Wednesday, 9 April 2014

Did you know? : How I Met Your Mother is releasing an alternate ending on DVD

Fans of the hit show who felt cheated by this series’ finale will be glad to hear that the sitcom’s creators Carter Bays and Craig Thomas, had a different conclusion in mind all along.
The CBS sitcom, How I Met Your Mother, came to an end after nine seasons on March 31, as Ted ended up with Robin and the Mother character Tracy was revealed to have died by the time Ted began telling his story to his children. Fans of the hit show who felt cheated by this series’ finale will be glad to hear that the sitcom’s creators Carter Bays and Craig Thomas, had a different conclusion in mind all along. It is described as ‘happy ‘and will be included on the show’s DVD set.
The series finale was met with a mixed reaction from critics and fans, but majority of the fans weren’t too pleased. Though a video made its viral rounds earlier this week featuring a much happier ending to the series, it’s since been removed from YouTube. Interestingly, however, the creators who stuck to their original plan that was filmed in season 2 also had a different ending in mind, reported Time. According to reports, both, the season nine DVD and the complete series box set will feature the alternate ‘happy ending’.
Executive producer Carter Bays tweeted: “16 days ago, we were in the HIMYM edit room, trying to decide between two very different endings. We only shot one script, but through edit room magic we had two possible outcomes for the series. We chose the ending we chose and we stand by it. But we loved the other version too.”
Bays also shared an image showing the complete series DVD.

Possessive dad doesn’t want me to marry: Alia

The Highway star says she would like to be considered a fine actor before getting five or six films old. PHOTO: FILE
MUMBAI: Actor Alia Bhatt says her father and filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt is possessive about her, but adds that he has taken her on-screen intimacy with Arjun Kapoor in the forthcoming film 2 States practically.
“Like every father, who doesn’t want their daughters to get married, even my father is the same,” Alia said in a group interview.
“Recently, my father told us (Alia and her sister Shaheen) you all can’t go anywhere, I will lock you up in a room. He is honest and blunt about the fact that he doesn’t want us to get married.”
“He is not saying it just like that. He means it. He is very possessive and doesn’t want me to get married,” she added.
Currently, the Highway star is looking forward to her forthcoming film 2 States. Directed by Abhishek Verman, 2 States is an adaptation of Chetan Bhagat’s bestseller of the same name and Alia has read the book three times. She said: “I have to be as natural as possible. I read the book three times before we started shooting.”
Alia says that when she read the book for the first time, she felt it could be made into a good film. “I knew Arjun was on board… but I never thought I would be a part of the film. I got a call for a look test, which is basically figuring out if I look good with Arjun. I was hoping the role would come to me and it did. It’s a big achievement for me,” she said.
The actor, who garnered rave reviews for her performance in her last release Highway, says there was a reason behind doing 2 States. “After Highway I wanted people to say I am an actor and that I am not here to be a star. I would like to be considered a fine actor before getting five or six films old,” she concluded

The Ultimate Warrior dies at 54

Known for his muscular physique, long, shaggy hair and colourful face paint, The Warrior feuded with many of the then-WWF’s biggest stars, including Hulk Hogan and Macho Man. PHOTO: FILE
LAS VEGAS: The Ultimate Warrior, one of US professional wrestling’s most celebrated names, has died at the age of 54, days after being inducted into the World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. Hall of Fame, the company said late on Tuesday. The cause of his death was not given. He was added to the Hall of Fame on April 5.
WWE is shocked and deeply saddened to learn of the passing of one of the most iconic WWESuperstars ever, The Ultimate Warrior,” the Stamford, Connecticut-based company said on its website.
The Ultimate Warrior, whose given name was James Hellwig, began his WWE career in 1987 and rose to become one of the biggest stars in WWE history, the company said, highlighting an “epic encounter” in which he defeated Hulk Hogan at WrestleMania VI to become a WWEChampion.
“We are grateful that just days ago, Warrior had the opportunity to take his rightful place in the WWE Hall of Fame and was also able to appear at WrestleMania 30 and Monday Night Raw to address his legions of fans,” World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) said.
The 6-foot, 2-inch tall, 280-pound (127 kg) wrestler commanded the ring in his signature neon garb and long, blond hair, and face paint, WWE said.
His family could not immediately be reached, and an email sent through his website was not immediately answered. In a statement on his website, peppered with sarcasm, Hellwig expounded on philosophy and funneling energy from the ring into writing, motivational speaking and his family life after retiring in the late 1990s.
“Ultimate Warrior ran because I was running him. He was intense because I already was. Whatever I am doing – wrestling, writing, working out, speaking, even weaving pot holders – I am going to do it with action and intensity,” Hellwig wrote.
“I have built an incredibly empowered life on my OWN terms. As a devoted husband and father, I could not have custom-ordered a more loving, healthy, spirit-filled, and happy home life,” he wrote.
“Fans, supporters and wrestlers took to the internet to express their respect for the wrestler, who is survived by his wife Dana and his two daughters,” said WWE.
“Shocked and very saddened to hear about Ultimate Warrior passing. Prayers go out to his family! RIP. Loss for words,” wrestler Curtis wrote in a Twitter message.
“RIP WARRIOR. Only love. HH,” tweeted Hulk Hogan.
“Tomorrow is promised to know one!! My love to The Warrior and his family. RIP,” his fellow Hall of Famer Rowdy Roddy Piper tweeted.
“Saddened to announce the passing of The Ultimate Warrior. Icon and friend. My sympathy to his wife Dana and his daughters,” WWE Chief Operating Officer Triple H wrote in a Twitter message

Army top brass reviews implications of ISAF drawdown from Afghanistan

General Sharif also took the opportunity to commend the troops for implementing extra security measures along the Pak-Afghan border. PHOTO: ISPR
RAWALPINDI: On a day when a bomb killed 22 people in Islamabad and the peace process in danger of running aground again, the military’s top brass undertook a comprehensive review of the external and internal security situation of the country.
According to an official release from the Inter-services Public Relations (ISPR) on Wednesday, the Corps Commanders conference was held at the General Headquarters on Wednesday with army chief General Raheel Sharif in chair.
The meeting reviewed the prevailing external and internal security situation in the country, especially along the Western border. The issue of drawdown of International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) from Afghanistan and its subsequent implications on the security situation was also discussed.
The forum also comprehensively reviewed the army’s large scale involvement in security, development and rehabilitation works in various parts of the country.
General Sharif also took the opportunity to commend the troops for implementing extra security measures along the Pak-Afghan border to assist Afghanistan during the presidential elections.
According to Express News, the forum further discussed the ongoing peace talks between the government and the Tehreek-i-Taliban (TTP). The commanders also discussed their views about the TTP holding prisoners.

Nisar wants ICT to devise new security plan for bomb-hit fruit market

Interior minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan chairing a high level security meeting in Islamabad on Wednesday. PHOTO: PID
ISLAMABAD: Following the deadly blast at the fruit market in Islamabad on Wednesday morning, interior minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan in a security meeting directed the Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT) to take over control of the I-11 fruit market from CDA and create a security plan.
In the high level meeting, Nisar stressed on the need for better and effective coordination between all the concerned departments to be two steps ahead of terrorists.
Nisar asked ICT and police to identify potential targets under threat in the federal capital and workout a comprehensive security plan to safeguard them. He added that joint patrolling by police and Rangers must start during this month.
In addition to directing the ICT to take over security of the fruit market, he said all its entry and exit points should be properly regulated and surveillance cameras be installed.
Directing due care for all the injured at government expense, with compensation to the injured and relatives of the deceased be paid within next three days as per the package approved in the case of F-8 District Court incident.
Earlier, Chief Commissioner and IG Police briefed the Minister about the details of the incident and said there are 22 deaths so far in the bomb blast with 83 injured.
Secretary Interior, Chief Commissioner Islamabad, Deputy Commissioner Islamabad, IG Police, NC NACTA and Additional IG attended the meeting.
The blast that took place in the early hours of Wednesday in the busy market left at least 22 people dead and dozens injured.

Iran says 'narrowing some differences' in nuclear talks

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif (L). PHOTO:REUTERS/FILE
VIENNA: Iran’s lead negotiator in nuclear talks with world powers said both sides were inching closer on some issues as they sought Wednesday to intensify discussions on reaching a definitive agreement before a July deadline.
“On certain questions we have narrowed our differences,” Abbas Araqchi told Iranian media late Tuesday after a first day of talks in Vienna that were expected to wrap up later Wednesday.
The negotiations, aiming to settle a decade-old standoff and so avert a dangerous escalation, remained however “difficult and complicated”, Mehr news agency quoted Araqchi as saying.
He gave no details. He added that the next round between Iran and five permanent members of the United Nations (UN) Security Council plus Germany – the fourth this year – would take place in mid-May.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and the powers’ lead negotiator, European Union (EU) foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, were expected to make a statement to the media later Wednesday.
A senior US administration official involved in the talks said last week that the negotiators hoped to make enough progress in this round to begin drafting a deal in May.
In November the two sides reached an interim deal under which Iran froze certain parts of its nuclear activities in return for minor relief from painful Western sanctions.
But Iran has not permanently dismantled any of its nuclear equipment and can fully reactivate its facilities if it wishes when the deal expires on July 20.
US Secretary of State John Kerry told US lawmakers Monday that the theoretical period needed for Iran to produce a weapon’s worth of bomb material – if it chose to do so – was “about two months”.
In order to greatly extend this “break-out” time, the six powers want the final deal to see Iran reduce permanently, or at least long-term, the scope of its programme.
The deal may involve Iran slashing the number of centrifuges – used to enrich nuclear material – changing the design of a new reactor at Arak and giving UN inspectors more oversight.
Other outstanding thorny issues include Iran’s continued research and development of ever more advanced centrifuges and the Islamic republic’s ballistic missile programme.
Any agreement will need to be sold to skeptical hardliners both in the United States and to Iran’s arch enemy Israel, widely assumed to have a nuclear arsenal itself.
Threatening to throw a spanner in the works however is the crisis over Ukraine which has led to the biggest standoff between Russia and the West since the Cold War.
Russia’s chief negotiator, Sergei Ryabkov, fired a warning shot last month, saying Moscow might “take the path of counter-measures” on Iran if pushed too far.
On Tuesday however Ryabkov sounded a more conciliatory note, telling ITAR-TASS it would “not be wise” to turn Iran into a “bargaining chip”.
Moscow and Iran are said to be negotiating an oil-for-goods barter deal that would undermine Washington’s sanctions efforts, a strategy the US credits with getting Tehran to talks in the first place.
Another issue casting a cloud over the talks is the spat between Tehran and Washington over Iran’s selection of a new UN ambassador allegedly linked to the 1979 American embassy hostage crisis.
The White House said Tuesday Hamid Aboutalebi was “not viable” and on Monday the US Senate passed a resolution that would deny the veteran diplomat a US visa.

Pakistani ex-detainee in Bagram haunted by 'mental torture'

File photo of Afghanistan’s Bagram prison. PHOTO: FILE
LAHORE: Truck driver Umran Khan, a Pakistani national, spent nine years in Afghanistan’s Bagram prison, where he says he suffered beatings, sleep deprivation and a sustained campaign of mental disintegration — despite committing no crime.
Accused with a friend of transporting bombs in 2005, he has maintained his innocence — and an official record shows his captors suspected the same.
Now the 32-year-old, one of six Pakistanis released last November, has spoken out against his treatment at Bagram in a case rights groups say underlines the need for more scrutiny of the prison, opened in 2002 and often compared to Guantanamo Bay.
The Afghan authorities took over the jail, renamed Parwan, in 2013 but the US remains in charge of foreigners – including around 34 Pakistanis.
Mustafa Qadri, Pakistan researcher for Amnesty International, said the case “demonstrates the persisting secrecy surrounding US detention policies”.
“(It is) a significant problem given cases like this where individuals with no apparent involvement in hostilities happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.”
Khan’s ordeal began one night in the restive city of Peshawar, where he and his friend had travelled from Khyber tribal district to visit a cousin in hospital.
There, he met two Afghans, “Saifoo” and “Lalzir”, who had brought their sick grandmother to the same facility.
The men became friends and the Afghans promised the Pakistanis a sightseeing tour in the eastern Afghan province of Nangarhar and the chance to pick up some informal work.
“The first day we arrived we wanted to go out, and they refused saying we have to wait for a friend, wait until tomorrow,” Khan, a tall, light-skinned man with a long beard and a prayer cap, told AFP.
After days of waiting, Khan said he decided to take a bus back to Pakistan, but Saifoo and Lalzir insisted it was their duty as hosts to escort their guests in a taxi.
It was then that things took a turn for the worse, with the car searched at a checkpoint by the Afghan army.
They were allowed to go, but were stopped again further up the road and detained.
The two Afghans were later freed but Khan and his friend were taken to a US base and questioned about explosives found in the car’s boot.
“They asked us, ‘Is this yours?’ And we told them we had no idea,” Khan said.
A few days later, he was taken to Bagram airbase and given a new identity: prisoner ISN 2422.
Detainees at Bagram had no access to lawyers, but records on them were released following a freedom of information request by the American Civil Liberties Union in 2009.
Umran’s file tells of a man with a consistent account of events who cannot be linked forensically to the explosives found in the car and with no known connections to militant groups.
Despite the fact he was captured in a taxi with IEDs, “there is no fingerprint evidence linking him to these IED components” nor “evidence of exposure to explosive materials”, the file said.
The US investigation concluded that “based upon the evidence and testimony…the continued interment of (Umran) is not necessary” and noted the “strange” circumstances surrounding his capture.
Despite being given a low threat assessment, Khan says his captors held him in solitary confinement and regularly subjected him to sleep deprivation.
“They wouldn’t let us sleep. If they wanted to punish you, for example if you spoke to another prisoner they would put you in a star position for 30 minutes to an hour,” he said.
“They had metal bars fitted into the doors of our cells. When they saw people were sleeping they would run a stick along it to make a loud noise.”
He said he developed breathing problems from the tear gas he said guards used to quell unruly inmates.
He also recalled beatings at the hands of soldiers, once after he complained about repeated cell searches that upended his meagre possessions.
“They wanted us to never have a moment’s peace, day or night. By the time we left, they wanted our minds to be destroyed.”
A US defence spokesperson declined to comment on the details of the case but said they did not tolerate the abuse of detainees.
“Although there have been substantiated cases of abuse in the past, for which US service members have been held accountable, our enemies also have employed a deliberate campaign of exaggerations and fabrications,” the spokesperson said.
On Khan’s nine years in custody, the spokesperson said decisions regarding “third-country nationals” involve “sensitive diplomatic discussions, which often take a considerable amount of time”.
The JPP has taken the Pakistani government to court to push for the remaining detainees’ liberation ahead of the withdrawal of foreign troops by the end of 2014.
Campaigners fear the detainees may be caught in legal limbo if they are not repatriated before the deadline.
Tasneem Aslam, spokesperson for Pakistan’s foreign office told AFP negotiations were under way and they hoped for more releases in the coming months.
Khan now works in construction in Khyber and wants to get on with his life.
He recalled the day last November when he was released. As he left Bagram, he says a US colonel apologised to him.
“I replied: ‘Why are you asking forgiveness after nine years and after destroying our lives? Didn’t I tell you I’m innocent all along?’,” Khan said.
“He just said, ‘Forgive us, you were right.’”