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The Sandip Roy Show Profile

The Sandip Roy Show

English, Cultural, 1 season, 147 episodes, 4 days, 2 hours, 51 minutes
About
What makes people tick? What are the stories they carry with them? In a world of shouting heads, veteran journalist, radio commentator and novelist Sandip Roy sits down to have real conversations about the fascinating world around us and the people who shape it. Catch these engaging interviews every other Sunday
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Krish Ashok busts myths about the Indian thali

Krish Ashok, the author of the bestselling book "The Masala Lab," has become hugely popular on social media as the man who demystifies the science behind our cooking. In this episode, he joins Sandip to debunk myths about the Indian thali.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
2/4/20241 hour, 1 minute, 34 seconds
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How colonial is our constitution? ft Arghya Sengupta

The provocatively titled book, "The Colonial Constitution," examines how we got the Constitution we did and argues that, despite being crafted by the individuals who secured India's independence, it ultimately embodies strong colonial influences.On the occassion of Republic Day, Sandip speaks to its author, Arghya Sengupta, who is the Research Director at Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
1/26/202452 minutes, 30 seconds
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Sanjay Patel on animating Indian myths for kids

For two decades, Sanjay Patel served as an animator and storyboard artist for Pixar, contributing to beloved films such as Ratatouille, Cars, and Toy Story 2. Notably, he also wrote and directed "Sanjay's Super Team," a short film released in 2015 that earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Short Film.In this episode, Sandip speaks to Patel, delving into his illustrious career, exploring how he drew inspiration from the Ramayana, discussing his response to criticism, and uncovering the factors that led him to pursue a career as an animator.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
12/31/202329 minutes, 15 seconds
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Is secularism still 'half-baked' in India? ft Rajeev Bhargava

What makes Indian secularism so unique? Why is it so often misunderstood? And what challenges does it face at the moment? In this episode, Sandip Roy speaks to Rajeev Bhargava, the Director of the Parekh Institute of Indian Thought at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, who addresses all this and more in his book, 'Reimagining Indian Secularism’.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed Suresh Pawar
12/17/202335 minutes, 17 seconds
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The pop stars leading Hindutva's cultural revolution ft Kunal Purohit

They could be the biggest pop stars you've never come across. Absent from your social media feed, yet integral to the pop culture consumed by millions. Meet some of Hindutva's prominent pop stars who say they are on a mission, spearheading a cultural revolution.In this episode, Sandip speaks to journalist Kunal Purohit who in his book, 'H-Pop: The Secretive World of Hindutva Pop Stars', profiles key figures in Hindutva Pop, and delves into the motivations behind the audience's consumption of their 'daily dose of bigotry'.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
12/3/202351 minutes, 27 seconds
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Does the BJP need Rahul Gandhi more than the Congress? ft Sugata Srinivasaraju

Even though Rahul Gandhi is the guardian of the Nehru-Gandhi holy flame, at times it seems that his real mission is to reinvent his own party. On the other hand, many supporters of his party feel that the real stumbling block to its reinvention is Rahul Gandhi himself, who neither wishes to renounce it nor lead it from the front with gusto.Joining host Sandip Roy in this episode is journalist and author Sugata Srinivasaraju, who explores the politics and predicaments of Rahul Gandhi in the book, Strange Burdens.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
11/19/202351 minutes, 1 second
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Sunil Pant and Nepal's lessons for India's LGBTI movement

After the Supreme Court’s disheartening verdict on same-sex marriage, it appears that we are still struggling to make progress in this regard. However, if we were to look just beyond our northern border, we would realise that Nepal is actually several steps ahead of India on this issue.In this episode, Sandip Roy speaks to Sunil Babu Pant, one of the country's best-known LGBTI activists, about the lessons that India can learn from Nepal.Hosted, written and produced by Sandip RoyEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
10/29/202336 minutes, 37 seconds
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Ujjal Dosanjh on the India-Canada tensions and the Khalistan gap

India-Canada relations are currently at an all-time low. And it all started after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau alleged active connections between agents of the Government of India and the killing of Canadian citizen Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a Pro-Khalistan leader.In this episode host Sandip Roy speaks to Ujjal Dosanjh, the former Premier of British Columbia and federal minister, to explore how this controversy is unfolding in Canada, what Trudeau aims to achieve through it, and why Khalistan is a ‘western’ movement now.Produced by Utsa Sarmin and Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
10/15/202341 minutes, 40 seconds
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Gautam Bhatia on the state of top courts under the Modi era

Over the past decade, India's top courts have presided over numerous landmark cases, including those related to Aadhar, Sabarimala, the Hijab row, anti-defection laws, privacy, Section 377, and the UAPA. While each of these cases holds significant importance individually, does a different narrative emerge when considering them collectively? In this episode, host Sandip Roy speaks to lawyer and constitutional scholar Gautam Bhatia regarding his latest book, 'Unsealed Covers,' and what the past decade of India's top court decisions reveals about the country's trajectory.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
10/1/202344 minutes, 45 seconds
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​​Does India have a women in science problem? ft Aashima Dogra and Nandita Jayaraj

When ISRO launched its Mars orbiter, it drew attention to the women working at the space agency. And the recent Chandrayaan-3 landing also celebrated this idea. However, the prestigious Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar prizes, which were announced after a one-year hiatus, had 12 winners, none of whom were women. It appears that something is amiss.In this episode, host Sandip Roy speaks with Aashima Dogra and Nandita Jayaraj, who have been profiling the stories of women and non-binary individuals in science in India through their website, thelifeofscience.com. Their recently released book, "Lab Hopping," reveals the obstacles these individuals face and their extraordinary efforts to rectify a seemingly broken system.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar(In the episode image: Indian Space Research Organization scientists and other officials cheer as they celebrate the success of Mars Orbiter Mission at their Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network complex in Bangalore.)
9/17/202350 minutes, 40 seconds
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Siddhartha Basu on taking India from Quiz Time to KBC

From hosting and producing popular shows like Quiz Time and Mastermind India to becoming the producer-director of Kaun Banega Crorepati (KBC), Siddhartha Basu is widely regarded as the father of Indian quizzing. In this episode, he talks to host Sandip Roy about his journey, how quizzing has evolved in the country, and what knowing the right answer means in the era of Google.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
9/3/202348 minutes, 51 seconds
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Shubhra Gupta on what makes a crossover star from Irrfan to Priyanka

With Priyanka Chopra starring in ‘Citadel’ (an American spy thriller TV series) and Alia Bhatt starring in ‘Heart of Stone’ (an American spy thriller film), has Bollywood finally made the crossover? Was Irrfan Khan India's first genuine crossover star? And in an era when stardom is increasingly becoming global, does it even matter?In this episode, host Sandip Roy is joined by Indian Express film critic and columnist Shubhra Gupta to discuss all of this and more, including her recently released book, ‘Irrfan: A Life in Movies.’Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
8/20/202343 minutes, 29 seconds
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Sudha Pai and Sajjan Kumar on the Dalit vote mystery in UP

There is a mystery surrounding Dalit politics in Uttar Pradesh. Over the past decade, the Bahujan Samaj Party's Dalit voter base appears to have been co-opted by the Bharatiya Janata Party, which is often perceived as an upper-caste Hindu party. Surprisingly, this shift has occurred despite the fact that atrocities against Dalits by the upper castes have not decreased in the state.In their new book titled 'Maya, Modi, Azad: Dalit Politics in the Time of Hindutva' authors Sudha Pai and Sajjan Kumar attempt to shed light on this conundrum. In this episode, Sandip Roy is joined by both of them to discuss the insights gained from their research for the book.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Abhishek Kumar
8/6/202355 minutes, 4 seconds
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Hansal Mehta on making Scoop and using characters to confront his demons

Filmmaker Hansal Mehta joins Sandip Roy to talk about his latest TV series, Scoop, which is based on journalist Jigna Vora's book 'Behind Bars in Byculla: My Days in Prison.' In the book, she shares her experience of being accused, arrested, and tried in court for journalist Jyotirmoy Dey’s killing, before ultimately being acquitted of all charges. During their discussion, they delve into the making of the show, the state of journalism, the differences between writing for a film and writing for OTT, and how Mehta confronts his demons through his characters.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
7/23/202337 minutes, 46 seconds
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Why laws have not ended caste violence in India, with Manoj Mitta

Even though we talk about caste through the lens of politics, reportage, and even personalities, the intersection of caste and law is often overlooked. Even though it is the law that has been used again and again as the main weapon in the fight for social equality.In this episode, Sandip Roy talks to journalist Manoj Mitta, who in his latest book 'Caste Pride: Battles for Equality in Hindu India' examines the resilience and violence of the Hindu caste system through the legal lens, and ends up uncovering the controversies and decisions that have shaped the fight against caste.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
7/9/202348 minutes, 37 seconds
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Hoshang Merchant, still a poster-boy for gay liberation at 75

In this special Pride Month episode, Sandip interviews Hoshang Merchant, a poet and writer who has never been shy about discussing love, sex, and religion. Born in 1947, Merchant has led a life that has taken him across the globe, from Mumbai to Los Angeles, and from Heidelberg to Jerusalem. In 1999, he edited the pioneering anthology of gay writing from South Asia titled ‘Yaaraan.’ Additionally, he has authored multiple books, including the autobiographical fiction under the title ‘The Man Who Would Be Queen.’In this candid conversation, Merchant talks about his experiences of growing up gay, reinventing love at 75, his thoughts on the same sex marriage debate, and more.This episode contains the use of explicit language and adult themes. Listener discretion is advised.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
6/25/202337 minutes, 50 seconds
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Angela Saini on why there is nothing ‘natural’ about patriarchy

Patriarchy seems like an entrenched fact today, and many argue that it is the 'natural' order of things. But is it? What do we really know about its roots? How did male domination spread across different societies and cultures? And what can science, history and archaeology tell us about it? These are the questions that science writer Angela Saini explores in her latest book, The Patriarchs: How Men Came to Rule.In this episode, she joins Sandip Roy to talk about what she found out while looking to answer these questions, and the role we play in keeping Patricharial structures alive.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
6/11/202352 minutes, 48 seconds
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Ujjal Dosanjh on how Canada became a haven for Khalistanis

From taking on the Khalistan movement in Canada, and surviving an assassination attempt, to discussing multiculturalism (and why it is a double edged sword) and caste in Sikhism, in this episode Sandip Roy speak to Ujjal Dosanjh, the former Premier of British Columbia and federal minister — the first person of Indian origin to lead a government in the west.In this conversation, Dosanjh speaks about meeting the Sikh militant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, how Canada became a haven for Khalistanis, and his novel, The Past is Never Dead, that tells the story of a rural Punjabi family in search of a better life, and the ‘stranglehold of caste over Sikh immigrants in Britain.’Produced by Shashank Bhargava and Utsa SarminEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
5/28/202349 minutes, 13 seconds
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Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni on why a world without villains might be scarier

In this episode, host Sandip Roy interviews bestselling author Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni about her latest novel ‘Independence’, which tells the story of three sisters who are separated after the Partition of Bengal. They discuss her approach to storytelling, why women are the central focus of her work, her beginnings as a writer, and her belief that (for the most part) there are no villains in the world.Produced by Shashank Bhargava Edited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
5/14/202350 minutes, 18 seconds
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Writing Dalits back into history, with Yogesh Maitreya

In this episode, Sandip Roy speaks to Dalit poet and publisher Yogesh Maitreya and discusses his memoir Water in a Broken Pot, the experiences that led him to becoming a writer, and why he places his hope on the power of literature.Maitreya also speaks candidly about his beginnings, the alienation that Dalits often feel in academic spaces, and the pervasive nature of caste in Indian society and how it affects us all.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Abhishek Kumar
4/30/202350 minutes, 40 seconds
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Nilanjana Bhowmick on why men prefer wives in cages and daughters to fly

In her book, Lies Our Mothers Told Us, writer and journalist Nilanjana Bhowmick talks about how middle-class homes can be a laboratory for patriarchy, and the burden that women have to bear in India. In this episode, she joins Sandip Roy to talk about what inspired her to write the book, fighting patriarchy at home, the lack of women in public spaces, a possible solution to break the cycle of caregiving burden, and much more.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
4/16/202346 minutes, 35 seconds
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Nilanjana Roy on writing crime, eating books, and falling for Delhi

Writer and journalist Nilanjana Roy's new novel, Black River, is a police procedural set in a dusty little town in Northern India that revolves around the horrendous murder of an eight year old girl. In this episode, she joins Sandip Roy to talk about writing the book, why she likes killing in print, her adventures in reading, her advice for budding writers, and why Delhi is kinder than you think.(Episode image credit: Gauri Gill)Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
4/2/202357 minutes, 53 seconds
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The documentary won, when will our elephants? ft Vivek Menon and Alok Gupta

What is the actual state of elephants in India? How many of them are currently in captivity, and what are the reasons for that? And what challenges do conservationists face in trying to help them? After the recent Oscar win of The Elephant Whisperers, Vivek Menon and Alok Hisarwala Gupta join Sandip Roy to answer these questions, and talk about the extent to which a documentary like this helps the conservation cause.Vivek Menon is the Founder Trustee & Executive Director, Wildlife Trust of India. Alok Hisarwala Gupta is a lawyer and founder of the Centre for Wildlife Rehabilitation and Conservation.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and Mixed by Suresh Pawar
3/19/202343 minutes, 7 seconds
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Manil Suri on how mathematics saved his life

The literary world may know him as the author of books like The Death of Vishnu, and The Age of Shiva, but Manil Suri is also a professor of mathematics at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. And in his latest book, The Big Bang of Numbers, he writes about creating the universe in seven days using only maths. In this episode, he joins Sandip Roy to talk about the book, how maths helped save his life, why it is hard to teach it, and the time he danced to 'Piya Tu Ab Toh Aaja'.Also, listen till the end for an audio postcard about the 150th anniversary of Calcutta's trams.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed bby Abhishek Kumar(Manil Suri's photograph by José Villarrubia)
3/5/202355 minutes, 44 seconds
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Timepass or subversion? Ira Bhaskar and Ghazala Wahab on Pathaan's politics

Why did Pathaan become such a success? Is it just an action film or a 'daring act of subversion'? And what does it say about the role of Muslims in Hindi films? In this episode, host Sandip Roy talks to Professor Ira Bhaskar, and author Ghazala Wahab about the depiction of Muslims in Hindi cinema, and how it changed over the years according to the changing politics of the country.Ira Bhaskar is Professor, Cinema Studies, School of Arts and Aesthetics, Jawaharlal Nehru University. And Ghazala Wahab is executive editor, FORCE, and the author of the award winning book, 'Born A Muslim: Some Truths About Islam In India'.Produced by Shashank Bhargava and Utsa SarminEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
2/19/202355 minutes, 47 seconds
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Why Shobhaa De Remains Insatiable at 75

In this episode, host Sandip Roy talks to the novelist and columnist Shobhaa De about her recently released memoir 'Insatiable' — from her early modelling career and how she developed her writing style, to her past controversies and her reaction to Pathaan.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
2/5/202347 minutes, 46 seconds
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No country for the elderly, with Himanshu Rath and Indira Jai Prakash

Who is taking care of India’s elderly? UN statistics project that 48 million Indians will be over the age of 80 by 2050. That’s more than the population of California. But is India ready for that? In this episode, host Sandip Roy speaks to Himanshu Rath and Indira Jayaprakash about the lack of elderly care facilities in the country, the issue of accessibility and the impact of Covid, changing family dynamics, and economic concerns.Himanshu Rath is the founder and chairman of Agewell Foundation Himanshu Rath, and Indira Jai Prakash is the former Professor of Post Graduate Department of Psychology, Bangalore University, who has researched ageing for years in India.Produced by Shashank Bhargava and Utsa SarminEdited and mixed by Abhishek Kumar and Suresh Pawar
1/22/202354 minutes, 32 seconds
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P Sainath on the freedom fighters India forgot

In this episode, Sandip is joined by veteran journalist and the founding editor of People’s Archives of Rural India (PARI) to talk about his book, The Last Heroes: Foot Soldiers of Indian Freedom, which tells the incredible stories of freedom fighters who still have not been recognized for their contribution and struggle.Episode image credit: Bharat TiwariProduced by Shashank Bhargava and Utsa SarminEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
1/8/202352 minutes, 13 seconds
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50 shades of Christmas in India, with Jerry Pinto and Madhulika Liddle

In a new anthology titled, Indian Christmas, writers Jerry Pinto and Madhulika Liddle bring together essays that capture the many unique flavors of an Indian Christmas — from a village in Nagaland, to Bow Barrack in Kolkata, and from churches to Goa to even rural Jharkhand. In this episode, they join host Sandip Roy to talk about what is really unique about Christmas in India.(Cover image of Jerry Pinto by Ashima Narain)Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and Mixed by Suresh Pawar
12/25/202256 minutes, 33 seconds
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What Indian languages say about who we are, with Peggy Mohan

What makes Indian languages different from other ones? We all know about a mother tongue, but is there also a father tongue? Why did invaders from Uzbekistan bring us Persian? And will English cannibalise every other language or is the future of Indian languages something like Hinglish or Nagamese? In this episode, host Sandip Roy talks to Peggy Mohan about her book, 'Wanderers, Kings, Merchants', which tells the story of India by digging into India's languages.Peggy Mohan has taught linguistics at Jawaharlal Nehru University and Jamia Millia Islamia, and is the author of three novels.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and mixed by Suresh Pawar
12/11/202254 minutes, 3 seconds
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Why Mallika Sarabhai isn't shy of taking the alternative path

11/27/202253 minutes, 49 seconds
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Changing the way we talk to kids about sex, with Reema Ahmad and Ramya Anand

When it comes to sex education, there are many questions that don't have easy answers. Like, who should do it? Should it be parents or schools? And when should you do it? And should it just be about the reproductive system or infections or abstinence? Or should it also include pleasure? In this episode, host Sandip Roy talks to Reema Ahmed and Ramya Anand who have been trying to figure out the answers to these questions in the Indian context.Reema Ahmad is a life coach, sexuality educator, and the author of 'Unparenting: Sharing Awkward Truths with Curious Kids'. And Ramya Anand is a Senior Programme Officer with Tarshi (Talking About Reproductive and Sexual Health Issues), a not-for-profit organisation that works on issues of sexuality.Produced by Shashank BhargavaEdited and Mixed by Suresh Pawar
11/13/202251 minutes, 45 seconds
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How safe are the drugs we take, with Dinesh Thakur

The Gambian cough syrup tragedy in which 66 children died has once again raised alarm about India's drug regulation policy. But was Gambia just one rotten apple? Or this apple cart itself full of loopholes? In this episode Dinesh Thakur, who became famous as a whistleblower against Ranbaxy, joins Sandip Roy to talk about his book The Truth Pill (co-written by Prashant Reddy) which looks at the state of drug regulation in India, and whether we actually get what we ordered when we buy medicines in India.
10/30/202250 minutes, 9 seconds
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Kuch meetha ho jaye, with Rajyasree Sen

With Diwali around the corner, columnist and host of the Awful and Awesome podcast Rajyasree Sen joins Sandip Roy to talk about her latest book, The Sweet Kitchen, which includes tales and recipes of India's favourite desserts — from Daulat ki Chaat in Old Delhi to Black Rice Kheer from Manipur, to Sawdust pudding from Goa and sweet hot debates like who does the Rasgulla really belong to.Listen till the end as Rajyasree takes part in a rapid fire, and Sandip brings you an audio postcard about the economic and environmental impact of Durga Puja.
10/16/202252 minutes, 32 seconds
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Gopalkrishna Gandhi on how Bengal shaped the Mahatma

Even though Mahatma Gandhi is one of the most well known figures in Indian history, for many, especially the young, he has become a bit of a two dimensional figure. Someone who helped us get independence from the British, but also someone whose face is on the currency notes, and who has a lot of streets named after him. Though it is only when we read his letters to friends, family and opponents, or their accounts of encounters with him, we get a much more three dimensional picture of the Mahatma. Recently, his grandson, Gopalkrishna Gandhi, the former governor of West Bengal, has compiled and edited, A Frank Friendship, that brings out these details. The book is about the Mahatma's long history with Bengal, a state that brought him great joy, but also tested his life's philosophy. On the occasion of the 153rd anniversary of the Mahatma's birth, he joins host Sandip Roy to talk about the book, and how the state shaped the father of the nation.
10/2/202251 minutes, 33 seconds
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Shaili Chopra on why every woman doesn't need to be Indra Nooyi

Is the female CEO the only model for female empowerment? To what extent are women still split down the middle when it comes to home and work? And what does success, independence, and agency mean to women today? These are some of the questions that Shaili Chopra, the founder of SheThePeople.TV, tackles in her book, Sisterhood Economy. In this episode, she joins Sandip to talk about the book, what she found out while researching for it, and why there needs to be a generation of unlikeable women.
9/18/202255 minutes, 35 seconds
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Rohini Nilekani on why India's wealthy need to do more to boost civil society

At a time when the government and the marketplace have assumed enormous power over our lives and choices, Rohini Nilekani argues that now is the time for civil societies to be boosted, and that India’s wealth creators need to do more about it. In this episode, she joins host Sandip Roy to discuss her latest book, ‘Samaaj, Sarkaar, Bazaar’, in which she talks about the need for a balance between these three sectors.Nilkani has been associated with several civil society movements, and has been a founding member of organisations such as Pratham Books, and EkStep Foundation.
9/4/202243 minutes, 19 seconds
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Rahul Sagar on the 19th century debates to make India great again

In his latest book, To Raise A Fallen People, Rahul Sagar points out that the debates around what role India should play on the world stage started way back in the 19th century. This was the time when public figures were questioning the kind of power India should be, what lessons it needs to learn from Europe, and the kind of economy it should have going forward.In this episode, Sagar, Global Network Associate Professor of Political Science at NYU Abu Dhabi, joins host Sandip Roy to talk about these debates, and what they reveal about our past and present.
8/21/202253 minutes, 33 seconds
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The unanswered questions about the Cheetah Project, with Ravi Chellam and Prerna Bindra

In 1952, the cheetah was officially declared extinct in India. Now, the animal, albeit a different subspecies, might be set for a comeback - not in the wild, but to Kuno National Park, Madhya Pradesh. Wildlife conservationists in India, though, are in no rush to welcome the cheetah home. In this episode, eminent conservationists Ravi Chellam and Prerna Bindra join host Sandip Roy to discuss the scientific, logical and ethical concerns around this move, and most importantly, whether the Asiatic lion will be paying the price for it.
8/7/202242 minutes, 22 seconds
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Seema Chishti on love, food and the challenges of diversity

Journalist Seema Chishti's mother, Sumitra, wrote a cookbook so that she could pass down recipes from their rather unique kitchen - a kitchen which was shared by Sumitra, who was a Kshatriya Hindu from Mysore in Karnataka, and her husband Anees, a Syed Muslim from Deoria in Uttar Pradesh. Now, in her new book, Sumitra and Anees, Chishti includes recipes from her mother's cookbook and tells the story of her parents and their marriage. In this episode, she joins Sandip Roy to talk about the book, why she chose to write it, and the increasing demonization of interfaith relationships.
7/24/202247 minutes, 9 seconds
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Vauhini Vara imagines how a Dalit CEO shapes an algorithm to rule the world

Journalist Vauhini Vara's debut novel, The Immortal King Rao, has been making waves because it marries a vision of technocapitalism with caste. The book imagines a Dalit man who escapes the coconut plantations of his childhood to live the American dream and creates a company that rules the world via an algorithm. In this episode, she joins host Sandip Roy to talk about the book, caste discrimination, and what she has learned about America's tech sector while reporting on it.
7/10/202238 minutes, 44 seconds
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Pride Month Special: A lesbian couple about life and love in India

Even though the Pride Month is now embraced across India, its coverage mostly focuses on gay men and sometimes transgender women activists. But lesbians seem to be largely missing from this coverage and conversation. So in this special episode, host Sandip Roy talks to a lesbian couple, Rituparna Borah and Amrita Tripathi, living in Delhi to understand whether lesbian lives have changed since Pride became more celebrated and 'cool' in India.
6/26/202251 minutes, 23 seconds
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The untold story of a slave rebellion in UP, with Laura T Murphy

In this episode, Sandip Roy speaks to Laura T Murphy, professor of human rights and contemporary slavery at Sheffield Hallam University. They speak about the people still living in modern day slavery, the role of violence in overthrowing oppression, and her new book, ‘Azad Nagar: The Story of a 21st-Century Slave Revolt’.
6/12/202244 minutes, 10 seconds
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Ramachandra Guha on 7 original 'anti-nationals' who fought the British

At a time when nationalism and patriotism are increasingly conflated, historian Ramachandra Guha's latest book, Rebels Against The Raj, tells the story of seven remarkable westerners who went to jail or were expelled from the country for rebelling against the British. They were in today's parlance 'anti-nationals'. In this episode, host Sandip Roy is joined by Ramachandra Guha to talk about the book, and discuss these magnificent seven.
5/29/202240 minutes, 7 seconds
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Estimating India's real Covid death toll, with Dr Bhramar Mukherjee

Data scientist Dr Bhramar Mukherjee joins host Sandip Roy to talk about the challenges of estimating India's real Covid death toll.
5/15/202248 minutes, 24 seconds
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Aparna Piramal Raje on living (and thriving) with bipolar disorder

The pandemic has been tough on many of us, but for those with mental health problems, it's been even tougher. Former CEO of BP Ergo, and columnist Aparna Piramal Raje has had to deal with Bipolar disorder during this time, and which she talks about in her book, Chemical Khichdi: How I Hacked My Mental Health. While it has been hailed as a brief coming out story, it is also a handbook for those struggling with mental health issues. In this episode, she joins host Sandip Roy to talk about it.
5/1/202239 minutes, 49 seconds
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100th Episode Special – Usha Uthup on her unique musical journey

On this show’s 100th episode, host Sandip Roy is joined by the iconic pop singer Usha Ushup as she takes a trip down memory lane, remembering her unique musical journey so far, recounting her experience of working in the Indian film industry, giving us a peek at her talent for mimicry, and discussing her authorized biography, The Queen of Pop by Vikas Kumar Jha. Do stay with us till the end of the episode for a very special surprise for our listeners, from the legend herself!
4/17/202257 minutes, 35 seconds
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Making sense of India’s Ukraine strategy, with Krishnan Srinivasan

After five weeks of the Russian invasion of Ukraine not going as planned, what end game does Vladimir Putin have in mind? How well can India continue to walk the tight diplomatic rope? And how will this crisis reshape the geo-political chess game? In this episode, host Sandip Roy is joined by retired diplomat, historian, and former Indian Foreign Secretary Krishnan Srinivasan to answer these questions and more.
4/3/202243 minutes, 51 seconds
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Saeed Naqvi on why Hindutva needs the Indian Muslim

In veteran journalist Saeed Naqvi’s play, The Muslim Vanishes, overnight everyone Muslim, and everyone thing deemed Muslim in the country, suddenly vanishes into thin air. This leads to consequences that no one could have foreseen, including problems for those who wanted Muslims to vanish from public life. In this episode, Naqvi joins Sandip Roy to talk about his sardonic play, why the hindutva project needs the Muslim community, the results of the UP elections, the recent Hijab ruling, and more.
3/19/202246 minutes, 4 seconds
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How Delhi’s street names reveal its history, with Adrija Roychowdhury

Journalist Adrija Roychowdhury joins Sandip Roy to speak about her new book, 'Delhi in Thy Name' which traces the history of the capital city through the naming of its streets. She delves into six neighborhoods of Delhi to trace the different trajectories and expressions of the past. She identifies Mughal influences in Chandini Chowk, the remnants of British colonialism in Connaught Place, and migration and partition histories in CR Park and Pamposh enclave.
3/6/202245 minutes, 11 seconds
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Using SRK to understand womanhood and the Indian economy, with Shrayana Bhattacharya

Shrayana Bhattacharya is trained in development economics and is currently working at a multilateral development bank. But, to the surprise of many around her, she spent the last 15 years interviewing women who are Shah Rukh Khan fans. And she did this, to understand the Indian economy. Her book, Desperately Seeking Shah Rukh, details her research and reveals an emotional map of the economy. In this episode, she joins Sandip Roy to discuss what she found, and what the SRK fandom can teach us about womanhood.
2/20/202252 minutes, 31 seconds
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What we don’t understand about India’s data, with Rukmini S

We often use data to understand India and its problems. Be it data about unemployment, how we vote, what crimes we commit, and even who we choose to love. But data journalist Rukmini S' new book, Whole Numbers and Half Truths, talks about how we use numbers to make sense of all this, without realising that data can be misleading or that we might be misreading it. In this episode, she joins host Sandip Roy to discuss India's problem with data.
2/6/202245 minutes, 16 seconds
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A New Election Series by The Indian Express

You can listen to the series at:3 Things - https://bit.ly/34jEQbpExpress Elections - https://bit.ly/3gvzDQ1
2/5/20221 minute, 5 seconds
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Johann Hari on how our attention is being stolen

A lot of us can relate to the idea that increasingly, we are finding it harder to focus and are more distracted. Many blame themselves and their smartphones for shorter attention spans, but a new book claims that there is another reason why we can’t pay attention the way we used to. In this episode, best-selling author Johann Hari speaks to Sandip about his new book, Stolen Focus, in which he writes about how we have profoundly misunderstood what’s happening to our attention, and calls for an attention rebellion.Episode image credit: Kathrin Baumbach
1/23/202257 minutes, 2 seconds
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Mridula Ramesh on what it would take to solve India's water crisis

How bad is India's water crisis? What has led us to this place? And what can be done to solve it? In this episode, Sandip is joined by Mridula Ramesh to talk about India's groundwater crisis. From the Indus Valley civilisation, to British policies that still affect us, Ramesh tells us about all that has caused India's grave water crisis.Ramesh is the author of the new book, Watershed: How We Destroyed India's Water and How We Can Save It. She is founder of the Sundaram Climate Institute, which focuses on waste and water solutions.
1/9/202248 minutes, 6 seconds
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Why eating insects makes sense, with Srishtaa Aparna Pallavi and Tansha Vohra

The United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation has said that eating insects can help us fight hunger and malnutrition. This is considering they are rich in protein, and farming them can be more sustainable and environment-friendly. Now, even though the idea can invoke disgust, perhaps even shame, in many people, insects have been part of the human diet for centuries.In this episode, host Sandip Roy is joined by Srishtaa Aparna Pallavi and Tansha Vohra to talk about the past, present and future of eating insects in India. They discuss what insects are the most popular as food, why certain foods are considered inferior, the concerns around popularizing this practice, and their favourite insect recipes. Shrishta Aparna Pallavi, writes about indigenous people and their traditions and foods, and has given an acclaimed TED talk on what food our ancestors loved.Tansha Vohra is a permaculture designer, and runs the Boochi project, which explores insect eating in India.
12/26/202142 minutes, 15 seconds
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Amitav Ghosh on whether a climate apocalypse is inevitable

Are all countries obliged to tighten their belts equally for the sake of climate change? Based on our current efforts, have we reached a point of no return? And do we need a new narrative to change that? In this episode, Sandip Roy is joined by Jnanpith award winner and writer Amitav Ghosh to answer these questions, and to talk about his latest book, The Nutmeg's Curse: Parables for a Planet in Crisis.Also in the end, an audio postcard from Shillong.
12/12/202136 minutes, 35 seconds
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How Nehru debated his adversaries, with Adeel Hussain and Tripurdaman Singh

In their latest book, Nehru: The Debates that Defined India, Adeel Hussain and Tripurdaman Singh look at four men debated the first Prime Minister – Muhammad Iqbal, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, Sardar Patel and Syama Prasad Mookerjee – and how theses exchanges came to shape India as we know it today. In this episode, they both join Sandip to discuss what they found out during their research, and what we can learn from these debates.Adeel Hussain is an assistant professor at Leiden University and a senior research affiliate at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg. And Tripurdaman Singh is a British Academy postdoctoral fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London.
11/28/202148 minutes, 33 seconds
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Josy Joseph on how India's deep state is threatening our democracy

What is ailing India's democratic institutions today? – This question is at the heart of investigative journalist Josy Joseph's latest book, The Silent Coup: A History of India's Deep State. In this episode, host Sandip Roy talks to him about it, along with how the deep state threatens our democracy, and what has led us to this place.
11/14/202143 minutes, 54 seconds
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Rethinking the Indian Monsoon, with Dr Sulochana Gadgil

The arrival of the monsoon is always big news in India. But its drama and romance is also accompanied by anxiety and tension, especially now, with the rains growing more erratic, and some places getting less of it while others experience floods and cloudbursts. In this episode, Sandip speaks to one of the world's foremost monsoon meteorologists, Dr Sulochana Gadgil about the myths and realities surrounding the monsoons. Dr Gadgil was with the Centre for Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences at the Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru.
10/31/202147 minutes, 33 seconds
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The battles of India's first women in medicine, with Kavitha Rao

While it isn’t unusual to have women doctors in India now, and the rise of women in the medical field seems to have been steady, the road that led us to this place wasn’t easy. India’s first "lady doctors" battled everything from unsupportive husbands and over supportive husbands to widowhood, caste rules, and divorce. Kavitha Rao’s new book, ‘Lady Doctors’ tells the inspiring stories of these women, and the battles they fought. She joins Sandip in this episode to talk about it.
10/17/202150 minutes, 49 seconds
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What we don't understand about Gandhi's non-violence, with Jyotirmaya Sharma

Mahatma Gandhi is known around the world as the apostle of non-violence, but what did his insistence on ahimsa actually mean for him? In this episode, Sandip talks to Jyotirmaya Sharma, professor of political science at the University of Hyderabad, about his new book – Elusive Nonviolence: The Making and Unmaking of Gandhi’s Religion of Ahimsa. They discuss what influenced Gandhi’s idea of non-violence, why the Hindu community largely rejected his ideals, whether he actually believed in equality and diversity, what has survived of his ideas, and more.
10/3/202137 minutes, 38 seconds
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How alternate realities really work (beyond Whatsapp forwards)

How does information warfare shape our realities? Has the problem of alternate realities worsened now? Does fake news or Whatsapp forwards create the problem or only add to it? And to what extent does fact-checking help?In this episode, Shivam Shankar Singh and Anand Venkatanarayanan join Sandip to answer these questions and talk about their book, 'The Art of Conjuring Alternate Realities: How Information Warfare Shapes Your World'.
9/19/202144 minutes, 9 seconds
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The story of India through 100 objects, with Vidya Dehejia

In this episode, Sandip talks to Vidya Dehejia, Barbara Stoler Miller Professor of Indian and South Asian Art at Columbia University, about her latest book, India: A Story through 100 Objects.
9/5/202150 minutes, 48 seconds
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What a Pak-China-Afghan axis will mean for India, with C Raja Mohan

What leverage points does the international community have over the Taliban right now? In what way does the situation in Afghanistan affect India? And what will a Pak-China-Afghan axis mean for India?In this episode, Sandip Roy talks to Professor C Raja Mohan about the ongoing crisis in Afghanistan, and its implications for India.Professor Mohan is the Director of the Institute of South Asian Studies at National University of Singapore, and is also a contributing editor on foreign affairs for The Indian Express.
8/22/202134 minutes, 7 seconds
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Shahrukh, Aamir, Salman: How the 3 Khans changed India, with Kaveree Bamzai

How have the three Khans of Bollywood helped shape how Indians see themselves? How have their characters helped us grapple with a changing India? How have they negotiated their religious identities on screen? And is the age of the Khans finally over?In this episode, Sandip talks to veteran journalist Kaveree Bamzai about all this and more, along with her latest book, 'The Three Khans: And the Emergence of New India'.
8/8/202142 minutes, 19 seconds
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An intimate history of a changing Kashmir, with Farah Bashir

How does the conflict-ridden state of Kashmir affect the everyday lives of people? How does the trauma get processed? And what stories get lost in the usual reportage of the area? In this episode Sandip talks to author Farah Bashir about her memoir 'Rumours of Spring', which is an intimate history of Kashmir told through the eyes of a young girl.
7/25/202141 minutes, 31 seconds
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80: How China spun the COVID-19 narrative, with Manoj Kewalramani

Manoj Kewalramani on whether China has successfully spun the Covid-19 narrative to its advantage, and his latest book Smokeless War: China's Quest for Geopolitical Dominance.
7/11/202144 minutes, 38 seconds
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79: Chinmay Tumbe on what we can learn from past pandemics

Sandip Roy talks to Chinmay Tumbe about the pandemics India has witnessed in the past, how they changed the country, and what we can learn from them.
6/27/202143 minutes, 26 seconds
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78: Nik Sharma on the science of taste and why we like the things we do

Chef Nik Sharma breaks down the science of taste, talks about the joy of cooking, and discusses his latest book – The Flavor Equation.
6/13/202142 minutes, 18 seconds
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77: Dr Gagandeep Kang addresses the concerns around India's vaccine policy

In this episode, Sandip talks to Dr Gagandeep Kang, who addresses the concerns around India’s vaccine policy.
5/30/202144 minutes, 33 seconds
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76: Ghazala Wahab on what it means to be an 'Indian Muslim' today

Discussing the the changing face of Indian Islam, and what it really means to be an ‘Indian Muslim’ today.
5/16/202140 minutes, 47 seconds
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75: Sharmila Tagore remembers Satyajit Ray on his 100th birth anniversary

Renowned actor Sharmila Tagore joins Sandip to celebrate this occasion, take a look back at his films, and talk about what made him stand apart from others.
5/2/20211 hour, 1 minute, 27 seconds
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74: Memories of food and what's missing on our plate, with Anumitra Dastidar and Shalini Krishan

Sandip talks to the co-founder of Edible Archives, a restaurant-cum-research centre in Goa that is spearheading a new way to think about food memory and food heritage.
4/18/202138 minutes, 47 seconds
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73: The conundrum of BJP's meteoric rise in Bengal, with Neelanjan Sircar and Sajjan Kumar

In this episode, Sandip is joined by political analyst Sajjan Kumar and Neelajan Sircar, assistant professor of political science at Ashoka University, to talk about the West Bengal state polls 2021.
4/4/202147 minutes, 44 seconds
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72: Anuja Chauhan on the pleasures of murder and perils of romance

Anuja Chauhan joins Sandip to talk about her new novel, the politics of Delhi (and Bangalore) clubs, the perils of writing romance in the time of ‘love-jihad’, and more.
3/21/202133 minutes, 52 seconds
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71: What's next for Bihar after Lalu and Nitish? – with Santosh Singh

Sandip talks to Indian Express' Associate Editor Santosh Singh about what Bihar politics will look like after Nitish Kumar, Lalu Prasad's lasting impact on the state, and his latest book – JP to BJP: Bihar After Lalu and Nitish.
3/7/202129 minutes, 26 seconds
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70: Stephen Alter on what Uttarakhand tells us about fragility of Himalaya

Author Stephen Alter on what the history of Himalaya can tell us about the present, lessons we can learn from past disasters, and his latest book ‘Wild Himalaya’.
2/21/202144 minutes, 29 seconds
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69: Dr Gagandeep Kang on the mystery of India's declining COVID numbers

In this episode, microbiologist Dr Gagandeep Kang and Sandip Roy discuss why South Asian and Sub-Saharan countries have shown higher seropositivity than the West, why vaccinations are necessary but not enough and the pressing need for more clinical research.
2/7/202139 minutes, 41 seconds
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68: Harsh Mander on how India's Covid strategy forgot its most vulnerable

Social activist Harsh Mander on how the pandemic has impacted the country's most vulnerable, his own harrowing experience of getting COVID-19, and his latest book Locking Down the Poor: The Pandemic and India’s Moral Centre.
1/24/202133 minutes, 54 seconds
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67: The A to Z of ghosts and monsters of India, with Rakesh Khanna

Rakesh Khanna, the founder of Blaft Publications, talks about his new book which is an encyclopedia of ‘Ghosts, Monsters and Demons of India’.
1/10/202139 minutes, 20 seconds
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66: Why the BJP keeps winning, with Vinay Sitapati

Political scientist Dr Vinay Sitapati talks to Sandip about this latest book, Jugalbandi: The BJP before Modi.
12/27/202052 minutes, 21 seconds
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65: Dr Shashi Tharoor on the gap between nationalism and patriotism in India

Dr Shashi Tharoor on who does nationalism really mean in the Indian context, and how it is different from patriotism.
12/13/202042 minutes, 40 seconds
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64: Why India's better placed to do a huge vaccine roll-out than most other countries, according to Dr Giridhar R Babu

Sandip speaks with epidemiologist Dr Giridhar R Babu about the great vaccine race, and whether millions of COVID-19 infections are being undercounted.
11/29/202037 minutes, 48 seconds
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63: The fascinating career of the actor and fitness icon, Mandira Bedi

Sandip talks to Mandira about her career, how she has reinvented herself over the years, and her memoir, Happy For No Reason.
11/15/202036 minutes, 20 seconds
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62: Why life won't go back to normal even after a COVID-19 vaccine, with Dr Gagandeep Kang

Sandip talks to Dr Gagandeep Kang about what we’re really looking for in a COVID-19 vaccine, and clears up some burning coronavirus concerns.
11/1/202039 minutes, 16 seconds
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61: The untold story of the unraveling of Parveen Babi's mind, with Karishma Upadhyay

Sandip talks to author Karishma Upadhyay about her new book on Parveen Babi, the glamorous star whose life was turned upside down by her mental health struggles, and discusses how far we've come, or not come, since then.
10/18/202046 minutes, 19 seconds
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60: Romila Thapar on dissent in India from Vedic Brahmanism to Shaheen Bagh

Historian Romila Thapar on the history of dissent in India – from Vedic Brahmanism to Shaheen Bagh.
10/4/202042 minutes, 9 seconds
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59: SSR case and why India's drug laws are out of date, with Ronny Sen

Award winning photographer and filmmaker, Ronny Sen on the questions we should be asking about drug addiction and the issues that India's drug laws fail to address.
9/20/202037 minutes, 58 seconds
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58: Apurva Asrani on whether Bollywood has changed 2 years after the 377 verdict

National Award winning film editor and writer Apurva Asrani on why he has been overwhelmed by the changes he has seen in Bollywood since the Section 377 verdict was announced two years back.
9/6/202046 minutes, 50 seconds
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57: Comic books as art, protests and propaganda, with Paul Gravett

Sandip speaks to Paul Gravett, the world's foremost comic book authorities, about the unique power of comic books to absorb and reflect cultures.
8/23/202037 minutes, 29 seconds
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56: How to overcome anxiety in the middle of this pandemic, with Dr Sonali Gupta

In this episode, Sandip talk to clinical psychologist Dr Sonali Gupta about how to cope with anxiety during this pandemic and her book, 'Anxiety: Overcome It and Live without Fear'.
8/9/202042 minutes, 5 seconds
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55: The Cisco case and how Indians took casteism to the US, with Thenmozhi Soundararajan

In the latest episode of the Sandip Roy Show, Dalit activist Thenmozhi Soundararajan talks about how the Cisco case highlights the problem of caste discrimination in the US.
7/26/202036 minutes, 51 seconds
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54: What the Tiktok ban means for young India, with Snigdha Poonam

In this episode, Sandip talks to journalist Snigdha Poonam about what made TikTok different from other social media apps, how it affected the lives of young Indians, and why it has been a cultural phenomenon.
7/12/202041 minutes, 26 seconds
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53: What India's environment ministry's been doing while we were preoccupied with COVID-19, with Kanchi Kohli

In this episode, Sandip talks to Kanchi Kohli, senior researcher at Center for Policy Research (CPR), about how the pandemic has affected the way the ministry has been taking decisions and changing the fundamentals of the environment assessments process.
6/28/202036 minutes, 50 seconds
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52: Angela Saini on Black Lives Matter and how 'race science' helped harden discrimination

In this episode, Sandip talks to award-winning science writer Angela Saini, whose latest book Superior, talks about how the feeling of racial superiority has been hardened through 'race science' that lets people believe that is not prejudice but biology behind these ideas.
6/14/202037 minutes, 13 seconds
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51: How Cyclone Amphan warns us about the future of Sundarbans, with Nilanjan Ghosh

Sandip talks to ecological economist, Nilanjan Ghosh, Director of the Observer Research Foundation (ORF), Kolkata about the future of Sundarbans and the damage that cyclone Amphan has done to the region.
5/31/202032 minutes, 32 seconds
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50: How to talk to your kids about the Bois Locker Room, with Tanu Shree Singh

In this episode, Sandip talks to psychologist and author, Tanu Shree Singh, about how to talk to your kids about Bois Locker Room and have other difficult conversations.
5/17/202029 minutes, 20 seconds
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49: The lockdown's toll on mental health, with Dr Pratima Murthy

Dr Pratima Murthy on how mental health is suffering during this time. From the toll that the lockdown has taken on people suffering from alcohol addiction and severe mental illness like schizophrenia to the problems being faced by the elderly and the stigma associated with the disease.
5/3/202038 minutes, 57 seconds
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48: What will it take for India to come out of lockdown? With Dr Giridhar Babu

In this episode, Sandip talks to Dr. Giridhar R Babu, professor and head of life course epidemiology at the Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) about how we will know whether India is ready to come out of the lockdown on May 3, and the kind of new India that we will emerge into.
4/19/202035 minutes, 52 seconds
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47: Understanding how India migrates, with Chinmay Tumbe

In this episode, Sandip talks to Chinmay about India’s internal migrants, the myths that surround them, how the government can better address their problems, the emerging trends in migration and his book, India Moving: A History of Migration.
4/5/202039 minutes, 6 seconds
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46: When India locked up 3,000 Chinese-Indians in internment camps, with Dilip D'Souza

In this episode, Sandip talk to journalist Dilip D'Souza about this latest book, The Deoliwallahs: The True Story of the 1962 Chinese-Indian Internment.
3/22/202035 minutes, 59 seconds
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45: Getting a coronavirus reality check, with Dr Gagandeep Kang

In this episode, Dr Gagandeep Kang, one of India's leading clinical scientists, busts myths about coronavirus, talks about why she is hopeful for a vaccine and how climate change affects the spread of such viruses.
3/8/202035 minutes, 11 seconds
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44: Viswanathan Anand on being a bad loser and why he admires John McEnroe

In this episode, Sandip talk to Viswanathan Anand about how he deals with losing, why he admires John McEnroe, his autobiography and more.
2/23/202027 minutes, 58 seconds
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43: How Congress helped the BJP come to power, with Kapil Komireddi

In this episode, Sandip talks to Kapil Komireddi about how secularism was worn down in India, how historians inadvertently contributed to it and his latest book, Malevolent Republic.
2/9/202031 minutes, 44 seconds
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42: What Ranbaxy and Indian Pharma don't want you to know, with Katherine Eban

Investigative journalist, Katherine Eban, on her book Bottle of Lies that documents global fraud, large-scale data fabrication and unsafe practices inside Indian drug plants.
1/26/202033 minutes, 28 seconds
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41: 'Oh, but you don't look like a Muslim!' with Rakhshanda Jalil

Writer, translator and literary historian, Rakhshanda Jalil, on her collection of essays titled 'But You Don't Look Like A Muslim'.
1/12/202035 minutes, 21 seconds
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40: The Best of Sandip Roy Show 2019

The best conversations Sandip had with this year's guests, including Amitav Ghosh, Prannoy Roy, Harsh Mander, Paro Anand, Anjali Gopalan and more.
12/29/201934 minutes, 35 seconds
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39: Trucking through India - A Hitchhiking Adventure with Rajat Ubhaykar

What a hitchhiker learned from riding across India in trucks and the insight it gave him about how corruption works.
12/15/201936 minutes, 13 seconds
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38: The politics of India's relationship with technology, with Arun Sukumar

Over the decades, India's political leadership has had a complicated relationship with scientific innovations. Arun Sukumar, the head of the technology initiative at the Observer Research Foundation of New Delhi joins Sandip to discuss pivotal moments in India's tech history, how Prime Minister Modi sold Indians "a lethal cocktail of faith and technology" and more.
12/1/201939 minutes, 4 seconds
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37: Our plastic addiction and what we can do about it, with Bharati Chaturvedi

The myriad ways in which plastic affects our lives and how we can realistically fight it.
11/17/201937 minutes, 53 seconds
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36: William Dalrymple on how a private company came to rule India

In this episode, Sandip talks to historian William Dalrymple about how the East India Company came to rule India and why many know so little about it.
11/3/201936 minutes, 19 seconds
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35: Why the sedition law still exists, with Chitranshul Sinha

In this episode Sandip talks to writer and Supreme Court lawyer Chitranshul Sinha about the history of the sedition law in India and why it still exists in the 21st century.
10/20/201934 minutes, 15 seconds
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34: On being Gandhi and why he still matters, with Paro Anand

Sandip talks to writer Paro Anand about her latest book, Being Gandhi and what we can still learn from the father of the nation.
10/6/201933 minutes, 7 seconds
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33: Sex and other pleasures, a chat with Paromita Vohra

Sandip talks to Paromita Vohra the founder of Agents of Ishq about how ideas of sex and love are evolving and why sex education is important for a good sex life.
9/22/201932 minutes, 14 seconds
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32: How much corporate India changed a year after 377, with Parmesh Shahani

Sandip talks to Parmesh Shahani about what corporate India looks like one year after the 377 verdict.
9/8/201934 minutes, 58 seconds
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31: Understanding depression, the invisible illness, with Amrita Tripathi

Sandip talks to Amrita Tripathi, the founder-editor of the Health Collective, about her latest book that tries to open up conversations about depression and tell us that we are not alone in dealing with it.
8/25/201933 minutes
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30: What we get wrong about Yoga, with Devdutt Pattanaik

Devdutt Pattanaik on what we get wrong about Yoga, how much is it really connected to faith and why the ancient Indians practiced it.
8/11/201938 minutes, 48 seconds
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29: What they cooked in Shah Jahan's Kitchen, with Salma Yusuf Husain

Food Historian Salma Yusuf Husain takes us through the wondrous kitchen of the Mughal emperor and talks about the surprising dishes that the Mughal's gave us.
7/28/201931 minutes, 52 seconds
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28: On migration, climate change and The Gun Island, with Amitav Ghosh

Amitav Ghosh talks about migration, cosmopolitanism, the lack of climate change in literature and his latest novel - The Gun Island.
7/14/201933 minutes, 32 seconds
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27: Afghanistan's first openly gay person, Nemat Sadat

Sandip talks to Sadat about what made him finally come out, why people around him saw it as an act of cowardice and his skepticism of 'liberal' Islam.
6/30/201932 minutes, 22 seconds
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26: A sanctuary for all creatures great and small, with Anjali Gopalan

LGBTQ rights activist and the founder of Naz foundation, Anjali Gopalan, on the way we treat our animals and what that says about us as a society.
6/16/201943 minutes, 41 seconds
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25: Close to the Bone, with Lisa Ray

In this episode, Lisa Ray talks about being boxed into the category of a "sex symbol", the problem of hypersexuality in Bollywood, her struggles with eating disorders and more.
6/2/201936 minutes, 25 seconds
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24: What it means to be secular in India today, with Harsh Mander

Writer and human rights activist Harsh Mander on the threat that we face as a nation and the need for fraternity in our society.
5/19/201935 minutes, 8 seconds
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23: People with mental illnesses and their right to vote, with Ratnaboli Ray

Ratnaboli Ray, the founder of Anjali, a mental health rights organization in Kolkata, talks to Sandip about the challenges and her efforts of getting people with mental illnesses to cast their votes.
5/5/201929 minutes, 47 seconds
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22: Understanding the Indian Constitution, with Gautam Bhatia

In this episode, Sandip speak to lawyer and legal scholar Gautam Bhatia about his new book 'The Transformative Constitution: A Radical Biography in Nine Acts'.
4/21/201936 minutes, 54 seconds
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21: Decoding Indian Elections, with Prannoy Roy

In this episode, Sandip talks to the man who, in many ways, brought elections to our living rooms.
4/7/201933 minutes, 15 seconds
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20: The BDSM scene in India, with the Kinky Collective

Journeys into the world of kink and the learnings that we can all take from the BDSM community.
3/24/201935 minutes, 21 seconds
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19: Ruskin Bond, The Man with the Golden Pen

In this episode, Sandip talks to the beloved author, Ruskin Bond, about his journey as a writer so far.
3/10/201922 minutes, 59 seconds
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18: Coming Out as Dalit, with Yashica Dutt

Journalist Yashica Dutt talks about how she passed as being upper caste and what made her finally come out as Dalit.
2/24/201932 minutes, 50 seconds
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17: Discovering Shakespeare in Bollywood, with Jonathan Gil Harris

Author Jonathan Gil Harris explains how Bollywood films are closely related to the work of Shakespeare and how the 'masala' genre celebrates India's cultural diversity.
2/10/201926 minutes, 55 seconds
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16: The Great Smog of India with Siddharth Singh

1/27/201931 minutes, 7 seconds
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15: Feminism, writing and mythology in the age of #metoo, with Meenakshi Reddy Madhavan

1/13/201920 minutes, 33 seconds
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14: End the year by learning to build on your failures, with Shabnam Aggarwal

Shabnam Aggarwal talks of the risk she took to follow her dream, and the lessons she learned when she failed.
12/23/201832 minutes, 37 seconds
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13: The close relationship between crime and politics in India

Carnegie Fellow Milan Vaishnav on how Indians like to elect people facing criminal charges
12/9/201831 minutes, 37 seconds
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The twice born: Talking to Indian Brahmins with Aatish Taseer

In this episode, Sandip speaks to author and journalist Aatish Taseer about his experiences writing The Twice Born: Life and Death on the River Ganges.
11/25/201835 minutes, 6 seconds
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11: The great Indian rope trick: A magical history of India with John Zubrzycki

John Zubrzycki talks to Sandip about the history of magic and magicians in India, from fakirs to P.C. Sorcar
11/11/201827 minutes, 28 seconds
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10: Mapping food in India, through time and place, with Pushpesh Pant

Pushpesh Pant talks to Sandip about food memories, sweets and what the map of India would look like if it were drawn by food.
10/28/201829 minutes, 36 seconds
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9: The buffet edition: Extended excerpts from our best episodes

A special episode with extended excerpts from James Crabtree, Devdutt Pattanaik and Shubha Mudgal
10/14/201830 minutes, 37 seconds
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8: Shubha Mudgal on music, activism and more

Shubha Mudgal talks about music, activism, education and more, with stories from her life and experiences.
9/30/201835 minutes, 31 seconds
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7: Devdutt Pattanaik on mythology, tribalism and #377

Mythologist and writer Devdutt Pattanaik talks about life for LGBTQI people after #377, Indian society's relationship with sex, our tendency to tribalism and more.
9/16/201827 minutes, 32 seconds
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6: Explore a fading community: Flower Silliman on the Jews of Kolkata

A conversation with one of the oldest of the dwindling Jewish community in Kolkata, Flower Silliman.
9/2/201819 minutes, 12 seconds
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5: The Billionaire Raj with James Crabtree

Sandip and James talk about the book The Billionaire Raj, the personalities of these tycoons and India's problem with corruption and crony capitalism.
8/19/201822 minutes
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4: Making it in Hollywood: Aseem Chhabra on Priyanka Chopra

On this episode, Sandip sits down to chat with author and film journalist Aseem Chhabra, who wrote the recently released unauthorized biography, Priyanka Chopra: The Incredible Story of a Global Bollywood Star. Aseem talks to Sandip about Priyanka's career in Bollywood, the way she adapted to Hollywood and how she managed to keep her relevance in India. 
8/5/201819 minutes, 53 seconds
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3: Pawan Dhall on LGBT activism

LGBT activist Pawan Dhall about the difficulties that the community faces in India
7/22/201820 minutes, 11 seconds
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2: Anusha Yadav on the Indian Memory Project

In this episode Sandip talks to photographer and visual artist, Anusha Yadav, who founded the Indian Memory Project, about how the project came about, the kind of stories it tells about love, loss, family and secrets, and what she has learned from curating it.
7/8/201818 minutes, 3 seconds
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1: Welcome to The Sandip Roy Show

Real conversations about the fascinating world around us and the people who shape it
6/23/20181 minute