
The Sandip Roy Show
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
Latest episodes

Jun 25, 2023 • 38min
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

Jun 11, 2023 • 53min
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

May 28, 2023 • 49min
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

May 14, 2023 • 50min
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

Apr 30, 2023 • 51min
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

Apr 16, 2023 • 47min
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

Apr 2, 2023 • 58min
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

Mar 19, 2023 • 43min
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

Mar 5, 2023 • 56min
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)

Feb 19, 2023 • 56min
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