Events in Goa

When Sunidhi Chauhan Took Over Goa: A Night of Nostalgia, Energy, and Collective Joy


Written by Intern Swara Bodke || Team Allycaral

On January 25, 2026, at the 1919 Sportz Cricket Stadium in Verna, Goa, the state experienced more than just a live concert—it witnessed a shared emotional journey powered by music. Sunidhi Chauhan’s performance transformed the venue into a space where memories, energy and collective happiness flowed freely, cutting across age groups and generations.

As soon as Sunidhi Chauhan took the stage, the atmosphere shifted. Her powerful vocals ignited the crowd, and the response was instant and overwhelming. From Gen Z audiences capturing every beat on their phones to millennials singing along with nostalgia-filled smiles, the concert felt like a living archive of shared musical moments. Social media quickly reflected the mood of the night, filled with reels, stories, shaky videos, hoarse voices and wide smiles, all echoing the same sentiment—the vibe was unmatched.

The performance seamlessly moved between emotions. Soulful tracks created moments of stillness, reflection and deep connection, while iconic high-energy numbers sent waves of excitement through the crowd. People danced without hesitation, sang without worrying about perfection and allowed themselves to be fully present in the moment. For a few hours, differences in age or background dissolved, replaced by a shared rhythm and collective joy.

What made the night especially memorable was the personal connection Sunidhi Chauhan established with the audience. Her stage presence was confident, magnetic and deeply engaging, making it feel less like a performance and more like a celebration shared between artist and audience. The energy flowed effortlessly from the stage to the crowd and back again, creating an atmosphere of unity and warmth.

For younger fans, the concert was a chance to experience live the music they had grown up hearing through playlists and reels. For others, it was a reminder of school days, road trips, house parties and simpler times. Together, the experience reinforced the idea that good music does not fade with time—it grows alongside the people who listen to it.

That night in Goa became a pause from routine, stress and deadlines. It was about dancing with strangers who felt like friends, about feeling alive through music, and about carrying home memories that would resurface every time a Sunidhi Chauhan song played again. The concert was not just an event; it was a moment—one that will live on in tired legs, full hearts and unforgettable melodies.

Human Interest

Arbaaz Khan and Wife Sshura Khan Welcome Baby Girl in Mumbai


Arbaaz Khan and his wife, makeup artist Sshura Khan, have stepped into a new phase of life as they welcomed a baby girl on Sunday in Mumbai. According to sources close to the couple, both mother and baby are doing well. The birth took place at PD Hinduja Hospital, where Sshura was admitted on October 4, just days after the family hosted an intimate baby shower attended by close friends and family, including Salman Khan and Arhaan Khan.

The baby shower, held in the last week of September, saw the couple twinning in cheerful yellow outfits and smiling for the cameras before heading in to celebrate privately. Since then, the family has been anticipating the arrival of the newest member with excitement.

Over the weekend, Arbaaz was seen making multiple visits to the hospital, and several other family members joined in to check on the expecting mother. The news of the baby girl’s birth was confirmed by Arbaaz’s team to Hindustan Times, though the couple has not yet made a formal announcement on their social media platforms. A source added that the moment is deeply emotional for the family, and they are simply enjoying the happiness in the moment. Salman Khan, who was out of town for work, has returned to Mumbai to be part of the celebrations.

This marks Arbaaz’s second time becoming a father. He shares a 22-year-old son, Arhaan Khan, with his ex-wife Malaika Arora. The couple separated in 2016 and divorced officially in 2017. Post-divorce, Arbaaz was in a relationship with Giorgia Andriani before he eventually married Sshura Khan.

Arbaaz and Sshura tied the knot in a private nikah ceremony on December 24, 2023, at Arpita Khan Sharma’s residence in Mumbai. After the ceremony, Arbaaz had shared a heartfelt message on Instagram, saying, “In the presence of our loved ones, me and mine begin a lifetime of love and togetherness from this day on!”

With the arrival of their baby girl, Arbaaz and Sshura’s journey together now unfolds into a beautiful new chapter — one filled with joy, love, and growing family bonds.

Special Occasion

A Day of Daughters: Love, Pride, and the Power of a Smile — Leaders Across Goa Celebrate National Daughters Day


National Daughters Day is not just a celebration—it is a feeling etched deep into the hearts of parents, families, and communities. It’s a reminder of the unconditional love, boundless energy, and quiet strength that daughters bring into our lives every single day. This day offers an opportunity to reflect on the joys of raising a daughter, to honor their spirit, and to amplify their voices in a world that hasn’t always treated them equally.

In its earliest form, the day was created to counter harmful cultural norms in societies where daughters were undervalued. It served—and still serves—as a powerful reminder that every girl deserves to grow up in a world that sees her as strong, capable, and irreplaceable. Over time, the meaning of the day has deepened. It’s become personal, emotional—a celebration of identity, of dreams, and of the unbreakable bond between a daughter and her parents.

Goa echoed this emotion as National Daughters Day was met with warmth and admiration from leaders across the state. Chief Minister Dr. Pramod Sawant shared a heartfelt message about empowering girls and supporting their ambitions. MLAs Rohan Khaunte, Michael Lobo, Yuri Alemao, Delilah Lobo, Jit Vinayak Arolkar, Chandrakant Shetye, and Speaker Dr. Ramesh Tawadkar also expressed their love and pride—reminding their communities of the beauty and power daughters bring into our world.

These tributes transcended political boundaries—they came from a place of genuine love. They celebrated daughters not as future leaders or citizens alone, but as individuals who matter deeply in the present moment. Girls who are strong, curious, creative, and brave. Girls whose dreams deserve to be nurtured and whose presence brings life to every home.

Across the world, Daughters Day is celebrated on various dates—September 25 in many places, the fourth Sunday of September in India, or even September 28 or October 1 in other regions. But the meaning remains timeless and universal. It’s a day rooted in the heart, not just the calendar.

Families mark the day in different ways. Some take their daughters out for special meals or create small keepsakes. Others simply spend time together—talking, laughing, reflecting. Social media fills with warm photos and tributes, filled with pride and emotion. In more challenging parts of the world, the day becomes a platform to advocate for education, safety, and equality for every girl.

At its core, National Daughters Day is a love letter. A promise. A moment to say: You are valued. You are powerful. You are loved.

In a daughter’s laughter lives our hope. In her dreams, our future. In her strength, our pride.

And that is worth celebrating—not just today, but always.

Human Interest

Rihanna and A$AP Rocky Welcome Baby No. 3, Daughter Rocki Irish Mayers


Rihanna has officially become a mother of three. On September 13, the Grammy-winning artist and entrepreneur welcomed her third child—a baby girl named Rocki Irish Mayers—with longtime partner and rapper A$AP Rocky. The couple confirmed the news via Instagram, where Rihanna shared a heartwarming image of herself holding her newborn daughter wrapped in a soft pink blanket, accompanied by a symbolic photo of pink boxing gloves tied with satin ribbons. The caption simply read: “Rocki Irish Mayers, Sept 13 2025.”

Rocki’s arrival completes what fans have been calling Rihanna and A$AP Rocky’s “perfect family of five,” joining her older brothers—RZA, age 3, and Riot, age 2. The couple has been open about their joy at expanding their family. Back in July, during the premiere of The Smurfs Movie, in which Rihanna voiced the character of Smurfette, she revealed that both boys were thrilled about the idea of a new sibling. She also shared her own hopes, admitting she “always wanted a girl” but felt grateful either way, saying, “God knows best, right? And I love my boys.”

A$AP Rocky shared his own excitement in a statement to the Associated Press, saying, “It feels amazing. We were tired of holding that in, and now everyone can share in our joy. We’re definitely happy.”

For Rihanna, motherhood has been life-changing. Over the years, she’s reflected on how becoming a parent shaped her style, her confidence, and even her approach to creativity. She’s proudly embraced her role as a “boy mom,” telling E! News last year that it made her feel “really cool.” But now, with the arrival of her daughter, fans are eager to see how her journey as a mother evolves even further.

Rihanna and A$AP Rocky’s relationship has only grown stronger with time and parenthood. “We’re best friends with a baby,” Rihanna famously told British Vogue in 2023. “Everything changes when you have a baby, but I wouldn’t say it’s done anything but made us closer.”

With Rocki Irish Mayers now part of the family, Rihanna’s world just became a little more pink—and the world is celebrating with her.

Human Interest

The Otrovert: A Newly Identified Personality Type That Defies Introvert-Extrovert Labels


Psychiatrists may have found a new piece in the puzzle of human personality. Introducing the “otrovert” — a term coined by psychiatrist Rami Kaminski to describe people who don’t fit neatly into the classic categories of introvert or extrovert. Instead, Otroverts are emotionally independent, resistant to social mirroring, and oriented in a completely different direction than those around them.

Kaminski, who initially introduced the idea in New Scientist and further explores it in his forthcoming book The Gift of Not Belonging: How Outsiders Thrive in a World of Joiners, says this personality type is both real and common — though often misunderstood. The word “otrovert” comes from the Spanish otro, meaning “other”, paired with the psychological suffix “-vert” to denote orientation. Originally born as a joke among his team, the idea evolved through clinical observation and personal reflection.

Unlike introverts who draw energy from solitude or extroverts who thrive in social settings, otroverts appear to operate on an entirely different emotional axis. They tend not to absorb the emotional states of those around them — something Kaminski calls resistance to the “Bluetooth phenomenon,” where people emotionally pair with those nearby. Instead, otroverts maintain a distinct internal emotional tone, often allowing them to remain calm and clear-thinking in high-emotion group settings. This, Kaminski argues, can foster originality, critical thinking, and a deep sense of personal integrity.

He recounts a childhood memory — standing in a scout uniform, saying the pledge while others around him were visibly moved. He, by contrast, felt nothing. Not out of indifference, but because he didn’t emotionally sync with the group. It was a moment that, in hindsight, revealed the traits of an otrovert.

Kaminski believes many famous figures may have shared this disposition — including Frida Kahlo, Franz Kafka, Albert Einstein, and George Orwell. These individuals often stood emotionally apart from their peers, and their distance may have enabled some of their most revolutionary insights.

Although being an otrovert can come with social challenges — especially during adolescence, when belonging feels paramount — Kaminski sees it as a potential strength. He stresses that what is often labeled as emotional detachment or even dysfunction could actually be a gift. Rather than pathologizing this trait, he urges educators, therapists, and families to see it as a unique emotional and cognitive orientation, one deserving of understanding and support.

Kaminski is now calling for more research into the origins and mechanisms of this personality type, hoping that future studies will uncover how otroversion develops and how it can be nurtured in a world still largely oriented toward joiners.

As the psychological community begins to engage with this idea, the question remains: Are you an otrovert — and what could that mean for how you think, feel, and connect with the world?