Bappi Lahiri is seated in front of me, outsized sunglasses framing an outsized head on an outsized neck, hinting at either a baby-faced chainsaw-murderer in a Coen Brothers movie or a benign Buddha, smiling and waving away the world’s worries. But to hear the singer-musician speak, he’d rather be thought of as Paul the Octopus, whose predictions during the FIFA World Cup were awaited with as much breathlessness as the royal announcement about when Kate and William would finally get hitched. Lahiri is certain that India will win the ICC World Cup, and his confidence springs from his exhortatory album Come On India, in which he belts out the sentiment, ‘Aankhon mein hai bas ek sapna, haathon mein hoga World Cup apna.’ He has a dream, a singular dream, that we will win the trophy shaped like a golden globe held up by three silver columns. It makes sense that Bappi Lahiri has his eye on that trophy. There is, after all, all that glittering metal.