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Sunday, November 22, 2009

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Ranjona Banerji
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Ranjona Banerji’s introduction to journalism came when she attended and then dropped out of a mass comm course at a well-known Bombay institution. She learnt nothing except that the timing of the evening classes clashed with the hostel dinnertime. Before that realisation dawned, many vada-paos were eaten.

That was 1984. She also pursued her lifelong (four years’) dream of being a copywriter. An utter failure as a copywriter (no one told her it was about marketing even if the word “creative” was used fairly often), she stumbled into journalism via Bombay magazine, where her first job was to write headlines and captions. That dream job lasted about two months. Then the grindstone was presented to her and she spent the next few years as a sub-editor-cum-correspondent.

The grindstone never went away. Bombay magazine closed in 1991 and Banerji shifted to India Today for a while before joining Gentleman magazine, where she wrote about politics, books, gender issues, health, fashion, and anything else that had to be done, as well as columns on food and gender issues.

She joined Mid-Day, Mumbai’s most popular tabloid, in 1993 and worked in a number of areas in the newspaper in a variety of roles (features editor, in-charge of Sunday Mid-Day, columnist on serious and funny issues, the edit page, deputy editor of Mid-Day, and editor of Sunday Mid-Day). In 1997 she and Ayaz Memon, now DNA’s editor-at-large, co-wrote and edited a book on 50 years of Indian Independence.

In 2001, Banerji went to Ahmedabad as deputy resident editor of The Times of India, a month after the devastating earthquake of January 26. She was there right through the horrific riots. She left Ahmedabad in 2004 for a two-year sabbatical in Dehra Dun to write another book (which is almost there) and joined DNA in 2006 to work on the edit page. For almost a year she was also the paper’s city editor, before she shifted back to the edit page.

Banerji’s edit-page column is usually about religion and politics and being Indian; her city columns are observations about Mumbai.

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The vodka shaking, smooth, suave, slightly misogynistic, terribly snobbish and sexually, that’s what makes 007 more than a mere number.
November 11, 2006

C’mon baby, light my fire

Ranjona Banerji loves the sound and the fury of Diwali - the smells of cordite, gunpowder, things burning, charcoal tablets and so forth.
October 21, 2006

Where the Pope got it wrong

The Pope has a problem, undoubtedly. Christianity is losing its hold over the West and Catholicism is now strong only in South America and Asia.
October 7, 2006

Sofa it’s not been so good for me

How many people would you kill to become the owner of a red plush arm chair? Or would you kill yourself if someone suggested that you own such a thing?
August 26, 2006

No loving or longing in Mumbai

After Tuesday’s bomb blasts, and all the subsequent anger, breastbeating, talk of resilience, maybe it’s time for some plain speaking. Honesty.
July 15, 2006

Why men in shorts are such beauts

Many women feel widowed during the football season and book themselves into spas. This is the worst kind of escapism, writes Ranjona Banerji .
June 10, 2006

The unbearable conscience of Ms Roy

One of Arundhati Roy’s endearing characteristics is the naiveté she brings to all her causes. There is passion, there is intelligence, there is argument too.
May 27, 2006

Where’s Bombay gone?

Three years in dry Gujarat and another couple in Dehra Dun Ranjona Banerji returns and tries hard to locate that old city groove.
May 13, 2006

Let’s not talk about sex, baby

Here's a true confession: my parents have had sex. At least twice, to account for my sister and myself.
November 27, 2005

Tennis is more fun than cricket

Sports & pastime: Is the apparent big fight between (former?) cricket captain Sourav Ganguly and coach Greg Chappell, a front to hide the real issue?
October 29, 2005
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