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ఆ వార్తలు అవాస్తవం: ఆలియా భట్
తనకు గాయమైందని వస్తున్న వార్తలు నిజం కాదని తేల్చింది బాలీవుడ్ హీరోయిన్ ఆలియా భట్. పెద్ద పెద్ద ఆర్టికల్స్ రాసేముందు, కొంచెం అడిగి తెలుసుకోండని వారిపై సెటైర్ వేసింది.
ఆ వార్తలు అవాస్తవం: ఆలియా భట్
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Published : Jan 22, 2020, 10:08 AM IST
| Updated : Feb 17, 2020, 11:11 PM IST
బాలీవుడ్ హీరోయిన్ ఆలియా భట్.. ప్రముఖ దర్శకుడు సంజయ్లీలా భన్సాలీ దర్శకత్వంలో 'గంగూబాయి కతియావాడి' సినిమాలో నటిస్తోంది. అయితే చిత్రీకరణలో ఆమెకు గాయమైందనే వార్త కొద్ది రోజులుగా చక్కర్లు కొడుతోంది. తాజాగా ఈ విషయం గురించి మాట్లాడిందీ భామ.
"గంగూబాయి కతియావాడి' సినిమా షూటింగ్లో ఎలాంటి గాయం కాలేదు. మీరు చూసిన చిన్న గాయం.. నేను ఇంట్లో ఉండగా తగిలింది. నా గురించి పెద్ద పెద్ద ఆర్టికల్స్ రాసే ముందు కొంచెం అడిగి తెలుసుకోండి"
- ఆలియా భట్, హీరోయిన్
ఒకప్పటి ముంబయి మాఫియాలో లేడీ డాన్గా ఉన్న గంగూబాయి జీవితం ఆధారంగా ఈ చిత్రం తీస్తున్నారు. ఈమె పాత్రలోనే కనిపించనుంది ఆలియా. ఇటీవలే విడుదలైన ఫస్ట్లుక్ ఆకట్టుకుంటోంది.
ఆ వార్తలు అవాస్తవం: ఆలియా భట్ ప్రస్తుతం ఆలియా.. తెలుగులో దర్శకధీరుడు రాజమౌళి రూపొందిస్తున్న 'ఆర్ఆర్ఆర్'లో నటిస్తోంది. అల్లూరి సీతారామరాజు పాత్ర పోషిస్తున్న రామ్ చరణ్ పక్కన సీతగా కనిపించనుంది. కరణ్ జోహార్ నిర్మిస్తున్న భారీ బడ్జెట్ సినిమా 'బ్రహ్మాస్త్ర'లో హీరోయిన్గా నటిస్తోంది.
ఇదీ చదవండి: ముందు రక్షకుడు.. ఆ తర్వాత వస్తున్న రాక్షసుడు
బాలీవుడ్ హీరోయిన్ ఆలియా భట్.. ప్రముఖ దర్శకుడు సంజయ్లీలా భన్సాలీ దర్శకత్వంలో 'గంగూబాయి కతియావాడి' సినిమాలో నటిస్తోంది. అయితే చిత్రీకరణలో ఆమెకు గాయమైందనే వార్త కొద్ది రోజులుగా చక్కర్లు కొడుతోంది. తాజాగా ఈ విషయం గురించి మాట్లాడిందీ భామ.
"గంగూబాయి కతియావాడి' సినిమా షూటింగ్లో ఎలాంటి గాయం కాలేదు. మీరు చూసిన చిన్న గాయం.. నేను ఇంట్లో ఉండగా తగిలింది. నా గురించి పెద్ద పెద్ద ఆర్టికల్స్ రాసే ముందు కొంచెం అడిగి తెలుసుకోండి"
- ఆలియా భట్, హీరోయిన్
ఒకప్పటి ముంబయి మాఫియాలో లేడీ డాన్గా ఉన్న గంగూబాయి జీవితం ఆధారంగా ఈ చిత్రం తీస్తున్నారు. ఈమె పాత్రలోనే కనిపించనుంది ఆలియా. ఇటీవలే విడుదలైన ఫస్ట్లుక్ ఆకట్టుకుంటోంది.
ఆ వార్తలు అవాస్తవం: ఆలియా భట్ ప్రస్తుతం ఆలియా.. తెలుగులో దర్శకధీరుడు రాజమౌళి రూపొందిస్తున్న 'ఆర్ఆర్ఆర్'లో నటిస్తోంది. అల్లూరి సీతారామరాజు పాత్ర పోషిస్తున్న రామ్ చరణ్ పక్కన సీతగా కనిపించనుంది. కరణ్ జోహార్ నిర్మిస్తున్న భారీ బడ్జెట్ సినిమా 'బ్రహ్మాస్త్ర'లో హీరోయిన్గా నటిస్తోంది.
ఇదీ చదవండి: ముందు రక్షకుడు.. ఆ తర్వాత వస్తున్న రాక్షసుడు
US WILDFIRE TECH
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS / VALIDATED UGC - MUST COURTESY GLEN MOREY / LADERA TECH / DRONESEED
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only / UGC - MUST COURTESY GLEN MOREY /
LENGTH: 4.56
SHOTLIST:
VALIDATED UGC - MUST COURTESY GLEN MOREY
Buchan, Victoria, Australia - 30 December 2019
++USER GENERATED CONTENT: This video has been authenticated by AP based on the following validation checks:
++Video and audio checked against known locations and events
++Video is consistent with independent AP reporting
++Video cleared for use by all AP clients by content creator
++Mandatory on-screen credit to Glen Morey
1. Aerial of thick smoke billowing from burning forest, wildfire raging
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
North of Moruya, New South Wales, Australia - 4 January 2020
2. Mid of bush land burning next to Princes Highway
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Stanford, California, US - 14 January 2020
3. Mid of Eric Appel shaking bottle of "Fortify" fire retardant at his Stanford University lab
4. Close of Fortify being poured into beaker
5. Mid of Appel holding piece of wood sprayed with Fortify
6. Close of wood sprayed with Fortify
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Eric Appel, Ladera Tech Co-founder and Chief scientific advisor:
"And what Fortify allows is for you to pre-treat these areas that are at most risk of fire starts to stop them from starting in the first place, because once a fire has got going, it's too late."
HANDOUT - LADERA TECH - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Santa Margarita, California, US - 12 July 2018
8. Split-screen video shows fire burning untreated grass and grass treated with Fortify (labels in English) ++MUTE++
HANDOUT - LADERA TECH - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Simi Valley, California, US - 1 October 2019
9. Various of crews spraying Fortify on brush next to freeway ++MUTE++
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Stanford, California, US - 14 January 2020
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Eric Appel, Ladera Tech Co-founder and Chief scientific advisor:
"Just as with health care, prevention is always cheaper than treatment, right? If the fire has already started, it's really hard and really expensive to put out. It would be much cheaper and much more effective to take a proactive, preventive-based approach where you can just stop the fires from starting in the first place."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Napa, California, US - 9 November 2018
11. Various of homes and buildings in flames
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
ARCHIVE: Santa Rosa, California, US - 10 November 2017
12. Aerial footage of destroyed homes in Santa Rosa ++MUTE++
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Menlo Park, California, US - 14 January 2020
13. Mid setup of Bilal Zuberi working at computer in office
14. Mid of screen showing Lux Capital webpage with portfolio of companies
15. SOUNDBITE (English) Bilal Zuberi, Partner, Lux Capital:
"I think we have realised with the wildfire season that we have had the last few years, that this is a massive problem. This is a global problem. I think this is the time for Silicon Valley investors, for entrepreneurs, for large technology companies, for utilities, all the stakeholders to get to a table and say, "how we can solve this problem?". We need to make sure that the best technology is being used, and is being funded, and is being bought."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Seattle, Washington, US - 15 January 2020
16. Tracking shot of DroneSeed employees push crate with large drone
17. Mid of employee removing part of drone
18. Mid of employee walking into work area with DroneSeed banner
19. Mid of employees putting drone in hard case
20. Mid of employee showing bags of Ponderosa pine tree seeds
21. Close of tree seeds in bag
22. Close of seeds
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Redwood City, California, US - 15 January 2020
23. SOUNDBITE (English) Grant Canary, DroneSeed CEO:
"As we're seeing in Australia, as we're seeing in Brazil, as we've seen in California - that's only gonna get worse. It's only going to get drier and hotter. It's not going to get better. And so we have to have better tools to be able to reforest faster."
HANDOUT - DRONESEED - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Fireground in Southern Oregon, US - October 2018
24. Various aerial footage of DroneSeed drones dropping seeds in forestland burned by wildfire ++MUTE++
25. Zoom in of green shoot at fire ground
26. Zoom out aerial from team working on ground to aerial wide of burned out forestland
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Redwood City, California, US - 15 January 2020
27. SOUNDBITE (English) Grant Canary, DroneSeed Founder and CEO:
"Climate change is a problem that all other problems report to, not because they're not important, but because if we don't mitigate the worst effects of climate change, no other problem gets time on the clock."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Seattle, Washington, US - 15 January 2020
28. Mid of employee showing computer-generated images of forest land
29. Close of screen showing computer-generated images of forest land
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Redwood City, California, US - 15 January 2020
30. Mid of Marc Tarpenning in "Spero Ventures" office
31. Close of sign "Spero Ventures"
32. SOUNDBITE (English) Marc Tarpenning, Spero Ventures:
"This next 50 years is going to be really challenging. I mean, we have some big problems coming up, and finding a way of re-foresting vast areas quickly is going to be one of those key technologies which enable us to build the future that we want to see."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Geyserville, California, US - 24 October 2019
33. Mid of wildfire burning in hills above Geyserville
34. Wide of homes and vineyards in Geyserville with wildfire smoking rising in background
LEADIN:
Entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley say it's vital that technology is developed fast to help fight increasingly fierce wildfires across the globe.
From drones that plant seeds to new types of retardant sprays, some are viewing a hotter, more volatile future as a good business opportunity.
STORYLINE:
As massive wildfires become increasingly frequent, entrepreneurs are looking for ways to combat the growing threat.
Following megafires in Australia and California this fire season, Silicon Valley is upping the pace to find solutions to help fight wildfires or prevent them all together.
Stanford University materials scientist, Eric Appel has developed Fortify - a long-lasting flame retardant that the company says can prevent trees and grasses from catching fire.
Appel, whose Stanford lab focuses on drug-delivery technology, and his brother-in-law Jesse Acosta, a former fire prevention forester, launched a company, Ladera Tech, to commercialise the fire retardant.
Ladera Tech has been working with the California Department of Transportation to test Fortify.
During last year's fire season, the Department sprayed along stretches of fire-prone freeways in southern California – with positive results.
The California start-up recently reached an agreement with an Australian agricultural supply company, Agritrading, to produce and use Fortify to fight bushfires.
"What Fortify allows is for you to pre-treat these areas that are at most risk of fire starts to stop them from starting in the first place, because once a fire has got going, it's too late," Appel says.
Despite catastrophic blazes in the US, sometimes in their own backyard, Silicon Valley has been slow to focus on wildfires.
But that's starting to change, observers say, as a new wave of start-ups seek to prevent, detect and contain destructive fires.
"I think this is the time for Silicon Valley investors, for entrepreneurs, for large technology companies, for utilities, all the stakeholders to get to a table and see how we can solve this problem," says Bilal Zuberi, a partner at Lux Capital.
"We need to make sure that the best technology is being used, and is being funded."
Seattle-based DroneSeed is using heavy-duty drones to help forests recover from wildfires.
The start-up sends up swarms of drones to drop seed packets onto burned forestland, allowing the company to plant trees much faster than humans with just boots and shovels.
It's been conducting pilot projects to reforest areas of Oregon and Washington state, in the US Pacific Northwest.
"As we're seeing in Australia, as we're seeing in Brazil, as we've seen in California, that's only going to get worse. It's only going to get drier and hotter. It's not going to get better," says Grant Canary, DroneSeed's CEO and founder.
"And so we have to have better tools to be able to reforest faster."
DroneSeed has attracted investment from Silicon Valley investors who see a big economic opportunity in saving the planet.
"This next 50 years is going to be really challenging. I mean, we have some big problems coming up," said Marc Tarpening, a co-founder of Tesla Motors, who is now a partner at Spero Ventures in Redwood City, California.
"Finding a way of reforesting vast areas quickly is going to be one of those key technologies which enable us to build the future that we want to see."
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Last Updated : Feb 17, 2020, 11:11 PM IST