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CupcakKe Shares Video for New Song “Mickey”: Watch

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CupcakKe has released another new song, the latest of several new singles from the Chicago rapper over the past year. It’s called “Mickey,” and it comes with a new music video where she holds a man at knifepoint. Check it out with a new video below.

CupcakKe’s streak of new music began early last March with “Lawd Jesus,” which she followed with “Lemon Pepper” in May. She’s since released “Discounts,” “Elephant,” “Gum,” and “The Gag Is.” Her most recent studio album was 2018’s Eden, which was preceded by Ephorize earlier that year.

Revisit Pitchfork’s feature “You Need to Listen to CupcakKe, The Raunchiest Rapper Out.”



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Made In India (Alisha Chinai) | Karaoke With Lyrics | Free Full Karaoke

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Note – This video and our YouTube channel in general may contain certain copyrighted works that were not specifically authorised to be used by the copyright holder(s), this video is made with love for the creativity and music and for the Karaoke lovers to sing and enjoy the song more! We believe in good faith.

If you have any specific concerns about this video or our position on the fair use, please feel free to contact us. Thank you!
-Ek Vairagy ..in search of Happiness!!
________________________________________

Song Name – Made In India
Album – Made In India
Singer – Alisha Chinai
Lyrics – Alisha Chinai, Shyam Anuragi & Biddu
Music Composer – Biddu
Music Label – Sony Music Entertainment India Pvt. Ltd.

Karaoke With Jimmy!

Raynaud Hernández y Antares Jazz Festival Internacional de Jazz de Querétaro 2021

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Raynaud Hernández y Antares Jazz
Festival Internacional de Jazz de Querétaro 2021.
#FIJQ2021 #festivalinternacionaldejazzdequeretaro2021 #AntaresJazz #FIJVQ2021

En estos tiempos Difíciles ¡Estamos contigo!

Raynaud Hernández: Guitar
Alejandro Villafan: Bass
Daniel Beltran: Drums
Alejandro Delgado: Percussion

Producción: Elena Gonzalez

00:00 Festival Internacional de JazzJazz de Querétaro 2021
00:05 Mayra
07:16 Latín Jamm
15:09 Baila Ibrahim
21:21 La luz de tu mirada
29:08 Para Guinga
36:50 Flor y Canto
47:22 Vida Subterranea

PAGE

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Raynaud Hernández utiliza cuerdas Savarez

#Savarez

Raynaud Hernández usa Guitarras Godin

#GodinGuitars

Raynaud Hernández usa Amplificadores Roland

#Roland

Meet Anna Park, the Artist Channeling Chaotic Energy Through Charcoal

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Courtesy of Anna Park. Photo by Luis Corzo.

Over a year into lockdown, old rituals feel more like the stuff of past lives: brushes against strangers on a crowded dance floor, collisions with tourists in Times Square, packing into an 8am subway car, commuters sipping coffee and yawning all over each other. The charcoal-drawn scenes of the 24-year old South Korean artist Anna Park take us back to the quintessential chaos of pre-pandemic New York life, reminding us of what it felt like to live in constant motion. In Park’s painted universe, parties and pageants turn to pandemonium. Celebrations and social gatherings arrive at their crescendo, where euphoria looks a little farcical and a little monstrous.

In her latest show, Pluck Me Tender, at Half Gallery, opening today and on view for a month, groups mingle around bunches of flowers, objects and bodies obscured amidst a flurry of frenzied marks. For some, the flowers that appear in Park’s drawings may evoke nature, a stable refuge in pandemic times. Yet, they also gesture powerfully to ephemerality, Park tells Interview, a kind of memento mori­­­ denoting the impermanence of the moment­­: that every party must, eventually, end. To Park, the works function as “time capsules,” both in their traces of vintage Americana and in their relation to viewers’ personal memories of those freewheeling Before Times, all unmasked and uninhibited.

Despite the pandemic’s doldrums, Park has not slowed down much. After two years at Pratt, moving to Brooklyn by way of Utah, Park transferred to the New York Academy of Art, where the artist-toymaker KAWS spotted her work at a school event and instantly became an admirer. A flurry of opportunities quickly followed for the young artist, including a commissioned movie poster for David Fincher’s latest Oscar-nominated film Mank. On the occasion of her new show, we spoke to Park about art, pandemic life, and all her “chaotic energy.”

———

On dispelling assumptions: Maybe it looked like I was getting these club or party scenes from firsthand experience. Which I’m not really much–– I’m quite the opposite. I’m more like a hermit now. I’m usually just in the studio or––I don’t know––just on YouTube at home or something.

On Utah: It was super suburbia. It was maybe what… I mean, in Korea, I was watching Disney Channel when I was little and I had this idea of what being an American kid would be like. And then when I moved to Utah, it was so quiet, and lot of things in hindsight now, I’m just like, ‘That was kind of not that great.’ I mean, you’re so young, so you kind of just accept the fact that you feel very othered constantly, because it was a lot less diverse and there was the heavy religious aspect too, which my family wasn’t a part of. It was very traditional. True suburbia, I guess.”

“Intermission.” 2021. Charcoal on paper mounted on panel. 86 x 120 inches. Courtesy of Half Gallery.

“First Marriage.” 2021. Charcoal on paper mounted on panel. 60 x 72 inches. Courtesy of Half Gallery.

On moving to New York: “I think it was just these overwhelming sensations. There’s so much visual stimuli every day. I think it was just so much zero-to-a-hundred, and it happened to be reflected in the work because that was one of my only outlets. I had to put the energy somewhere. You’re really not alone for the most part of your day. You’re constantly bumping into people. [The work] is reflective of our own experiences.”

“Hero Mentality.” 2021. Charcoal on paper mounted on panel. 75 x 120 inches. Courtesy of Half Gallery.

“Now You See Me.” 2021. Charcoal on paper on panel. 60 x 75 inches. Courtesy of Half Gallery.

On Google Images as inspiration: “It’s like this influx of information. Especially now we’re on our phones even more so, or on the computer more, at least I am, and we’re just constantly fed information, images. We’re bombarded by that every day, so I figured it was only natural that it became more incorporated into the work too. It’s overwhelming sometimes, but I feel like the work, my drawings themselves, are a bit overwhelming, when you first step into room with them. Because at first glance, it just seems so much noise and all this copy of marks. And then if you sit with it long enough, there’s little Easter eggs that I’ve hidden here that are more recognizable, or they devolve into just abstract marks. That’s maybe how I process information too. It’s kind of like these massive clouds that I’m trying to make sense of.”

On drawing flowers in lockdown: I mean, you saw how deserted the city was [during early lockdown]. I was just like, ‘This is fucking depressing.’ None of us really knew what was going on. So I think maybe in a way, I wanted to go somewhere that just afforded me peace. It’s like you’re reaching for more simple things and reminding yourself, ‘I have to be more grateful for things.’ I think we’re so like, ‘Go, go, go, go,’ and maybe my work was reflective of that too. When I was seeing those crowded club party scenes, it was just like—you were just so in that moment, and then you’re off to the next kind of thing. With this most current body of work—maybe I wanted this to be like, ‘I have to sit with myself and with the work too.’”

“It’s Good for you.” 2020. Charcoal on paper. 60 x 80 inches. Courtesy of artist.

“Parent Teacher Conference.” 2019. Charcoal on paper. 29 x 43 inches. Courtesy of artist.

On chaos: “I’m probably a little chaotic, but always trying to make sense of through the chaos. That’s probably in my work—chaos, but restraint as well. Maybe that’s my personality too. It’s like I’m always trying to refrain from making an ass of myself.”



Silvia Killingsworth’s Grub Street Diet

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Silvia Killingsworth and her Pittsburgh salad.
Illustration: Lindsay Mound

An editor for Bloomberg, Silvia Killingsworth has been the series editor of the Best New American Food Writing anthology since 2018, and written about the ethics of eating octopus and restaurant reviews for the New Yorker. These days, she’s mostly meatless, more because of her husband than her own preferences. “I’m definitely more conflicted than I was, before I met my husband,” Silvia Killingsworth says. But she does eat plenty of fake meats, and sees room for a little more innovation: “The market is ripe in the deli-sliced vegetarian sandwich meat area.” She split her week between her home in suburban New York and hero office in the city, snacking on gummies, microwaving banana bread, and eating one of her husband’s ancestral dishes: a salad with French fries and ranch dressing.

Wednesday, March 31
The first thing I consume every day is two gummy vitamins and a Nespresso coffee. I worked at The New Yorker when Kelefa Sanneh was writing his profile of Aida Battle and he used to do a little pourover lab in the dinky office kitchen. I got super into coffee as a result, got all the gear, got used to tasting blueberries in my java. Five years later, my now-husband John moved in and I needed coffee in much larger volumes, fast. I bought a Hamilton Beach drip machine and my parents gave us their spare Nespresso machine. No regrets.

Twenty minutes later, I am downstairs for a second coffee and John makes me grapefruit juice and seltzer (one-third former to two-thirds latter). Breakfast is a slice of chocolate-chip banana bread slathered in Earth Balance “frosting.” I always think of the Taffy Brodesser-Akner profile of Billy Bob Thornton in GQ where he covers oat bars in the stuff. We keep both Earth Balance and Kerrygold in our house at all times; my husband prefers the former and I concede it spreads better on things like banana bread.

It’s a gray and dreary day, and I can’t seem to wake up. “Perhaps a third coffee? What could go wrong?” I ask, gambling with my own sweat glands. This time I add a brown sugar cube and warmed milk. It doesn’t seem to help.

Around 1 p.m., I trundle downstairs to reheat some leftover pasta: orecchiette with broccolini and Field Roast Italian Garlic & Fennel plant-based sausage sauteed with garlic, red pepper flakes, and lots of olive oil. I drizzle some more olive oil on it right out of the microwave and shave some Pecorino over it. On the side, a mini can of Coca-Cola: Seven and a half ounces and perfectly carbonated.

I won’t drink Coke in a 20-ounce bottle. Everyone talks about how the Mexican Coke is real sugar, not corn syrup, so it tastes different. But when you start to talk about cans versus bottles, you get into carbonation, and I will tell you, I think the 7.5 ounce can is much more bubbly than a 12 ounce. It’s like a shot, the espresso version of a Coke — not in strength, but in size and spirit.

For dinner, I cook fillings for burritos. I don’t yet have a preferred preparation of Mexican rice (what my Mexican-American mother would call “sopa”), so I gamble with internet recipes. The one I’ve been using lately has you plop onions into a Vitamix full of crushed tomatoes and I’m very into the efficiency. You then mix that with chicken broth (I use Better Than Bouillon’s vegetarian no-chicken base) and simmer rice in it. We use black beans nine times out of ten since most refried beans aren’t vegetarian. I sauté some Trader Joe’s soy chorizo, which is so well spiced and oiled you basically can’t argue with it. For fixings, we have iceberg lettuce, shredded cheese, sour cream, and pickled jalapeños. Dessert is a Reese’s peanut butter Easter egg.

Thursday, April 1
I’ve been commuting to the office Tuesdays and Thursdays for the past few weeks. Before heading to the train station I have my two Nespressos and a bowl of Kashi Heart to Heart cereal with blueberries and, I swear this is key, Organic Valley grassmilk.

Bloomberg is famous for its snacks. On the way to my desk I grab Dolcetto Wafer Rolls (basically tubes of chocolate) and Albanese Gummi Bears, which I’m sure have gelatin in them. I’m not a strictly observant vegetarian, and I will still occasionally eat meat — I just have to pick my spots. Chicken soup or a BLT? Fine. Something like a steak is a bit more of a gamble.

The company has been providing box lunches for people who come into the office, and there’s always a green salad component. Thursday’s is baby mixed lettuces with artichoke hearts, olives, tomatoes, cucumbers, and a side of vinaigrette. For the main course there’s always a vegetarian option, usually either tofu, mushroom, or eggplant as the meat-replacement vehicle. Today’s was herb-marinated seared tofu with green beans, carrots, peppers, and tri-colored baby potatoes.

After lunch I head out for my jab and walk ten blocks north to a CVS on Third Avenue. I’m depressed to see the number of food establishments that have gone out of business in the past year but the two I care about most are still going: Omar’s on East 55th Street and Land of Plenty on East 58th Street. I can’t wait to get back.

Back at my desk, the aforementioned snacks power me through the rest of the afternoon. The gummy bears taste better than I remember. In the Before Times, my colleague Jim Aley would often go to Katagiri, the Japanese grocery store a few blocks from the office, and return with bags and bags of fruit gummies. He used to launch them across the desks at whoever wanted any. I miss that.

Since I work late-ish, John does the honors for dinner: Pittsburgh Salad. We use a base of Wegmans Italian Escarole Blend, topped with sliced cucumbers, green bell pepper, red onion, pickled banana peppers, shredded cheese, and, yes, French fries. For the “chicken” we use Quorn’s Spicy Meatless Patties cut into strips, and the dressing is Hidden Valley Ranch. I thought my in-laws were joking about how serious ranch dressing is to life in Pittsburgh, and then I went to a Giant Eagle and saw for myself: an entire refrigerated section just for ranch dressing.

Friday, April 2
Good Friday! We both have the day off. I start with two Nespressos and a seltzer. We consume godly amounts of seltzer in this house. One of the nice things about living in the suburbs is you get to have a full-size refrigerator that can fit two twelve-packs and also an enormous recycling bin in the garage. We used to be Sodastream people, but when the pandemic hit there was a CO² cartridge shortage, so we switched to cans. Apparently now there’s also an aluminum can shortage. You can’t win.

Normally I would have mixed the seltzer with juice, either tangerine or grapefruit, but we’re out. After a quick bowl of cereal, we head to Wegmans to restock. We also pick up ingredients for one of our latest discoveries: vegetarian turkey Reuben sandwiches. I use Quorn Meatless Turkey-Style Deli Slices, Swiss cheese, sauerkraut and Russian dressing (Ken’s, if you must know). On the side we have Lay’s lightly salted wavy potato chips and a Claussen’s dill spear.

Fridays are pizza nights, always. When we lived in Brooklyn we had a tradition: an extra large cheese pie from Sal’s on Court Street. When we moved to Westchester we tried a bunch of different delivery places, none of them anything like Sal’s, but sometimes you just want a very regular cheese pizza. If I’m not feeling too tired, I’ll make pizza from scratch. I’m not too tired.

You may not know this about me, but I’m a classically trained pizza scholar. I went to pizza school, AKA Pizza a Casa on the Lower East Side. Theirs is a quick dough; I use Saf Instant Yeast and let it rise for an hour if I can stand it. (Though I am a very confident student of the Tartine school of bread-baking, I have yet to use my starter for pizza. On the spectrum of cracker to bread, we prefer a thinner crust.) The first pizza gets green bell peppers and red onions, plus a sprinkling of banana peppers. The second pizza gets Yves Veggie pepperoni and banana peppers, plus the leftover sliced veggies. I pour some olive oil into the curled-up cups of fake pepperoni and sprinkle them with salt. It’s no cured pork, but it’s fatty and salty, which is satisfying.

For dessert we finish the last of the chocolate-chip banana bread, microwaved, topped with a scoop of vanilla bean ice cream. In 2016, Katie Notopoulos was giving away a free Cuisinart ice cream maker to whomever trudged to Williamsburg to get it. I started making my own ice cream and I’ve never looked back.

Saturday, April 3
I have two coffees and some flat water, and then a bowl of Kashi with blueberries and grassmilk. John eventually has leftover pizza. We fertilize the lawn, repot some plants, feed the birds and squirrels (black oil sunflower seeds, suet cakes, corn cobs, and peanuts), and then head over to my sister-in-law’s house to hang out with our little quarantine pod.

By the time we get there it’s almost 1 p.m. and I’m starving, so I reach for what’s available: My niece’s leftover mac and cheese. It’s Kraft, and unicorn shapes to boot, and has already been adulterated with extra cheddar cheese. I microwave it and shake some Frank’s Red Hot on top. My niece is having tomato soup, and the rest of the adults decide to join the seven-year-old’s menu: Trader Joe’s chickenless crispy tenders, tater tots, and waffle fries. I have a handful of each. After lunch we all head outside to prune some hedges and shoot some hoops. Back inside, I have a Cadbury Creme Egg.

I had big plans for dinner, but I’m so tired from all the yard work. John has the brilliant idea to reheat leftovers and make burritos again. We’re out of chorizo so we decide to try the Daring “original pieces,” which I sauté in a bit of oil and then dress with lime juice and salt and pepper. They’re pretty good—they have that “slip” when you bite down on them. If you look at a cross-section you can see lots of thin layered sheets, which is what probably gives you that fleshy muscle-y bitefeel. This is probably horrifying to some vegetarians. There is no one true meat replacement for everyone, and many vegetarians don’t actually want a realistic imitation of meat.

Sunday, April 4
I sleep in until about 8:30, so by the time I wake up John has already had his coffees and seltzer-juices. I make myself a tangerine juice with mandarin orange seltzer and prepare a pot of coffee.

For the past two years or so, we’ve been buying Starbucks Veranda Blend whole bean coffee and making a big pot on weekend mornings. (We like the “blonde” roast given Starbucks’s propensity for burning the hell out of its beans.) But a few months ago I was mindlessly scrolling my Promotions tab in Gmail and came across this Rolling Stone piece by Tom Petty’s biographer, Warren Zanes, resurfaced by Pocket. I sent it to my husband, who looks like if Tom Petty and Frances McDormand had a boy child together who then went on to play in metal bands for twenty years. He also happens to love Tom Petty. In the piece, Zanes reveals that Petty became single-minded about replicating the perfect cup of diner coffee: Maxwell House, brewed in a Bunn Automatic coffeemaker. We bought some Maxwell House immediately. I’m sure there’s a Bunn in our future, if we ever move into a bigger house with one of those butler’s pantries.

On Sundays, we have a ritual: homemade sausage-egg-and-cheese sandwiches. For the biscuit, I use Asha Gomez’s tellicherry buttermilk biscuits, which I make in double batches and store in the freezer. The sausage used to be Morningstar’s Hot & Spicy patties, which have become impossible to find, so we just use the regular ones now. After years of futzing with egg rings both metal and silicone, the tool that works for me to make the perfect puck-shaped egg is a seven-dollar miniature (we’re talking three inches) frying pan I found in the aisle of Stop & Shop. I curse myself every weekend for not buying two. After defrosting and sautéeing, the sausage disc gets two quarter-squares of sliced cheddar cheese. Put it all together and you have one of the most satisfying sandwiches ever invented. Hats off to McDonalds.

For Easter Sunday, we head to my sister-in-law’s house for a socially distanced outdoor hang with my niece and her cousins. (The aforementioned Katie Notopoulos is actually my sister-in-law’s sister in law. Full circle.) With three young kids it’s total chaos, so over the course of six hours I consume a half a bagel with cream cheese, one Captain Lawrence Freschester Pale Ale, one glass of Gruet Brut, at least four seltzers, a homemade Big Mac with a Boca Burger, a few bites of a Lightlife Smart Dog with mustard and onions, and a vanilla cupcake.

By the time we get home around 5 I feel that though I’ve been grazing all day, I’m not quite satisfied. I put together something I’ll hesitate to call an Alfredo sauce. It contains butter, olive oil, garlic, a splash of milk, Parmesan cheese and salt and pepper. I throw in some steamed broccoli, cut-up chunks of Quorn “Naked” (ew) Chik’n Cutlets, and some rotini. A few hours later, I have some dark chocolate nonpareils and a couple of Girl Scout Trefoils. I think that’s my type kind of dessert: less of a final course and more of a punctuation mark.

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Uppena Movie Success Tour Warangal | Vaishnav Tej | Krithi Shetty | Thalimpu | Filmylooks

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Uppena Movie Success Tour Warangal | Vaishnav Tej | Krithi Shetty | Thalimpu | Filmylooks

Uppena Movie Success Tour Warangal | Vaishnav Tej | Krithi Shetty | Thalimpu | Filmylooks

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Did Leo DiCaprio and Trishelle Cannatella Really Hook Up? She Says…

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Trishelle Cannatella took a moment to stop being polite and start getting real, and we couldn’t be more grateful. 

The 41-year-old reality TV mainstay was a guest on the Thursday, April 8 episode of Watch What Happens Live, where a fan truly went for it by asking her about rumors that she had hooked up, on separate occasions, with Leonardo DiCaprio and Andy Dick.

The current contestant on The Challenge: All Stars, who tied the knot with pilot John Hensz in 2017, was quick to point out the absurdity of having those two guys’ names mentioned in the same context. Understandably, she tackled the Andy Dick portion first.

“Andy Dick, we made out, and we used to make out a lot,” Trishelle confessed. “That’s it!”

But Andy Cohen wasn’t about to let her tiptoe away without addressing the truly juicy portion of the question, a.k.a. the Leo portion. After laughing, Trishelle replied, “Let’s just save that for the drinking game,” and took a sip from her wine glass.

Naturally, this led the host to surmise, “Ooh, well, that’s a yes, everybody. And she might have signed an NDA. Or she’s just being a lady.” To which she responded with a shrug, “Or both!”

Easy Chicken Chow Mein Recipe by Food Fusion

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Here is your Chicken Chow Mein Recipe which you can easily make in no time at home and impress everyone. #HappyCookingToYou #FoodFusion #MehranFoods

Written Recipe:

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Easy Chicken Chow Mein
Serves 4
Recipe in English:

Ingredients:
-Water as required
-Spaghetti 300g
-Namak (Salt) 1 & ½ tsp or to taste
-Cooking oil 1-2 tbs
-Soy sauce 1 tbs
-Sirka (Vinegar) ½ tbs
-Safed mirch powder (White pepper powder) 1 tsp
-Namak (Salt) ½ tsp or to taste
-Lehsan powder (Garlic powder) 1 tsp
-Chicken boneless stripes 300g
-Baking soda ¼ tsp
-Cooking oil 2 tbs
-Soy sauce 2 tbs
-Chilli sauce 3 tbs
-Chilli garlic sauce 1 tbs
-Oyster sauce 2 tbs
-Til ka tel (Sesame oil) 1 tbs
-Cheeni (Sugar) 1 tbs
-Namak (Salt) 1 tsp or to taste
-Kali mirch powder (Black pepper powder) 1 tsp
-Cooking oil 1-2 tbs
-Gajar (Carrots) julienne 1 cup
-Shimla mirch (Capsicum) julienne 1 cup
-Band gobhi (Cabbage) shredded 1 & ½ cups
-Cooking oil 2-3 tbs
-Lehsan (Garlic) sliced 8-10 cloves
-Hara pyaz (Spring onion) white 2 tbs
-Spaghetti boiled
-Fried Chicken
-Prepared chowmein sauce
-Stir fried vegetables
-Hara pyaz (Spring onion) leaves 1-2 tbs

Directions:
-In boiling water add spaghettis & mix well.
-Add salt, mix well & boil until tender (4-5 minutes).
-On a pot place a strainer, strain it & rinse with tap water. Add oil, mix well,strain & set.
-In a bowl add soy sauce, vinegar, white pepper powder, salt, garlic powder & mix well.
-Add chicken boneless stripes & mix well.
-Add baking soda & mix well. Cover & let it rest for 15 minutes.
-In a wok add cooking oil, marinated chicken, cook for 4-5 minutes on medium flame or until done & set aside.
-In a bowl add soy sauce, chilli sauce, chilli garlic sauce, oyster sauce, sesame oil, sugar, salt, black pepper powder, mix well. Chowmein sauce is ready & set aside.
-In the same wok add cooking oil, carrots, capsicum, cabbage, mix well & sauté for 2 minutes. Take out & set aside.
-In same wok add cooking oil, garlic & mix well.
-Add spring onion white, mix well & sauté for a minute.
-Add boiled spaghettis & mix well for a minute.
-Add cooked chicken & mix well.
-Add prepared chowmein sauce, mix well & cook for 1 minute on high flame.
-Add stir fried vegetables & mix well.
-Add spring onion leaves, mix well & serve.

Recipe in Urdu:

Ajza:
-Water as required
-Spaghetti 300g
-Namak (Salt) 1 & ½ tsp or to taste
-Cooking oil 1-2 tbs
-Soy sauce 1 tbs
-Sirka (Vinegar) ½ tbs
-Safed mirch powder (White pepper powder) 1 tsp
-Namak (Salt) ½ tsp or to taste
-Lehsan powder (Garlic powder) 1 tsp
-Chicken boneless stripes 300g
-Baking soda ¼ tsp
-Cooking oil 2 tbs
-Soy sauce 2 tbs
-Chilli sauce 3 tbs
-Chilli garlic sauce 1 tbs
-Oyster sauce 2 tbs
-Til ka tel (Sesame oil) 1 tbs
-Cheeni (Sugar) 1 tbs
-Namak (Salt) 1 tsp or to taste
-Kali mirch powder (Black pepper powder) 1 tsp
-Cooking oil 1-2 tbs
-Gajar (Carrots) julienne 1 cup
-Shimla mirch (Capsicum) julienne 1 cup
-Band gobhi (Cabbage) shredded 1 & ½ cups
-Cooking oil 2-3 tbs
-Lehsan (Garlic) sliced 8-10 cloves
-Hara pyaz (Spring onion) white 2 tbs
-Spaghetti boiled
-Fried Chicken
-Prepared chowmein sauce
-Stir fried vegetables
-Hara pyaz (Spring onion) leaves 1-2 tbs

Tarkeeb:
-Ubaltay pani may spaghettis daal kar milayen.
-Namak daal kar milayen or achi tarah ubal len (4-5 minutes tak).
-Aik pot pe strainer rakhen or spaghettis ko chaan kar tap pani se dho len. Oil daal kar chaan len or alag rakh den.
-Aik bowl may soy sauce, sirka, safed mirch powder, namak, lehsan powder daal kar milayen.
-Chicken stripes daal kar achi tarah milayen.
-Baking soda daal kar milayen, dhak kar 15 minute k liye rakh den.
-Karahi may oil garam karen or marinated chicken daal kar 4-5 minute tak medium flame pe pakayen or alag rakh den.
-Aik bowl may soy sauce, chilli sauce, chilli garlic sauce, oyster sauce, til ka tel, sugar, namak, kali mirch powder daal kar milayen. Chowmein sauce tayar hai.
-Usi karahi may tel daal kar gajar, Shimla mirch, band gobhi daal kar milayen or 2 minute tak fry karen or alag rakh den.
-Usi karahi may tel daal kar lehsan daal kar milayen.
-Hara pyaz safed daal kar milayen or 2 minute tak fry karen.
-Boiled spaghettis daal kar 1 minute tak milayen.
-Cooked Chicken daal kar achi tarah milayen.
-Chowmein sauce daal kar 1 minute tak high flame pe pakayen.
-Stir fried vegetables daal kar milayen.
-Hara pyaz daal kar milayen or serve karen.

Everything’s Gonna Be Okay TV Show on Freeform: Season Two Viewer Votes – canceled + renewed TV shows

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Everything's Gonna Be Okay TV show on Freeform: canceled or renewed for season 3?

(Freeform/Ser Baffo)

How will the pandemic play out for this imperfect family in the second season of the Everything’s Gonna Be Okay TV show on Freeform? As we all know, the Nielsen ratings typically play a big role in determining whether a TV show like Everything’s Gonna Be Okay is cancelled or renewed for season three. Unfortunately, most of us do not live in Nielsen households. Because many viewers feel frustrated when their viewing habits and opinions aren’t considered, we invite you to rate all of the second season episodes of Everything’s Gonna Be Okay here.

A Freeform comedy, the Everything’s Gonna Be Okay TV show stars Josh Thomas, Kayla Cromer, Maeve Press, and Adam Faison. The series follows the ups and downs of Nicholas (Thomas), a neurotic twenty-something. While home visiting his father and his teenage half-sisters — Genevieve (Press) and Matilda (Cromer) — Nicholas’ trip is extended due to his father’s untimely death. The siblings are left to cope with not only a devastating loss, but also the realization that misfit Nicholas will have to rise to the challenge, move in, and hold the family together. While all of this is going on, the new head of the household meets Alex (Faison) and they make a romantic connection. Navigating autism, budding sexuality, consent, parenthood, adolescence, family and grief, this imperfect family discovers the importance of finding happiness in the middle of really difficult moments, one awkward conversation at a time.

What do you think? Which season two episodes of the Everything’s Gonna Be Okay TV series do you rate as wonderful, terrible, or somewhere between? Do you think that Everything’s Gonna Be Okay should be cancelled or renewed for a third season on Freeform? Don’t forget to vote, and share your thoughts, below.

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