Sunday Special

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Sunday Special

Ebar Ram, pore Bam: How Left voters quietly helped BJP win Bengal election

One of the crucial factors in the BJP's historic 2026 victory in West Bengal polls has been the silent Left supporters who backed it. Repelled by the TMC and lacking any viable alternative, scores of Left supporters voted for the BJP in the 2026 polls. The strategy of the CPI(M) supporters is similar to the one used by MMA fighters.

Ebar Ram, pore Bam: How Left voters quietly helped BJP win Bengal election

Sunday Special

Zero electricity bill, credit for selling surplus: Neighbour's envy driving solar in India

Households across India are turning to rooftop solar through an unusual mix of triggers. From Varanasi to Greater Noida to a village in Maharashtra, neighbours are inspiring each other to go solar. Backed by government subsidies, growing awareness, and most importantly, lower electricity bills, solar is now powering more middle-class households in India than ever.

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Sunday Special

Why Indians are spending up to Rs 50,000 to run on JUST ONE DAY

Thousands of runners are spending heavily on travelling and participating in marathons in India like the TCS World 10K Bengaluru, and Wipro Bengaluru Marathon. Marathons have mushroomed and the number of participants has grown manifold. A simple sport like running has become a part of corporate India's fitness ritual.

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Sunday Special

Distress in India's Ceramic City: Cold kilns in factories, cold stoves at homes

The war in the Middle East has brought manufacturing in India's ceramic hub Khurja to a standstill, with 90% of the 300 units shutting shops temporarily. The election in West Bengal has added to the crisis. With workers scrambling to survive, Khurja is a microcosm of the distress in India's manufacturing hubs.

In a Khurja ceramic factory, mugs head into the kiln. Due to the LPG shortage, kilns across all 300 units are not able to run. (Image: Meenal Sharma)

Sunday Special

With Rs 500 for a kg of LPG, chhotu cylinder turns big daddy

For migrants, bachelors and street vendors, the small 5-kg cylinder has been a lifeline. Now the Iran war-induced LPG crunch has pushed their illegal refill rate to Rs 400-500 a kg. And the legal 5-kg cylinders are hard to find. Truly, the chhotu has become the baap, or even the granddaddy of LPG cylinders.

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Sunday Special

India's big internship crisis: A generation left without skills or jobs

Internships are disappearing in India. Freshers, who once entered the workforce after completing a series of internships, now join as trainees with little to no experience. As trainee positions remain limited, many capable candidates, who would earlier have had a chance, are being filtered out. This shift is further exacerbating the skills gap, leaving young professionals without the practical exposure they miss during their education.

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Beyond News

I was offered lavender marriage. A closer look revealed the dark reality

I was proposed lavender marriage twice within five months. Such moments seemingly unfold daily on matrimonial apps as queer people turn to this arrangement for social camouflage. A woman is offered a life of opulence abroad, but the emotional cost is huge and legal guardrails near-zero.

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Beyond News

An AI-proof, recession-proof career, with blessings from temples

There is seemingly a job that AI can't take away, and it might boom during recession. Wondering what it is? It's related to India's temple economy, and is coming up as a new career path. Courses in temple management are drawing Gen Z students and retirees alike.

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BEYOND NEWS

Gutter, but of gold. Why Dharavi slums charge Rs 5 lakh rent a month

The towers of Mumbai have seen kilometres of expanse of Dharavi's asbestos and tin roofs for decades. Most pity the slums as a place that is deprived of the basics, while others romanticise them. As Asia's largest shanty town stands at the cusp of a major overhaul, it's humming with enterprise. Beyond the filth, Dharavi runs businesses that generate a billion dollars a year.

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BEYOND NEWS

The dream job that doesn't pay the rent: India's IT salary reality

For years, a Big Tech job in India has been sold as the ultimate middle-class dream, but for many freshers in 2026, the reality begins with a salary package that hasn't kept pace with inflation, rent, or real life. This is the story of brand-name jobs, stagnant starter pay, and a generation quietly realising that their "dream offer" comes with a 2013 pay cheque.

Big tech, small pay: A dream job but with a 2013 pay cheque?

Sunday Special

Did General Naravane do the right thing?

Former Army Chief General MM Naravane wrote in his unpublished memoir that he was handed a "hot potato" by the NDA government during the confrontation with China along the LAC in August 2020. India's history of "hot potatoes" suggests a pattern. The political leadership gives nothing but broad brush outlines to military leaders, who then exercise their judgement.

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Sunday Special

How Dilan Teer Bija from Pak's Lyari became a hit at Indian weddings

A Balochi song, Dilan Teer Bija, has been a must-play at shaadis in India's Hyderabad for years. Dilan Teer Bija was a political song of Benazir Bhutto's time from Karachi's Lyari, the canvas of Dhurandhar. But how did a PPP song become a staple in marriages in India? This Sunday Special reveals the unusual journey of music across borders.

Before the 1987 polls, Dilan Teer Bija, became Benazir Bhutto's PPP's anthem. Now people in Hyderabadi weddings go crazy on it. (Image: Vani Gupta/India Today Digital)

Sunday Special

If 40 is the new layoff age, is it also India's new retirement age?

The new middle-class nightmare isn't recession but redundancy at 40. It takes one call, one email, one "restructuring", and your peak earning years are wiped out. It is true, India is creating a 20-year gap where people are neither employed nor retired, just stuck in survival mode.

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Sunday Special

Is friendflation making us lonely?

With the prices of everything increasing, young Indians are finding that inflation is not only making daily life difficult but forcing many to cut back on socialising and reshaping friendships. Here is how young people in urban India are navigating friendflation, and what experts suggest could help in such situations.

Rising cost of living also comes at a price of friendships
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