Thursday, March 19, 2015

From Tuk Tuk in Phnom Penh to rugby in Papua New Guinea

From Tuk Tuk in Phnom Penh to rugby in Papua New Guinea


We relish stories on how rugby as a game is dong it bit to curb violence in Papua New Guinea. Stories on Tuk tuk as a mode of transport in Phonm Penh evince interest so does the battle to maintain heritage in South Korea against new constructions. Tuk Tuk as a mode of transport is economical, environment friendly and no noise emitting.Time has come to run battery operated buses in different cities as it would keep environment in check. THe paper which did a story on govt buses and their reducing number should have checked facts. This story on its local page did not gell well.Another story on page three that surveillance would generate sympathy looked childish. One paper had that during the second stint no new AIRs have been filed. In the first place the first set of AIRs you filed in the first stint only showed your arrogance. A nation where dragging someone to court for no fault has become pastime. Those at fault deserve to be handled this way but not others.

Another story on film festival in south/central america evinced interest. But the show where someone is being tried and how one is taking a drag in a public place in France looked offensive.
Another channel runs hashtag like raga, leads. Look at the point size of hashtag. It looks alarming Look how cluttered the debate looks. First one gentleman used to come. Now two to three from studio and two in the field.Let each do a separate show. Or at the most two in one show. Try to do debate on how minorities can be brought in mainstream, institutions doing the same effort. Try to do debate on posh colonies and how possibly rash some are by their effort to garner huge loads of money and make from car washer to other personnel look similarly arrogant. Do a debate on real estate and how it has hit the simple law and order and other fundamentals of economy.  Do a debate on how they want to raise a skyscraper in East Delhi when Yamuna is yet to get little clean.

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