The Arch of Resilience In the volatile ecosystem of the film industry, a "second act" is a statistical rarity. Most careers that stall in their infancy remain relics of a specific era, yet the journey of Ananda Chakrapani offers a profound case study in professional adaptation. His narrative is not a standard "comeback" story; rather, it is a calculated evolution that mirrors the tectonic shifts of the Telugu film industry itself. Spanning from the hero-centric, Chennai-based 1990s to the current content-driven OTT era, Chakrapani’s three-decade hiatus served as a period of professional incubation. By transitioning from a 1990s lead actor to a contemporary character artiste of high repute, he has demonstrated that longevity in cinema requires more than just talent—it requires the psychological resilience to pivot when the industry’s paradigms shift from star dominance to authentic, realistic storytelling. The Chennai Exodus and the Tyranny of the Hero Archetyp...
A Delhi High Court judge, her two children and a cascade of government briefs have opened a window onto three uncomfortable truths about India's higher judiciary: the persistence of family advantage, the opacity of empanelment, and the enduring dominance of a tiny demographic slice. HYDERABAD On paper, Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma's elevation to the Delhi High Court in March 2022 was unremarkable. A career judicial officer who had risen from magistrate at twenty-four to sessions judge and later Special Judge in CBI cases, her appointment followed a conventional trajectory. What followed was less conventional. Within two years of her elevation, both her son Ishaan Sharma and daughter Shambhavi Sharma had secured empanelment as Central Government panel counsels — positions that grant access to a steady and lucrative stream of government briefs. Public records and RTI data cited in court proceedings suggest that Ishaan Sharma, who completed his law degree in 2017 and began pract...