More episodes
View all episodes

Get your Milton Friedman and Ayn Rand right: Zomato and Blinkit aren’t capitalism
23:17|Late last week, I wrote a piece responding to Deepinder Goyal’s tweets on how he views India’s gig economy. It went viral – and as is inevitable with anything that does, it brought with it an equal measure of bouquets and brickbats.Since then, I have been labelled a communist, a leftist, and a Marxist, for pointing out the large holes in Goyal’s arguments. I have also been told that I don’t understand what capitalism is – or how a free market works. Of course, along with this there has been some abuse as well – words that can’t be published here.The most amusing of these was the claim that since Deepinder Goyal – the founder of Eternal – the company behind Zomato and Blinkit – has made a lot of money in life, he necessarily knows what he is talking about. And since I haven’t, my thinking, apparently, doesn’t really count.Interestingly, many of the people accusing me of not understanding capitalism would swear by Ayn Rand, the novelist-philosopher who turned the entrepreneur into a moral hero. Rand believed that profit was not a dirty word but a signal of value creation. In her novels and non-fiction, entrepreneurs earned rewards by solving real problems for willing customers, not by relying on hidden subsidies or a desperate labour force.All this has led to this piece, in which I try examining whether what the likes of Zomato, Swiggy, Blinkit, Zepto, Instamart, and others are doing, can really be labelled free-market capitalism. Or is it something else being passed off as capitalism? Indeed, are we witnessing a high-speed exploitation engine merely dressed in free-market clothing?
‘Overconfidence killed BJP’: Political analyst Sanjay Singh on Modi, Hindutva, Lok Sabha polls
50:22|The Lok Sabha poll results stunned most spectators, with the BJP falling short of the majority mark despite its clarion call for over 400 seats. So what went wrong? How did the INDIA bloc parties engineer their revival? Sanjay Singh, director of Lokniti CSDS, has been tracking and analysing Indian politics for decades. In this conversation with Newslaundry, Singh delved into the factors that led to the BJP’s decline, particularly in Uttar Pradesh. The political analyst shared his insights on the caste dynamics at play in the elections, the Modi factor, consensus among people, and the triggers behind the BJP’s setback. “Prime Minister Modi’s magic is still intact…but there has been a decline in his ability to pull votes for the BJP.” Singh said the “narrative of Hindutva” didn’t work and that “overconfidence has killed the BJP”, while the opposition’s rhetoric to “save the constitution” struck a chord with the people.
Between faith and livelihood: Days before Ram Temple inauguration, fear and excitement in Ayodhya
14:43|By Shweta Desai, Published on 10 Jan, 2024
As COP28 debates phrasing on fossil fuels, a snapshot of life near India’s coal mines
13:56|By- Mridula Chari & Denise Fernandes, Published on 14 Dec, 2023
Security guard discovered track and field in his 40s. He then ran Boston Marathon.
09:20|By Sumedha Mittal, published on 09 Dec, 2023

Modi’s Akashvani: PM speeches, govt schemes on loop, opposition on pause
22:12|By Sumedha Mittal , Published on July 29, 2023
Adani’s NDTV: New channels, Modi documentaries, a leadership void, and big plans for this year
27:45|On the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, something very unusual happened.It had nothing to do with monetary policy, recession worries, or net-zero energy technologies. Instead, after a gap of eight years, union minister Smriti Irani granted NDTV an interview.Irani sat down with NDTV’s editorial director Sonia Singh to talk about how the “India story was setting Davos on fire”, our triumph in “gender justice”, and why the Congress was “still hurt” that she had defeated Rahul Gandhi in Amethi in 2019.It was what one might describe as a ‘soft’ interview – except for five questions Singh asked on issues like India’s growth being hyped, “super censorship”, and Modi’s remarks on minority outreach.Read the full article here
Power, identity, resistance, and the Supreme Court: The story of Koovagam
14:52|For us Kinnars, marriage is not made in heaven. We get married on a battlefield.”This is what Amina said to me while she prepared for her wedding. Amina is a Kinnar, a term her community prefers over other alternatives like Khojja or Aravani or Hijra. She and hundreds of other Kinnars were queuing outside a small temple dedicated to Lord Aravan in the remote village of Koovagam, around 200 km from Chennai.Their bridegroom was the stiff-moustached, red-faced, fiery-eyed deity who rules over the half-world to which they belong.Every year, on a full-moon day in the Tamil month of Chithirai, a huge number of transgender people come to Koovagam to marry the village temple deity Aravan, who is also known as Koothandavar. It’s a pan-Indian, 18-day event that’s taken place for hundreds of years – certainly the biggest occasion for the community to come together and share experiences and opinions.
