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When it comes to most Indian restaurants in New York City, the question to ask is how low can these shitholes go.

The answer: Really, really low.

Believe us, guys. Believe us.

Shameless Scumbags
First, these Indian restaurants should start hiring real chefs not clueless buffoons who don’t know their way around the kitchen.

Second, scumbags who own restaurants like Baluchi’s (W.56th St) should pay their employees a living wage and stop stealing from diners. Hey, you low-life owner of Baluchi’s why the hell do you impose a gratuity on dining parties of less than four when your menu clearly states in unambiguous language that the 18% gratuity is for parties of four or more. In our lexicon, this is a crooked, disgraceful practice. We are inclined to send a photo of your menu and a copy of our bill to the New York Attorney General’s office to investigate your restaurant for cheating.

Third, wait-staff at Indian restaurants like Baluchi’s (W.56th St)  should be taught the basics like providing clean plates, offering knives and forks with the food, refilling water-glasses and stop texting/fiddling with mobile phones in the dining hall.

Trashy Food
From the salty Chicken Curry to the sour Vegetable Jalfrezi to the God-awful Vegetable Biryani to the sugar-less desserts, Baluchi’s on W.56th St is a nightmare that we wouldn’t wish on our Pakistani or Chinese enemies or even on our bete noire like Abhishek Bachchan.

Our recent visit to the W.56th St outpost of Baluchi’s was our second trip there. A few years back, we entered its portals one evening around 5PM only to find two sleeping wait-staff members who seemed upset at being woken up and rudely told us that the restaurant would open only at 5:30PM.

This time, we walked in for lunch at which time all food items except desserts and drinks are 50% off regular prices.

Not bad, we thought little realizing the horror movie that Baluchi’s kitchen and wait-staff was preparing to screen for us in the next few minutes. :(

Decent Opening, Poor Middle and Bad Ending
As we walked in, we were greeted by a friendly bespectacled waiter from Mumbai (Kishore?) who offered a choice of tables. The restaurant was mostly empty with just two tables taken when we entered.

We quickly placed our order for appetizers and entrees.

A short while later, a bespectacled waitress in a sullen mood deposited a dirty white plate with black spots on our table (which didn’t have the white table-cloth unlike many others).

And to our surprise, the Pakoras appetizer came in just a couple of minutes suggesting they were just reheated before being rushed out.

The sullen waitress who got us the appetizer never cared to get us our silverware and quickly disappeared. After waiting for a while, we hailed another waiter (the grim-looking, non-spectacled guy) and asked him for silverware. The man looked shocked that we’d not been provided silverware but could still mutter only a ‘oh’ and got the forks and knives and no, he didn’t care to apologize for his colleague’s total indifference. Continue reading »

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Karthi, the younger son of the Jillu Jillu, Gullu Gullu tail-less monkey Sivakumar, may be a decent actor but box office returns from his movies are not so decent.

We found Karthi’s latest movie Naan Mahaan Alla, which opened last Thursday in the U.S., to be a watchable flick but Tamil film audiences have not exactly stormed the box office. The U.K. box office, that is.

Naan Mahaan Alla brought in a meager £17,508 in the opening weekend at the U.K. box office and notched up an average gross of £2,918 after debuting in six theaters.

As you can see in the below table, Karthi’s previous film Paiyaa released in the same number of theaters but did better.

Here’s how Naan Mahaan Alla fared compared to a few other prominent Tamil films Continue reading »

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Google may be the cock of the search engine walk but when it comes to social networking sites, as the cognoscenti know Facebook is King.

Even in that overpopulated shithole, Facebook now rules.

Over the last 12 months, Facebook has made chutney of Google in India with a scorching 179% growth in unique visitors compared to a puny 16% for Google’s Orkut.

Here, look at the below table. The numbers tell the story better than any words could:

comScore estimates that the total Indian social networking audience grew 43% to 33.16 million users in July 2010.

India is said to be the seventh largest market for social networking after the U.S., Yellow Monkey nation (a.k.a. China), Germany, Russian Federation, Brazil and UK.

Says comScore’s executive VP for the Asia-Pacific region Continue reading »

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I have never taken drugs in my life.
- Tamil film star Trisha Krishnan

Source: Times of India

Never too late, sweetie. ;)

What’s life without a few highs!

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A thousand years ago, he was the most interesting man I’d ever met and I don’t just mean the way he looked.

- Sissy Spacek’s character Mattie speaking of Felix Bush (Robert Duvall) in Get Low.

Oh yeah, interesting certainly our Felix Bush is.

What else can a man, who wants to throw a funeral party for himself while he’s still alive, be if not interesting.

Get There Now
Boy, were we glad that we purchased the tickets for the afternoon show of Robert Duvall’s new film Get Low at 11:00AM itself.

For by the time we returned from lunch at Baluchi’s on W56th St after seeing Animal Kingdom, the tickets for Get Low were sold out at Lincoln Plaza (Broadway and 62nd St) in Manhattan.

More than three weeks after Get Low debuted in the U.S., albeit in limited release,  the film continues to attract discerning viewers who still think quality matters in a world increasingly overrun by the tacky, tawdry and trashy.

Set sometime in the 1930s in rural Tennessee, the camera in this splendid film focuses its lens mostly on an unusual character by the name of Felix Bush, he with the Solzhenitsyn-style long beard, grouchy mien and reclusive lifestyle in his cabin in the woods, far from any human habitation.

The man is a Methuselah as his white beard, balding head and slow gait attest but is still active as you see him chopping large timber blocks into small pieces.

Whispered About & Reviled
Felix Bush is the man people in counties near and far whisper about regarding bad deeds he’s said to have committed, some really bad deeds. We just don’t know the details yet although there’s talk of him killing some people in fights.

The old man gives credence to all the stories people tell about him by his solitary living, menacing and aggressive acts, behavior evidenced by the public thrashing he gives to Carl, the owner of the local diner.

For the funeral party, Felix approaches a down-on-his-luck local funeral parlor owner Frank Quinn (Bill Murray), who’s bemoaning his sorry fate because no one’s dying in the neighborhood.

If a gruff demeanor is Felix’ language of choice, sardonic humor is Frank’s idiom.

The movie’s plentiful moments of wit come mostly in the interactions between Frank and Felix and Frank and his young assistant Buddy Robinson (Lucas Black).

With his deadpan, mousy expression, it’s hard to beat Bill Murray in the humor department. Bill Murray makes even the likes of Ben Stiller seem like rank amateurs.

But beneath all the planning for the weird funeral-party-when-the-man’s still-living, lies a dark Continue reading »

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Aug 232010
 
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We purchased a brand new copy of the 18th edition of Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase & Fable on eBay recently for $9.63 (plus shipping) and are trying to squeeze our money’s worth from the book.

This morning as we were leafing through the book, we found a bunch of interesting acronyms that we reproduce below for your education and edification (the addition of INDIA is, of course, thanks to SI):

BOLTOP – Better on lips than on paper (of a kiss)
BURMA – Be undressed ready, my angel
EGYPT – Eager to grab your pretty tits
HOLLAND – Hope our love lasts and never dies
INDIA – I now dig Indian aunties Continue reading »

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