Who's that gorgeous South Asian woman on your Google homepage?
The women with a microphone in her hand, dupatta and long hair fluttering behind her, in front of 1980's disco-themed Google lettering?
It's legendary Pakistani singer Nazia Hassan, one of the country's first modern popstars, who today would have celebrated her 53rd birthday.
If you were a brown girl who grew up in the 1980's, you wanted to be Nazia.
The sultry popstar with long dark hair and slim-fit jeans rose to fame in the 1980's, forming a duo with brother Zoheb, with hits like Disco Deewane (Disco Dreamer Girl) and Boom Boom.
The Karachi-born singer got her big break at 15, recording the opening song, Aap jaisa koi for the Bollywood film Qurbani.
She went on to release a string of albums, including Boom Boom in 1982 and Young Tarang in 1984.
But she is best known for her 1981 hit Disco Deewane, propelling her onto the British charts and becoming the first Pakistani singer to do so with the English version of the song.
A beautiful, free woman singing about lust and love in conservative Pakistan and beloved by the majority? How is this possible?
Hassan rose to fame in 1980's Pakistan - an era marked by the authoritarian rule of military dictator Zia-Ul-Haq. Under the general's reign the freewheeling 1970's gave way to increasing Islamisation and censorship, with the politics of Cold War and jihadists dominating the country's foreign presence.
Hassan was an antidote to the beards with her youthful, catchy anthems and subtle sultriness that left more to the imagination and put her on the right side of sexiness for the moderate majority.
If being a superstar singer was not enough, Hassan had smarts too, putting a law degree to good use with a celebrity activism that went beyond photo-ops with her work with the UN and UNICEF promoting the rights of women and young people.
Sadly, Hassan lost her battle to lung cancer in 2000, at the premature age of 35.
But as Pakistan continues to be known largely in the modern western imagination for fundamentalism and militancy, Google's celebration of Nazia is a reminder of a artistic, smart, beautiful, feminine, liberal and dare I say sexy, Pakistan.
For South Asian girls, she'll always be our Disco Deewane.
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