Big Time Guru

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File under: Gurubusting
  1. Big Time Guru is the Tenth episode of Season 2 of Big Time Rush and the 30th episode overall. It aired on January 8 2011. 1 Plot 2 Synopsis 3 Quotes 4 Songs featured 5 Goofs 6 Trivia 7 Promo 8 Gallery Gustavo wants the band to change their ways in order to become very successful.
  2. 'Big Time Rush' Big Time Guru (TV Episode 2011) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.
  3. Add a photo to this gallery This gallery is for the images from the episode, Big Time Guru. To go back to the episode summary page, click here.

Big Time also offer some nice non-Megaways titles. Opal Fruits is one of those, giving you the chance to try out its six reels in a slick, space-themed setting, with futuristic music to match. Once you win a prize, you trigger a process in which the winning symbols are replaced by falling icons to form new win lines.

and The Siddhi of PR
Step 1: Make up a fanciful mythology about your youth:
Kaleshwar did not speak for the first seven years of his life and would often accept only a single drop of water as his daily sustenance. When asked years later the reason for this unusual behavior, he said, simply, that he was absorbing cosmic energy. Miracles occurred around him: once his grandfather observed the divine appearance of the Goddess Saraswati standing guard over him while he slept; another time, it was a king cobra, its mantel spread, that shaded him as he napped soundly on the ground in the backyard at his grandfather's farm.
Don't be fooled, folks. This guy is a crook.
(Thanks, Semblanceji!)

Labels: Gurubusting, The Siddhi of PR

File under: Gurubusting and The Siddhi of PR

Big Time Guru Full Episode


Big Time Gaming Free Play

Being in the States leaves us little vantage point to surmise just exactly how people feel about big-time gurus in India. Sure, there are hundreds of fawning propaganda pieces seeded by the likes of Sri Sri Ravi Shankar and his ilk, but do these really reflect the attitudes of India's clear-minded folk? We certainly would like to think not.
Time

So we were very pleased to encounter this article in India's Organizer this morning, plopped right down in an issue full of the same effusive nonsense that every big-time guru's PR department churns out with a horrifying, mind-clouding regularity in Bharat:
In an age with a plethora of god-men, gurus, preachers, some so popular as to have ashrams in many states and even in many countries, it is an astonishing truth that society is rudderless, adrift on an ocean of hedonism, without spiritual and moral guidance.
The fault lies with Star Gurus who seek self-aggrandisement by building huge cult followings and five-star ashrams where rich Indian and foreign devotees can practice yoga and meditation in comfort, in salubrious, resort-like environs. Justifying the Marxist slander of religion as the opium of the people, they peddle lullabies to frustrated millions seeking release from life's myriad problems. Such vicarious redemption is totally un-Hindu, and extremely harmful, as it turns a blind eye to festering evils and allows them to multiply under cover of a guru's benign gaze.
Looks like we just discovered another true hero in India. The turban is on the floor for author Sandhya Jain, who now bears a much closer observation here at Guruphiliac HQ.

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Gtbets sportsbook review. Labels: Gurubusting, The Siddhi of PR





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