Daily News & Analysis
  • Home
  • Mumbai
  • India
  • World
  • Money
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
  • Speak Up
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Sci/Tech
  • Academy
  • Gallery
  • Blogs
  • E-Paper
Sunday, November 22, 2009

Columns

Advanced Search

Malavika Sangghvi
Syndicate
this column

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.

more...
less...

Bird-brained beautification?

How landlords get such meagre rent that they have no interest in maintaining public areas in their buildings and would rather have them fall down?
October 10, 2007

Starry starry night

Who is the most powerful film star in Bollywood? Depending on your age you would not be amiss if you elected a Mr. B or Mr. SRK for the honour.
October 5, 2007

One more ritual

And a hundred years later — how has this India panned out? Is it by any stretch of imagination an India in which the poorest feel it is their country?
October 3, 2007

At your service!

So no wonder that Shah Rukh Khan feels Mumbai is the best city in the world. I tend to agree with him!
September 26, 2007

A life worth Rs50,000?

Look at the major industrialists shaking hands on big deals, announcing mergers and acquisitions, posing for the cameras at parties and premieres and plays.
September 21, 2007

Why teachers snap

Frustration, irritation, annoyance, dissatisfaction are what lead normal, otherwise sane and rational adults to vent their anger on people quarter their age and half their size.
September 19, 2007

They also serve...

My Nepali cook who is in hospital sent me an sms, requesting me to send over his laptop so that he could play computer games while he was recuperating.
September 17, 2007

Keeping up with the gyms!

Rumoured to be invented by Russian scientists the Vibrogym is the brand name for a generic machine that purports to revolutionise the way we exercise.
September 12, 2007

An afternoon of Renaissance men

Sunday afternoon found a handful of Mumbai’s most illustrious multi-taskers at Partap and Sue Sharma’s art-and-book-lined apartment with a breathtaking view of the sea, where the talk ranged from Bach to Goethe to Narendra Modi’s pogroms.
September 11, 2007

Gen X and social inequity

If the GenX and its emergence in liberalised India required a symbol, could there be anything more apt than this young man and his tragic unrealised life?
August 23, 2007

The Sky Below

The news that the BMC is thinking of constructing a series of ‘theme parks’ in Mumbai, at the sites of pumping stations, and reservoirs cannot have been met without a certain degree of consternation in some circles.
August 21, 2007

Political incorrectness

At the 2007 Rajiv Gandhi Awards at the NCPA on Sunday, they were all there: Union Ministers, State Ministers, Congress factotums, and that particular breed of gadflies.
August 13, 2007

A City on the Edge

With the accused in the bomb blasts case now facing sentences, it is imperative that justice be afforded the victims of the 1992-’93 riots.
August 10, 2007
«
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
...
14
»


Blogs »
  • Someday I will write about other things....
  • Why didn't the cops use Qasab for information and leverage from 26 Nov itself???
  • One week after the attack
  • All we need is love
  • Etiquette for Modern Times
Reports
  • I want to conduct in Kashmir: Zubin Mehta
  • Godrej is all set to unlock greater value in Mumbai
  • The six pillars of the festive season…
  • Round and a bout
  • Our daily options

Our columnists
  • Anil Dharker
  • Antara Dev Sen
  • Arati R Jerath
  • Arati R. Jerath
  • Ayaz Memon
  • Cyrus Broacha
  • Dilip Vengsarkar
  • Gaurav Kapur
  • Javed Gaya
  • Madhu Jain
  • Magandeep Singh
  • Mallika Sarabhai
  • Meghnad Desai
  • N Raghuraman
  • Parsa Venkateshwar Rao Jr
  • R Jagannathan
  • Ranjona Banerji
  • Robin Sharma
  • Sandeep Shanbhag
  • Sathya Saran
  • Siddharth Bhatia
  • Sidharth Bhatia
  • Suresh Nair
  • Venkatesan Vembu
  • Vinay Kamat
Contributors
  • Ankita Pandey
  • Arjun Parthasarathy
  • B Krishnakumar
  • Deblina Chakrabarty
  • Fahad K Samaar
  • Firoz Bakht Ahmed
  • Koel Purie
  • Manjula Pooja Shroff
  • MS Kamath
  • Mukul G Asher
  • Naini Setalvad
  • Pillman
  • Prof R Vaidyanathan
  • R N Bhaskar
  • Rakesh Bhatnagar
  • S Gangadharan
  • Shraddha Jahagirdar Saxena
  • Sumit Chakraberty
  • Vijay L Bhambwani
  • Vivek Kaul
  • Yatin Pandya
  • Zaheer Abbas
Popular Columns »
  • Suresh Nair : 2012: The end?
  • R Jagannathan: Fighting Hindi hegemony
  • Anil Dharker : For Muslims, the enemy lies within
  • Ayaz Memon: Twenty years is a couple of lifetimes in any sport
  • Mallika Sarabhai: Dubai: City of gold
  • Venkatesan Vembu: Before his Asia trip Obama should see 2012
  • Ranjona Banerji : Maharashtra’s issues come home to roost
  • Sandeep Shanbhag : Go for gold — the ETF way
  • Sidharth Bhatia : Laurel & Hardy are passé
  • R Jagannathan: Pink Panther strikes
About us | Contact us | Advertise with us | Subscription | Reprint rights
© 2005-2009 Diligent Media Corporation Ltd. All rights reserved.