity to the moon on New Year's Eve, this would be an excellent moment -- just before sunset -- to use the moon to help you find Venus and gain bragging rights for being one of the few people to be able to claim seeing more than one planet during the daytime (Earth being the other one).

Posted at 3:37 PM