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Sunday, November 22, 2009

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Malavika Sangghvi
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The New York Times once described Malavika Sangghvi as ‘a chronicler for social mores’. Sangghvi began her career in 1978 with The Times of India, which she soon left to become part of the founding team that launched Mid-Day, Mumbai’s first stand-alone tabloid.

Sangghvi has been at the forefront of every journalistic trend, working for the India Today Group’s Bombay Magazine, one of India's first lifestyle glamour feature titles, and then contributing extensively to leading national and international journals, including The New York Times, Harpers & Queen (of which she was India editor in the 1980s) and Business Traveler, amongst others.

Her weekly column for The Times of India’s Sunday Review, ‘Mostly Men’ an acerbic profile of some of the country’s most powerful men, drew much delighted response, as did her column ‘Ordinary People’ for The Indian Express. But what made her a household name was the weekly column ‘Mixed Media’, a spoof on current affairs, that she wrote for almost a decade for Sunday Mid-Day and her soulful ‘Salaam Mumbai’ in Bombay Times.

In 1995, Sangghvi was appointed editor of the Bombay Times, which she took from a bi-weekly supplement to a daily paper, making it an intrinsic part of the Mumbaikar’s reading habit. In this role she was instrumental in not only identifying the Page Three phenomenon, but in also giving the city a compassionate, humane paper that launched many campaigns for the disfranchised.

In 2000, she opted to revamp and relaunch The Times of India’s Sunday supplement, the Sunday Review, one of the largest circulated English weekend broadsheets in the world with a circulation of 2.5 million. Her cover story on Anil Ambani’s marathon running set a new benchmark in personality profiles.

Throughout her career Sangghvi has freelanced extensively for some of the world’s most prestigious journals. She has collaborated on an award-winning story for the Sunday Times (UK) on a hospital for burn victims and another 12-pager for the same publication on the call centre phenomenon. She has also written frequently for The New York Times, Conde Nast Traveler, and Departures.

Besides her prolific and high-profile print career, Sangghvi has anchored her own weekly television show on Murdoch’s Star Network, which ran for a year, and has broadcast extensively on BBC Radio 5.

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Of samosas and champagne

The year was 2001, and the powers that be in the wine and champagne worlds of Europe had decided that India was going to be the next target of their produce.
June 29, 2008

Murder she wrote

There was a time not so long ago when the routine way to end a love affair gone awry was for the couple in question to snub each other.
June 15, 2008

Hw da plice lst da Noida plot

It was one of the most high profile murder cases of the 1980s: a swashbuckling minor royal politician suspected of murdering his lover’s husband, a nationally-acclaimed sportsman.
May 31, 2008

Not all stars know how to orbit

It was one of the late Dhirubhai Ambani’s pet theories on social mobility — orbiting. This is how he explained it: people are constantly graduating to new hierarchical trajectories.
May 18, 2008

Who made the boys cry?

Ever since Sreesanth blubbered like a baby on TV, I have been perplexed by the idea of men crying.
May 4, 2008

The search for a Rome of one’s own

Don’t ask me why, but the legend of the twins Romulus and Remus, the founders of Rome, left to float as babies in the Tiber
May 2, 2008

A mongrel for a mascot?

News comes in that Mumbai’s mongrels are under threat from a group of cyber monsters who have flooded social networking site Orkut with ways and means to kill strays.
November 21, 2007

Diwali cheer!

In the days when we were much younger, a family tradition held that we collected all our loose change and gambled amongst ourselves for stakes as low as 10 paise.
November 9, 2007

Of grace and intellect

Bakul Patel, the highly qualified and accomplished wife of the late Rajni Patel, has just returned from the ‘Festival of Thinkers,’ held in Abu Dhabi.
November 3, 2007

Out of Control!

So it’s finally happened! A gun and six bullets have been employed to settle a parking dispute.
October 31, 2007

Being Shang-haied

Last week I was Shanghaied. In other words, I found myself gob-struck in the Chinese city, overwhelmed by its sights and sounds and skyline.
October 29, 2007

Global talent for local prices

Guru, a soft- spoken, shy man with an endearing smile, is a sound engineer who can put an IIT graduate to shame.
October 17, 2007

Heels behind wheels

If one were to base one’s judgment on the way Mumbaikars drive-we could be surmised to be a very rude city indeed.
October 15, 2007
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