Jean Michael Seri will be Barcelona's next signing The operation is close to being closed and the player has given him OK to a four-year deal.
There's a lot of concern at Barça about the performances in midfield last season. And that evaluation increased with the defeats against Real Madrid in the Super Cup. Therefore, the Catalan club decided to go for both Paulinho and Seri, with the Brazilian already signed and the Ivorian set to follow soon. Barcelona has already spoken with the player's entourage, asking them not to sign for anyone else and promising talks after Nice's Champions League qualifier against Napoli. Said and done. On Thursday, Barça spoke with Seri's brother, who is his agent, and communicated their desire to take the operation forward. The agreement, from there, was easy. Barça tried to reduce the cost down to 30 million euros, but Nice did not accept. The most likely ending is the pay the 40 million euros, although an agreement could be reached for it to be paid in installments. Sources close to the operation confirmed that the player is really excited and hopes things will be finalized soon.
Armed chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa is to have South Asia's biggest flag at Wagah outskirt at 12:00 am on Sunday to commence Pakistan's 70th Independence Day festivities.
Pakistan is to celebrate 70th Independence Day festivities on August 14 with the main service in capital Islamabad which is to be taken an interest by the state official Mamnoon Hussain, Prime Minister (PM) Shahid Khaqan Abbasi and head of every equipped constraint among others.
To kick-begin the festivals, the armed force boss is to have the biggest banner in the locale at midnight today around evening time at one of the regional fringes with India.
The 8th longest flag in the world and The first longest in South Asia. The Pak Flag is four hundred meters tallest. The Pak Flag 80 square meters long
The trailer of much-awaited Pakistani movie Na Maloom Afraad 2 has been released on June 21.
After the success of Na Maloom Afraad 1, director Nabeel Qureshi had decided to produce its sequel with the same actors that include Fahad Mustafa, Mohsin Abbas, and Javed Sheikh whereas Urwa Hocane and Hania Amir would also be seen in leading roles.
Coke Studio build the Pakistani songs in all around the world. In this Coke Studio celebrate our 10 years in Pakistan
Coke Studio is good to go to celebrate Pakistan's 70th commemoration of Independence by discharging an inspiring version of the National Anthem, sung by each of the 40 singers who will highlight amid this Season. While the most recent year song of devotion 'Yes Rah-e-Haq ke Shaheedo' gave us goosebumps, this year hymn went poorly well with fans.
This year also marks the consummation of the decade as Coke Studio entered the tenth period of the music scene, giving a stage to artists, who helped set a pattern with the combination of nearby and worldwide music.
The National Anthem which should give an enthusiastic feeling and feeling of well-being, freedom, and expectation, this Coke Studio adaptation appears to be dull and need feelings. A few vocalists were gaudily being enthusiastic, others shared an uncanny likeness to the Walking Dead.
Gatlin wins world championship gold for the USA in 9.92sec
Christian Coleman takes silver and Bolt has to settle for bronze
As a full moon rose over the London Stadium, athletics’ greatest pantomime villain, Justin Gatlin, sank his teeth into the carefully laid plans for Usain Bolt’s retirement party. And then, in the last desperate steps of the compelling world championships 100m final, brutally ripped them apart. The 35-year-old American, who was banned twice early in his career for doping offenses, is not necessarily the champion the sport wants. But given its problems, it is one that many will feel it deserves.
When it flashed on the scoreboard that Gatlin had taken gold in 9.92sec – 0.02 clear of the young American Christian Coleman, who took silver, and Bolt who claimed bronze a further 0.01sec behind – most of the 56,000 crowd in the stadium went silent before they collectively booed in disgust. A couple of years ago, Gatlin described himself as “the Batman of the track – a vigilante”. But few in the London Stadium were celebrating the rising again of this self-styled Dark Knight.
After over a decade of attempts, Stephen King's self-described magnum opus comes to the big screen via director Nikolaj Arcel.
For over a decade, some of Hollywood's most successful storytellers have wanted to turn Stephen King's eight-book Dark Tower saga into movies. Few, presumably, started out with the idea that the best way to wrangle this mountain of a plot was to write a new sequel to it. That's roughly what Danish director Nikolaj Arcel offers in The Dark Tower, weaving elements from the published books into a new premise suggested by the series' end and paring the whole mythology down enough to fit into a mere hour and a half. Recent industry gossip described a troubled shoot and early edits that were so confusing to test audiences they prompted much post-production tinkering by producers and studio execs. That's tough to believe when looking at the finished product, a save-the-multiverse sci-fi fantasy that is, if anything, too easily digested.
Though far from the muddled train wreck we've been led to expect, this Tower lacks the world-constructing gravitas of either the Tolkien books that inspired King or the franchise-launching movies that Sony execs surely have in mind. Though satisfying enough to please many casual moviegoers drawn in by King's name and stars Idris Elba and Matthew McConaughey, it will likely disappoint many serious fans and leave other newbies underwhelmed.
Things begin promisingly, with visions of impending doom that haunt the nightmares of a New York City kid named Jake Chambers (Tom Taylor). Despite (or maybe because of) the specificity of these John the Baptist-grade revelations, Jake's parents and shrink are sure it's all a fantasy, the emotional fallout of a death in the family. But the mysterious Man in Black that Jake has seen in his dreams knows otherwise, and his minions are already en route to kidnap the boy.
The Man in Black is McConaughey's Walter O'Dim, a sorcerer known by several names in King's books. We'll soon learn that he's attempting to harness the psychic energy of gifted children to destroy the eponymous Tower, which protects not just our planet (known here as "Keystone Earth") but an unknown number of parallel worlds. Beyond these worlds lies a void full of monsters, we're told. Though nobody ever hints at why Walter might want to set unpredictable, violent monsters loose on infinite Earths instead of just ruling over them — he coos commands to people and they magically do whatever he asks — it's hard to have a save-the-universe adventure without a villain bent on destruction.
Aslam was born into a Punjabi Muslim family in Wazirabad, Punjab, Pakistan. He began his education in kindergarten at Kimberley Hall School, Lahore. In 1991, he moved to Rawalpindi where he continued his studies in St. Paul's Cambridge School, Satellite Town, Rawalpindi. In 1995, Aslam returned to Lahore where he continued his studies in Divisional Public School. He attended Punjab Institute of Computer Science (PICS) to do his Bachelor's degree in Computer Science (BCS).
Imran Abbas Naqvi is a Pakistani actor and former model. He is known for his leading roles in television serials including Meri Zaat Zarra-e-Benishan (2011), Khuda Aur Muhabbat (2011), Mera Naseeb (2011), Piya Kay Ghar Jana Hai (2012), Dil-e-Muztar (2013), Shadi Aur Tum Say? (2013), Alvida (2015), and Mera Naam Yusuf Hai (2015).[1][2] Abbas made his film debut with a leading role in the 2013 romantic drama Anjuman. The following year, he appeared in Bollywood's monster horror film Creature 3D, which earned him Filmfare Award for Best Male Debut nomination.
Maya Ali is a Pakistani actress, model and VJ. Maya Ali started her career as a video jockey at Samaa TV, Waqt News and Dunya News.[1] She then appeared in drama Durr-e-Shahwar; and then starred in Aik Nayee Cinderella and Aunn Zara, both along with Osman Khalid Butt. In 2014, Ali was cast in Shanakht, in which she played the role of Qurat-ul-Ain, who follows Islam but is criticized by her family and society.[6] Ali also starred as Saman in Zid alongside Ahsan Khan.