I love the energy that Mumbai has as well as the people. I love how it is actually very relaxed; it’s kind of like an Eastern Los Angeles really. Of course, it is crowded, especially when you travel from South to North. Bombay is many things – there’s still a colonial heart to town and Walkeshwar. Bombay Gym is another country all together.Bandra is very hip and connected and is a lovely place to live. There are lots of places to eat and I have a lot of fun here. I am happy I moved out of Lokhandwala which is a nightmare honestly – there’s just too much traffic.I also love the fact that it is open late at night – you can pretty much get anything done at any time of the day or night. Your internet can get sorted with just a phone call. I think Delhi in comparison is slightly more sedate.I know and love both places however. If there’s anything I don’t love… well, the road to Film City has just too much traffic. However, I see the city get cleaner and better. This is the first government I have heard talking about toilets and topics like this which is really important. So, yes, I want the city to be clean. I want better infrastructure when it comes to sewage, especially in Lokhandwala where there are still open sewers and mosquitoes.Now, even well-to-do successful people are getting dengue, so we all better clean up. I have never voted and that’s because I have never felt that I am being represented. Now I feel I am and I am also a supporter of Modi’s government.It’s the first time we have had such a big majority. There is no excuse for not trying to achieve special things. I like the noises that the government is making. I like the way everyone is feeling. I am really of the fact that everyone in India thinks differently and nobody is on the same page. Everyone is scared and thinks, 'What will happen to the Muslims' and this and that.And we never get anywhere. This is one time where I feel that everyone should just fall in line. But, we should not expect miracles at the same time and then condemn the government.I don’t know if I am going to vote for the assembly polls but by the time the next election comes around, I might even campaign for what I believe in. In fact, Ritesh Deshmuk has taught me about government and elections and he said it well when he said that this last election would be thought of as a stirrer; in the sense that all our political consciences would get a little stirred and that we would have to decide where we stand.This is something we have not done before.