
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

Sep 18, 2022 • 56min
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.

Sep 4, 2022 • 43min
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.

Aug 21, 2022 • 54min
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.

Aug 7, 2022 • 42min
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.

Jul 24, 2022 • 47min
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.

Jul 10, 2022 • 39min
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.

Jun 26, 2022 • 51min
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.

Jun 12, 2022 • 44min
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’.

May 29, 2022 • 40min
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.

May 15, 2022 • 48min
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.