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Vir Sanghvi

Personal Profile

Vir Sanghvi
  • Date of Birth:
    , 1957
  • Place of Birth:
    Mumbai, India
  • Sex:
    Male
  • Hair Color:
    Black
  • Eye Color:
    Brown
  • Nationality:
    Indian
  • Religion:
    Hinduism
  • Education:

    Mayo College, Ajmer

    Mill Hill School, London

    Brasenose College, Oxford

Family

Vir Sanghvi

    Career

    Vir Sanghvi

    Awards

    Vir Sanghvi

    1995: Global leader of tomorrow by the World Economic Forum, Davos

    1998: Best Current Affairs Presenter at the Asian TV Awards

    2004: The Cointreau Award for Best Food Literature Book in the world the (food world’s equivalent of the Oscar)

    2004: The Asian Television Awards in Singapore

    2004: Best Food Critic Award from the Indian Culinary Foundation

    2008: The Rajiv Gandhi Award for Journalism

    2008: The friend of Thailand Award from The Thai Prime Minister

    2009: Lokmanya Tilak National Journalist Award From The Kesari Newspaper, Pune

    Trivia

    Vir Sanghvi
    • His published books include Rude Food, India – Then and Now and Men of Steel (a collection of profiles of India's leading businessmen) which has been translated into 10 other languages and is a huge best-seller. Penguin published in 2009, his biography of Madhavrao Scindia.
    • In 2006-07, he anchored two shows for NDTV, India's leading English news channel -- Face the Music and One on One. He has won several TV awards including the Asian Television Awards in Singapore.
    • Beginning in 1996, he hosted a number of programmes for the STAR TV, hosting shows like A Question of Answers, Cover Story and Star Talk.
    • Sanghvi's TV career began in 1994 on Doordarshan, the state-owned broadcaster.
    • He did a television version of Rude Food for the Discovery Travel & Living channel called A Matter of Taste which was a huge ratings success in India and South East Asia.
    • Sanghvi is a foodie, writing the Rude Food column in Brunch, Hindustan Times' Sunday magazine. A collection of these columns was published by Penguin in 2004 (Rude Food).
    • His political column, Counterpoint, which he began in Sunday, now appears in the Sunday Hindustan Times. He also writes Pursuits -- a column that appears in the weekend section of Mint, the business paper brought out by HT Media.
    • At the end of 2003, Sanghvi was appointed editorial director of HT Media Limited, the holding company of Hindustan Times, and launched the paper's Bombay edition in July 2005.
    • In 1999, he became editor of the Hindustan Times, the largest-selling English newspaper in Delhi, and over the next two years, launched new editions in Chandigarh, Calcutta, Ranchi, Bhopal and other north Indian cities.
    • In 1994, Sanghvi became consulting editor of the ABP group.

    Biography

    Vir Sanghvi
    Last Updated: Monday, July 13, 2009

    Vir Sanghvi is a Indian editor and also a television celebrity. Currently, he is Editorial Director of the Hindustan Times. Sanghvi was brought up in Bombay (now Mumbai) and London and educated at Mayo College, Ajmer, and Mill Hill School, London. He won an open scholarship to read politics, philosophy and economics at Brasenose College, Oxford. His journalistic career began in his gap year before Oxford when he started contributing to India Today. He continued writing for the magazine during his vacations and in 1978, the publishers of India Today asked him to start Bombay, India's first city magazine.

    At that stage, Sanghvi was 22, making him the youngest editor in the history of Indian journalism. The first issue of Bombay appeared in 1979 and though the magazine was an instant success, heralding the start of India's magazine boom, Sanghvi left it in 1981 to live in London for a year. Awarded a travelling fellowship by the Inlaks Foundation, he visited newspapers in the US and the UK for a project on how the western media looked at India.

    In 1982, he returned to India as editorial director of Business Press, India's largest publisher of trade magazines. While at Business Press, he revamped and reformatted Imprint, one of India's oldest magazines and turned it into a leading features magazine of the 1980s. In 1986, he was appointed editor of Sunday, a newsmagazine brought out by the ABP group. By 1989, Sunday had become India's largest-selling weekly newsmagazine. In 1994, Sanghvi became consulting editor of the ABP group, whose portfolio included -- other than magazines like Sunday and Businessworld -- the two largest papers in eastern India, The Telegraph in English and Ananda Bazar Patrika in Bengali.

    In 1999, he became editor of the Hindustan Times, the largest-selling English newspaper in Delhi and, over the next two years, launched new editions in Chandigarh, Calcutta, Ranchi, Bhopal and other north Indian cities. At the end of 2003, Sanghvi was appointed editorial director of HT Media Limited, the holding company of Hindustan Times, and it was in this capacity that he launched the paper's stunningly successful Bombay edition in July 2005. His column, Counterpoint, which he began in Sunday, now appears in the Sunday Hindustan Times, and is possibly the most influential political column in the country.

    He also writes Pursuits -- a column that appears in the weekend section of Mint, the business paper brought out by HT Media. These apart, Sanghvi is a foodie, writing the inimitable -- and hugely popular -- Rude Food column in Brunch, Hindustan Times' Sunday magazine. A collection of these columns was published by Penguin in 2004 (Rude Food). The book won the international food world's equivalent of the Oscar -- the Cointreau Award for Best Food Literature Book in the world the following year. Alongside, Sanghvi also won the Best Food Critic award from the Indian Culinary Foundation. He did a television version of Rude Food for the Discovery Travel Living channel called A Matter of Taste which was a huge ratings success in India and South East Asia. Sanghvi's TV career began in 1994 on Doordarshan, the state-owned broadcaster.

    Starting 1996, he hosted a number of programmes for the STAR Network. Among his successes are shows like A Question of Answers, Cover Story and Star Talk. In 2006-07, he anchored two shows for NDTV, India's leading English news channel -- Face the Music and One on One. He has won innumerable TV awards for his presenting skills at many national and international forums including the Asian Television Awards in Singapore. In 1993, Sanghvi was named a Global Leader of Tomorrow at the World Economic Forum in Davos and he is a member of several important advisory bodies attached to the Indian government, including the prestigious National Integration Council.

    In 2008, he also received the prestigious Rajiv Gandhi Journalism Award, at a nationally televised ceremony. His published books include Rude Food, India – Then and Now and Men of Steel (a collection of profiles of India's leading businessmen) which has been translated into 10 other languages and is a huge best-seller. Penguin will publish his biography of Madhavrao Scindia this winter.

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