
Kamal Haasan is back with latest season of ‘Bigg Boss Tamil’
The Hindu
Bigg Boss Tamil’s sixth season, hosted by Kamal Haasan, is set to kickstart this week. Here are some latest pics:
The sixth season of Bigg Boss Tamil, Star Vijay’s hit Tamil show, is set to be launched this Sunday. Actor Kamal Haasan returns to host the show.
This season will have a fresh set of contestants entering a re-designed Bigg Boss house. For over a hundred days, amidst multiple cameras to monitor them, the contestants will battle it out to win the title.
The redesigned house looks colourful and features intriguing set pieces. The prison cell inside the house — where drama is known to be at its peak — has been redesigned to resemble a birdcage.
Apart from celebrities from the film industry, members of the audience will also feature in the show. “A major reason why viewers of all age groups are glued to their television screens for over a hundred days is that the show lets the viewers identify themselves with the characteristics of the contestants. Emotions run high as they are introduced to a closed environment with no contact with the outside world. These contestants, who have gone through a rigorous selection process, promise to bring to the table their skills, strategy, and most of all, their honest emotions,” reads a statement from Star Vijay.
The inaugural episode will be aired on Star Vijay this Sunday from 6:30 pm onwards. The show will also stream on Disney+ Hotstar.

The ongoing Print Biennale Exhibition at Lalit Kala Akademi, Chennai, unfolds as a journey far beyond India’s borders, tracing artistic lineages shaped by revolution and resistance across Latin America and nNorthern Africa. Presented as a collateral event of the Third Print Biennale of India, the exhibition features a selection from the Boti Llanes family collection, initiated by Dr Llilian Llanes, recipient of Cuba’s National Award for Cultural Research, and curated in India by her daughter, Liliam Mariana Boti Llanes. Bringing together the works of 48 printmaking artists from regions including Mexico, Cuba, Argentina, Brazil, and Chile, the exhibition is rooted in the socio-political upheavals of the 1980s and 1990s. It shows printmaking as both a political and creative tool, with works that weave stories across countries and continents.












