Diljit Dosanjh appears unbothered by the paradox surrounding the Jaswant Singh Khalra film. (Credits: Diljit Dosanjh/Instagram)Dear Reader,Each weekday, The Daily Catch-Up sifts through the day’s news so you do not have to. From geopolitics to courtrooms, from classrooms to tech launches — we bring you the stories that matter, in plain language and without ceremony. Let us begin. The Daily Catch-Up: Rain devastation in Maharashtra and other storiesThe city’s rain death toll has climbed to ten, and officials are asking residents to stay home — a request that carries unusual weight when the roads themselves have become the hazard. The first monsoon closure of the Mumbai-Pune Expressway’s missing link has also added to the chaos on one of Maharashtra’s busiest corridors.The discovery of a child’s body in a pond, and the mob violence that followed, has turned a Bengal neighbourhood into a pressure cooker that local authorities are struggling to keep from boiling over.A woman is dead, her husband is in custody, and the case has put the machinery of dowry harassment back in an uncomfortable spotlight in the capital.A live CCTV feed and a family member in custody — the details of a school administrator’s murder in Shimla are raising questions that go well beyond a single crime.Rajasthan police have made 14 arrests and demolished hotels in connection with the gangrape of a minor, even as they say the viral video that inflamed outrage originated in a different state entirely.Story continues below this adThe BJP’s new organisational appointment has done what such appointments rarely do — drawn the opposition into a fight about the appointment itself.The Ram temple donation scandal has handed Uddhav Thackeray something his party badly needed — a Hindutva grievance that doesn’t belong to the BJP.The man who has won elections for others is now preparing to contest one himself — and Bihar’s Bankipur seat will tell us whether the theory holds up in practice.The upper house seats falling vacant in the wake of the TMC’s fragmentation have set up a test of political arithmetic that neither faction can afford to lose.Story continues below this adThe military’s request to retain more Agniveers beyond their four-year term suggests the scheme’s original architecture is being quietly renegotiated from within.Washington ran a quiet campaign to thin the attendance at a state funeral — a novel form of pressure that says as much about the limits of the Iran deal as it does about protocol.The Israeli Prime Minister’s pivot to India as a counterweight to American pressure is a signal — but of what, exactly, remains usefully ambiguous.The West Asia crisis has reshuffled alignments in ways that will outlast any ceasefire — and India’s window to act on them may be shorter than it thinks.Story continues below this adA carmaker with a stake in the outcome is making an argument that cuts against the electric-vehicle consensus — and it is not entirely wrong.Norway’s dismantling of Brazil was not just a result — it was a diagnosis. And Neymar’s exit from international football has given the post-mortem a face.Before the goals, before the records, there was a coach in Bryne who noticed something about a teenager’s positioning — and decided it was worth fixing.The film about Jaswant Singh Khalra has been banned — and is being watched anyway. Diljit Dosanjh seems entirely at peace with the contradiction.Story continues below this adAamir Khan married Gauri Spratt in what was meant to be a quiet ceremony. But we have pictures that say it may not have been that quiet after all.The speed of the transaction and the sentiment attached to it say something interesting about what Ayodhya has come to mean.The AAP leader’s wrist has become a talking point. The Daily Catch-Up is published Monday to Friday by The Indian Express.