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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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Ode to the sixteen-year-olds!

Malavika Sangghvi admits she just don’t understand sixteen-year-olds, but that does not stop her from adoring them!
December 26, 2006

God bless ye merry gentleman…

I do not know what it is about me but all major festivals — Christmas, New Year, Diwali, etc. — make me a little sad.
December 24, 2006

One too many

I wonder if you’ve begun to feel the same way too — but of late I’ve begun to recoil from the sense of too much of everything.
December 22, 2006

New Year Revolutions!

Show me a New Year resolution list-maker and I’ll point out at least three that are universally good and great — and unachievable.
December 19, 2006

Travelling in style!

How the rich travel has fascinated me and has been uppermost on my mind as I had an extraordinary insight in one instance.
December 17, 2006

She brought Reiki to India

Paula Horan, the lady universally acknowledged for introducing Reiki to India, is a wiry, red-haired woman of indeterminable age.
December 15, 2006

Lift Karade

Have any amongst you gentle readers had the following happen to you in an elevator? A) Been shot at. B) Been Kissed. C) Had sex. D) Met your future life partner.
December 12, 2006

When only your fishmonger smses you!

You know the height of modern-day angst? Receiving a single sms all Sunday — and that too from your fishmonger informing you of a fresh catch of prawns sold at a discount!
December 11, 2006

The fine art of restaurant etiquette

Each time I enter an eatery with someone whose restaurant etiquette is wanting I can feel the hairs on the back of my neck rise, along with my pressure.
December 8, 2006

Are we really sophisticated?

Today in our city we have visitors. Arriving from all over the country and in vast numbers they have traversed many miles in unimaginably harsh conditions to pay homage to their leader Babasaheb Ambedkar whose 50 death anniversary happens to be today.
December 5, 2006

And now, super luxury!

With Lamborghini’s showroom opening soon in Mumbai, is there any doubt that things are hotting up in the super luxury bracket?
December 3, 2006

Predicting the future

I have never been much of a believer in things like astrology, palmistry and numerology.
December 1, 2006

Are you a cynic or a sentimental?

Particularly provocative to a cynic are love, good deeds, Bollywood, anything New Age and compassion. Sentimentals believe in the best about other people, and often do so even when there's no reason to.
November 29, 2006
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