Veteran Bollywood actor Govinda and his wife Sunita Ahuja dispelled separation rumours as they celebrated Ganesh Chaturthi together at their Mumbai residence on August 27.
Married for over three decades, the couple welcomed the festival with warmth. Govinda appeared in a maroon kurta, while Sunita twinned in a matching saree.
Videos from the event showed them performing the traditional puja with devotion before distributing sweets to paparazzi outside their home. Actor and former Bigg Boss contestant Paras Chhabra was among the guests.
Addressing the media, Sunita firmly denied speculation about marital discord. “People should not believe such talk unless we ourselves say it,” she stated, stressing their unity.
The couple share two children, Tina and Yashvardhan. Tina made her Bollywood debut in 2015 with Second Hand Husband, while Yashvardhan is preparing for his acting debut.
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Water is essential to life—that’s not something new. It’s clear as daylight that humans all around the world open faucets daily to utilize water to shower, cook, and drink. But water is a privilege in drought-stricken areas; it is like finding a flower in the desert. In towns across these regions, the water that once flowed freely, created by nature to satiate human thirst, has become scanty like pearls in an ocean—something that demands effort, anxiety, and vigilance to be sought.
This problem is further enhanced by the so-called digital and magical era of AI—yes, the LLMs (Large Language Models) that complete all forms of writing, creative enough to mimic human tones and create art of any kind within seconds. The drawback: these vast databases and machines, smoke-screened by the power of AI, are consuming millions of litres of water.
This isn’t a tale of nature versus technology. It’s the uncomfortable intersection of two truths: water is life, and AI increasingly depends on industrial-scale water access. And as generative models like GPT-4o and future AI agents multiply across our lives—echoing the ambitions outlined by Sam Altman in his blog—they intensify the hidden thirst of our world.

