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తమిళ తంబిలను పలకరించనున్న ఆత్రేయ..!
ఈ ఏడాది జూన్లో విడుదలై అద్భుత విజయాన్ని సొంతం చేసుకున్న 'ఏజెంట్ సాయి శ్రీనివాస ఆత్రేయ' చిత్రం తమిళంలో రీమేక్ కానుంది. సంతానం హీరోగా నటించనున్నట్లు సమాచారం
తమిళ తంబిలను పలకరించనున్న ఆత్రేయ..!
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Published : Nov 14, 2019, 9:40 AM IST
నవీన్ పోలిశెట్టి హీరోగా ఈ ఏడాది జూన్లో విడుదలైన చిత్రం 'ఏజెంట్ సాయి శ్రీనివాస ఆత్రేయ'. గూఢచారి కథాంశంతో వినోదాత్మకంగా తీసిన ఈ సినిమా మంచి విజయాన్ని సొంతం చేసుకుంది. తాజాగా ఈ చిత్రాన్ని తమిళంలో రీమేక్ చేయనున్నట్లు సమాచారం.
తెలుగు నిర్మాణ సంస్థే తమిళంలోనూ రూపొందించనున్నట్లు వార్తలు వినిపిస్తున్నాయి. కోలీవుడ్ హాస్య నటుడు సంతానం ఇందులో హీరోగా నటించనున్నట్లు తెలుస్తోంది. త్వరలోనే అధికారిక ప్రకటన విడుదలయ్యే అవకాశముంది.
'ఏజెంట్ సాయి శ్రీనివాస ఆత్రేయ' చిత్రాన్ని స్వరూప్ తెరకెక్కించాడు. స్వధర్మ్ ఎంటర్టైన్మెంట్ బ్యానర్పై రాహుల్ యాదవ్ నక్కా నిర్మించాడు.
ఇదీ చదవండి: నందమూరి అందగాడి పక్కన నాయిక కావాలి..!
నవీన్ పోలిశెట్టి హీరోగా ఈ ఏడాది జూన్లో విడుదలైన చిత్రం 'ఏజెంట్ సాయి శ్రీనివాస ఆత్రేయ'. గూఢచారి కథాంశంతో వినోదాత్మకంగా తీసిన ఈ సినిమా మంచి విజయాన్ని సొంతం చేసుకుంది. తాజాగా ఈ చిత్రాన్ని తమిళంలో రీమేక్ చేయనున్నట్లు సమాచారం.
తెలుగు నిర్మాణ సంస్థే తమిళంలోనూ రూపొందించనున్నట్లు వార్తలు వినిపిస్తున్నాయి. కోలీవుడ్ హాస్య నటుడు సంతానం ఇందులో హీరోగా నటించనున్నట్లు తెలుస్తోంది. త్వరలోనే అధికారిక ప్రకటన విడుదలయ్యే అవకాశముంది.
'ఏజెంట్ సాయి శ్రీనివాస ఆత్రేయ' చిత్రాన్ని స్వరూప్ తెరకెక్కించాడు. స్వధర్మ్ ఎంటర్టైన్మెంట్ బ్యానర్పై రాహుల్ యాదవ్ నక్కా నిర్మించాడు.
ఇదీ చదవండి: నందమూరి అందగాడి పక్కన నాయిక కావాలి..!
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Washington - 13 November 2019
1. Medium of Deputy Asst. Secretary of State George Kent and William Taylor, Acting US ambassador to Ukraine swearing-in
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Julie Pace, Associated Press Washington Bureau Chief:
"This was the first public hearing that we've had into the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump. And we heard from two seasoned longtime American diplomats who were talking about from their perspective, what they saw in terms of Trump's dealings with Ukraine and the overall policy of the Trump administration toward Ukraine. What we learned in these hearings is that there was confusion. There was uncertainty oftentimes about what the posture of the U.S. relationship with Ukraine was under Donald Trump. And a lot of questions about whether a package of military aid that Congress had approved for Ukraine was being held up, so that Trump could get the Ukrainians to launch an investigation into Joe Biden, who is one of the front runners for the Democratic nomination, and the Democratic National Committee."
3. Side view of witnesses delivering opening statements
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Julie Pace, Associated Press Washington Bureau Chief:
"The Democratic strategy is to really put the Trump White House's relationship with Ukraine under a magnifying glass and look at it through the prism of people who are nonpolitical, who are not opponents of President Trump or supporters of President Trump, are just career diplomats who sort of know how the process is supposed to work and looked at this situation and said, 'hey, there's something wrong here. There's something going on here.' They're trying to make this separate from politics. They're trying to make this something that is about the abuse of power, is about whether the president of the United States, misused his office or tried to use his position to advance his own personal political interests. Republicans say that this is a complete political charade, that this is simply about trying to undermine the Trump presidency, get him out of office, invalidate the last election, and that Democrats are just grasping at anything they can to make that happen. And they try to portray the situation with Ukraine as essentially above board. They basically say that if you've got questions about why the aid to Ukraine was held up, you should just look at the fact that the aid to Ukraine was eventually released. If you have questions about whether the president of the United States wanted investigations into Joe Biden or into the DNC, you should look at all the evidence. They say that bolsters the need for those investigations. They are, at least on the House side, pretty much defending Trump on the substance of what he did and essentially saying there's not only nothing impeachable here, there's not even really anything wrong with his behavior."
5. Medium of Committee chairman Rep. Schiff and Ranking member Rep. Devin Nunes
6. Wide of committee
7. Close of Rep. Ratcliffe questioning witnesses
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Julie Pace, Associated Press Washington Bureau Chief:
"Much of what we heard today was already known. And that was expected because both Kent and Taylor had already done lengthy private depositions. And we saw the transcripts of those depositions released. There was one new wrinkle, one new piece of information from Bill Taylor. He says that he has learned in recent days that a staff member of his overheard a conversation between President Trump and another diplomat, Gordon Sondland, in which Trump could be heard on the phone asking about the investigations. We expect we will learn more about this call next week when Gordon Sondland has his moment on Capitol Hill in front of cameras and the American people. Trump says he does not remember this phone call that was described today, but that was really the only new, substantive thing that we learned at this hearing."
9. President Donald Trump and Turkey's president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan in joint press conference
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Julie Pace, Associated Press Washington Bureau Chief:
"So the strategy from the White House is essential to have the president out there at the forefront of it, defending his actions, calling this a political charade, urging his supporters to see this as just a witch hunt. There's not much in terms of a real organization that's happening, but they actually feel like they're being pretty successful with that strategy of having the president just out there defending his actions and encouraging his supporters to do the same."
11. Trump and Erdogan meeting
STORYLINE:
The case for President Donald Trump's impeachment arrived in public view Wednesday as the country for the first time heard directly from career diplomats at the forefront of U.S.-Ukraine policy on day one of the House's historic hearings.
The account they delivered is a stunning, if complicated, one. It's refuted by the president. But Democrats leading the investigation say it shows the president potentially abusing his office, and the power of foreign policy, for personal political gain.
"What we learned in these hearings is that there was confusion. There was uncertainty oftentimes about what the posture of the U.S. relationship with Ukraine was under Donald Trump. And a lot of questions about whether a package of military aid that Congress had approved for Ukraine was being held up," Julie Pace, Associated Press Washington bureau chief explains.
In between, the seasoned diplomats testified about how an ambassador was fired, the new Ukraine government was confused and they discovered an "irregular channel" -- a shadow foreign policy being orchestrated by the president's personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, raised alarms across the diplomatic and national security apparatus.
The hearing, playing out on live television and in the partisan silos of social media, provided the world a first look as Congress puts a constitutional check on the White House, weighing whether the 45th president should be removed from office.
Career diplomat William Taylor, the charge d'affaires in Kyiv, offered new testimony that Trump was overheard asking on the phone about "the investigations" he wanted Ukraine to pursue that are central to the impeachment inquiry.
Pace said, "There was one new wrinkle, one new piece of information from Bill Taylor. He says that he has learned in recent days that a staff member of his overheard a conversation between President Trump and another diplomat, Gordon Sondland, in which Trump could be heard on the phone asking about the investigations."
Trump responding from the White House denied ever having the phone call Taylor described. "First I've heard of it," Trump said.
At its core, the inquiry stems from Trump's July 25 phone call when he asked Ukraine's newly elected president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, for "a favor."
Trump wanted the Ukraine government to investigate Democrats in the 2016 election and his potential 2020 rival, Joe Biden -- all while the administration was withholding military aid for the Eastern European ally that is confronting an aggressive neighbor, Russia.
Both sides tried to distill it into soundbites. Democrats said Trump was engaged in "bribery" and "extortion." Republicans said nothing really happened -- the military aid was ultimately released after Congress complained.
The Republican president is accused of abusing power by holding up congressionally approved U.S. military aid in a bid to force Ukraine to launch potentially damaging investigations into former Vice President Joe Biden, a leading candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Trump denied any quid pro quo in comments to reporters, and criticized the impeachment proceedings as a "sham" based on "third-hand information." The president also said he had not watched the hours-long hearing even "for one minute" because he was busy.
Trump repeated his assertion that his conduct during a controversial July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had been appropriate. According to the transcript of the call released by the White House, Trump asked Zelenskyy to "look into" allegations against Biden and his son Hunter Biden, who served as a board member of a Ukrainian energy company.
The witnesses that testified for the Intelligence Committee on Wednesday were William Taylor, U.S. acting ambassador to Ukraine, and George Kent, deputy assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs.
Taylor, who has already said in closed-door hearings that he believed Trump was seeking a quid pro quo with Ukraine, testified in the open hearing about discovering that the U.S. security assistance, which has been crucial to Ukraine's defense amid Russian aggression, was conditioned on investigations into the Bidens and other issues.
The top U.S. diplomat in Ukraine said he believed Trump was asking the Ukraine president to "very publicly" commit to the investigations.
Asked whether Trump had cared more about the investigations of the Bidens than about Ukraine, Taylor answered, "Yes."
Republican lawmakers, meanwhile, sought to undermine the idea that Trump had committed impeachable offenses, such as by confirming with the witnesses that Ukraine eventually received the aid without announcing investigations of the type Trump requested.
They also pointed to media reports that Zelenskiy himself has denied being pressured by Trump to carry out such investigations.
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