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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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Mother’s Day and mothers

Some mothers compete with their daughters and more or less over shadow them when it comes to dressing and keeping up with the latest fashions and fads.
May 14, 2007

Grace under pressure

How do some people live their lives so effortlessly in quiet refinement? Why is grace such a palpable and edifying value, whose presence lifts all those who come in contact with it?
May 3, 2007

Why Mumbai has first claim on Goa

Take a Dilli-wala or an NRI from London or Hong Kong to the palm fringed state and the first thing they want to do is get a piece of its action-buy a plot of land, build a Spanish hacienda and eat squid paella.
April 30, 2007

An economy in the sun

Over the weekend I travelled to Alibag where a friend had bought a house by the beach to which he said would ultimately retire, once he had stopped working.
April 22, 2007

A people’s wedding

“I really can’t say how exclusive it is. From the looks of it- it seems to be the wedding of the people!”
April 20, 2007

Ah, Sunday!

Sundays are days when you wake up late, read the papers in bed, go out for brunch, come home, catch a good movie on TV, have a glass of wine with friends — and then go blissfully to sleep.
April 16, 2007

Rich man, poor man

Simply put, I mean that the poorer you are, the bigger hearted you are likely to be — and the bigger your bank balance, the more tight-fisted.
April 12, 2007

First World, Third World

Mine is what is called a Third World approach to life: acceptance and accommodation of failure, a shrug, a sigh, a justification, and a moving on.
April 11, 2007

I dream of rain

When it gets so hot, I dream of the rains — of the monsoons that will come to rescue us; the smell of wet earth, the sound of rain on tiled roofs...
April 9, 2007

Organising a film award ceremony

Now that the organisers of the Zee Cine Awards managed to get Ash and Abhishek and Salman and Katrina Kaif to dance together, organisers of the other hundred odd film award shows must are wondering how to top that.
April 5, 2007

Looking for Mr Fashion Designer

Two nights ago I was invited to dinner to meet a famous American designer, a man whose name is worn on the backs of teenagers all over the world.
April 3, 2007

We want happy coffee

I do not know about you, but I do not like having coffee with Karan Johar when he gets serious.
March 29, 2007

Dreaming about the next year already

There are five reasons why I wait for the New Year to come around: a fresh Oscar ceremony to look forward to, my birthday, the mango season, the monsoons and .....
March 27, 2007
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