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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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And, thank you for the music

At a Mumbai restaurant on karaoke night, bunches of grey-haired men leap up and belt out Neil Diamond’s greatest hits, with an occasional dip into the Eagles.
December 16, 2007

Fundamental right to take offence

We humans are bigots who discriminate against each other on some pretext or the other. Colour, gender, caste, race, religion — these are the big issues.
December 3, 2007

Tere mere beach mein...

Anyway, I haven’t been to Juhu Beach for ages and it’s not just because fat people cannot fit through the dividers to keep hawkers out.
November 29, 2007

Should I sax me up?

The one that is stuck in my head went, ‘Blue, blue my heart is true’ and I do not know if that is the name or the chorus or some random words or anything.
November 25, 2007

Why ‘campaigns’ to do routine work?

A visitor to this city remarked on how clean Bandra was — much to her surprise. Cities are dirty after all,so how did Bandra and the whole of Mumbai manage?
November 19, 2007

The big fight in the new Mumbai

This makes it a far cry from what it was for years – a failed satellite city attached to a throbbing metrop. This one. Amchi Mumbai.
November 15, 2007

A politically correct Diwali

Sure, there were sick, old, tired, pregnant people around and sure we all knew that our pets hated it, but in those more innocent times we were more callous without realising it.
November 8, 2007

Why are we selective in our civility?

As human beings who live in society there is a sort of dishonesty that is inherent in our dealings with each other. It is often innocuous and sometimes kind.
November 6, 2007

Liposuction is for dummies

Some folk built like this, some folk built like that/But the way I’m built, you shouldn’t call me fat/Because I’m built for comfort, I ain’t built for speed.
November 4, 2007

Stem the murkiness fast, lest...

Michael Llodra believes that he was one of the first tennis players to be approached to throw a match, when he received a phone call four years ago in his hotel room in Paris.
November 2, 2007

Glittering Mumbai by night

One of the most enduring clichés about flying into Mumbai is about the slums that overwhelm you and the bums that are all around them.
October 30, 2007

Power shift

You still hear those ancient beats - only this time it’s the people of Mumbai singing their hearts out for some reality talent contest or the other.
October 23, 2007

Mining the follies of political correctness

All Germans are precise, the English are exclusive and snooty and it’s all right to make fun of foreigners who do not understand your language or culture.
October 14, 2007
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