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Episode #34: 'The best jewellery artisans happen to be from Kolkata' | Eina Ahluwalia | Conceptual Jewellery Artist
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Eina Ahluwalia - conceptual jewellery artist, tells you stories of your personal power, your iridescence and grace, and the magic in your soul through her jewellery. Her very personal pieces of wearable art are containers for messages and reminders, which are the main material of her work. She is based out of Kolkata and retails out of her flagship e-store.
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Eina's Website: www.einaahluwalia.com
Eina's IG handle - @einaahluwalia
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Website: www.moodymo.co.in
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Sound recording & mixing: @roshan_machayya_music
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272. Women in Manufacturing: Leadership Without Fear
27:39||Season 1, Ep. 272What does real womenâs empowerment look like inside a factory?In this episode of The Mohua Show, Ranjitha Shankar shares a powerful blueprint for building workplace equality â not through slogans, but through systems.With decades of leadership in manufacturing and business, Ranjitha speaks about:Creating dignity and respect on factory floorsHiring and training women in technical rolesSupporting women through marriage, motherhood, and mobilityBuilding teams without hierarchy or fearEnabling financial independence at scaleInfluenced by a self-made mother and grounded in equal partnership, her leadership philosophy blends empathy with discipline â proving that inclusive leadership is not soft, itâs strategic.From grassroots mentorship to boardroom decisions, this conversation explores how women leaders can reshape systems from within â especially in traditionally male-dominated industries like manufacturing.This is not empowerment as rhetoric.Itâs empowerment as structure.If you care about workplace equality, women in leadership, social impact, or building inclusive organizations â this episode is a must-watch.đŻ What This Episode Is REALLY AboutNot a token representation.Not panel-discussion feminism.Not empowerment without accountability.Itâs about:Equality as a non-negotiable foundationWomenâs leadership in manufacturingFinancial independence and confidenceMentorship from the factory floor upwardHiring, training, and retaining women in technical rolesLeadership built on trust, not hierarchyLong-term social impact through workplace designIf youâve ever wondered what real equality looks like beyond policies and panels â this episode offers a practical roadmap.đ Support The Mohua ShowIf this conversation changed how you think about leadership or workplace equality:đ Like the videođŹ Comment your biggest takeaway đ€ Share it with someone building teams đ Subscribe for conversations on leadership, social impact, and changemakers shaping IndiaMusic Credits : https://pixabay.com/music/ambient-butterfly-113600/â Subscribe To Our Channel: /themohuashow  Stay updated!đFollow Us OnThe Mohua ShowâșWebsite: www.themohuashow.comâșInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/themohuashow  âșLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/themohuashow  Connect with the Host: Mohua Chinappaâș Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mohua_chinappa/âș LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohua-chinappa/âșFor any queries, EMAIL: hello@themohuashow.comCopyright ©2026 The Mohua Show. All Rights ReservedDisclaimer: The views expressed by our guests are their own. We do not endorse and are not responsible for any opinions expressed by our guests on our Show and its associated platforms.
271. English Is Indiaâs Best Kept Secret | Sumanto Chattopadhyay
42:29||Season 1, Ep. 271This episode of The Mohua Show is a rich, reflective conversation about language, creativity, class, and what it means to reclaim authorship in systems built around approval and hierarchy.Author, actor, and creator Sumanto Chattopadhyay speaks with humour and honesty about his journey from advertising to independent creative life â and why becoming his own client was both a creative necessity and a risk. What began as frustration with pitching ideas that led nowhere gradually evolved into The English Nut: a passion project driven not by algorithms or audience metrics, but by love for language.From the loneliness and uncertainty of leaving a structured industry, to sustaining himself through multiple creative streams â this episode traces how creative survival often lies in refusing to be just one thing.Through stories of slang, colonial history, and everyday speech, the conversation reveals how language is never neutral.What this episode is REALLY about:- Not grammar rules.- Not linguistic elitism.- Not nostalgia for âcorrectâ English.Itâs about:âą Creative independence â becoming your own clientâą Life after advertising â fear, freedom, and reinventionâą Broken English â dignity over mockeryâą Curiosity-driven work â passion over performance metricsâą Slang and youth culture â how language evolvesâą English in India â identity, politics, and belongingâą Creative survival â being more than one thingIf youâve ever felt boxed in by systems that reward conformity, questioned about why English provokes both aspiration and resentment in India â this episode will change how you think about language, work, and identity.Support the PodcastIf this conversation made you rethink language, class, or creative freedom â share it with someone who believes curiosity should never need permission.Subscribe for conversations that unpack power, culture, identity, and the systems shaping how we live and create.Music Credits : https://pixabay.com/music/ambient-butterfly-113600/â Subscribe To Our Channel: /themohuashow  Stay updated!đFollow Us OnThe Mohua ShowâșWebsite: www.themohuashow.comâșInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/themohuashow  âșLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/themohuashow  Connect with the Host: Mohua Chinappaâș Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mohua_chinappa/âș LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohua-chinappa/âșFor any queries, EMAIL: hello@themohuashow.comCopyright ©2025 The Mohua Show. All Rights ReservedDisclaimer: The views expressed by our guests are their own. We do not endorse and are not responsible for any opinions expressed by our guests on our Show and its associated platforms.
270. Who Really Decides What India Watches?
38:40||Season 1, Ep. 270This episode of The Mohua Show is a searing, deeply honest conversation about power, gatekeeping, censorship, and what it takes to make cinema inside systems designed to resist discomfort.Filmmaker Kanu Behl speaks with rare candour about his journey through Indian independent cinema â from giving nearly a decade of his life to a film, to publicly speaking out when its release and distribution were threatened. What began as a personal cry for help, he reflects, soon revealed the deeper power structures that govern Indian cinema today.From organic word-of-mouth that no marketing budget could buy, to the worsening barriers to access that now demand money even to be seen, this episode lays bare a system more interested in extraction than engagement.What this episode is REALLY aboutNot glamorous filmmaking.Not safe stories.Not pretending audiences donât understand complexity.Itâs about:âą Speaking out â when silence becomes impossibleâą Power structures â who really controls Indian cinemaâą Gatekeeping â access, money, and exclusionâą Corporate dominance â profit over artistic riskâą Organic word of mouth â when people choose storiesâą Formula cinema â violence, spectacle, and repetitionâą Intimacy on screen â home, family, and emotional truthâą The personal as political â why small stories hit hardestIf youâve ever wondered why certain films struggle to be released, why honest cinema feels increasingly rare, or why audiences are blamed instead of gatekeepers â this episode will change how you see Indian cinema.Support the PodcastIf this conversation made you rethink cinema, power, or who decides what stories get told â share it with someone who believes audiences deserve better.Subscribe for conversations that challenge control, question authority, and make space for uncomfortable truths..Music Credits : https://pixabay.com/music/ambient-butterfly-113600/â Subscribe To Our Channel: /themohuashow  Stay updated!đFollow Us OnThe Mohua ShowâșWebsite: www.themohuashow.comâșInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/themohuashow  âșLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/themohuashow  Connect with the Host: Mohua Chinappaâș Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mohua_chinappa/âș LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohua-chinappa/âșFor any queries, EMAIL: hello@themohuashow.comCopyright ©2025 The Mohua Show. All Rights ReservedDisclaimer: The views expressed by our guests are their own. We do not endorse and are not responsible for any opinions expressed by our guests on our Show and its associated platforms.
269. The Bollywood Film That Made India Talk About Abuse | Ep 269
41:32||Season 1, Ep. 269This episode of The Mohua Show is a powerful and unflinching conversation about racism, patriarchy, migration, and what it truly means to survive as a woman inside systems designed to control her.Writer, feminist, and co-author of The Politics of Patriarchy, Rahila Gupta speaks with rare honesty about arriving in Britain as a middle-class Indian woman â and watching racism strip her of class, security, and opportunity. From being pushed into âethnicâ writing boxes to fighting for abused migrant women trapped by immigration laws, Rahila reflects on how power, gender, and race intersect to shape womenâs lives.Drawing from decades of activism and scholarship, she speaks about why patriarchy survives every political system â from democracies to dictatorships â and why violence against women remains its most enduring weapon. She also introduces us to Rojava, a feminist-led Kurdish society inside war-torn Syria, offering a radical vision of what womenâs liberation can look like even in the most unlikely places.From landmark domestic violence cases that changed British law to the cultural impact of the film Provoked, Rahila reveals how stories, law, and feminist resistance combine to rewrite what justice can mean.A conversation about power over silence, survival over shame, and why dismantling patriarchy requires both courage and imagination.What this episode is REALLY aboutNot polite feminism.Not surface-level diversity.Not saving women without changing systems.Itâs about:âą Racism and class â how migration erases social statusâą Writing as survival â finding identity through languageâą Patriarchy across the globe â why no system is free of itâą Rojava â a women-led revolution inside Syriaâą Feminist resistance â how women build power even in warâą Immigration laws â how the state traps abused migrant womenâą Killing to survive â when abused women are pushed to extremesâą Bollywood and abuse â Aishwarya Rai and breaking the silenceâą Grief and poetry â writing as a way to hold onto loveIf youâve ever wondered why women stay, why systems fail survivors, or how patriarchy hides inside law, culture, and even democracy â this episode will change how you see power.Support the PodcastIf this conversation made you rethink power, patriarchy, or justice â share it with someone who believes women deserve more than survival.Subscribe for conversations that challenge injustice, amplify resistance, and tell the stories that systems try to bury.Music Credits : https://pixabay.com/music/ambient-butterfly-113600/â Subscribe To Our Channel: /themohuashow  Stay updated!đFollow Us OnThe Mohua ShowâșWebsite: www.themohuashow.comâșInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/themohuashow  âșLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/themohuashow  Connect with the Host: Mohua Chinappaâș Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mohua_chinappa/âș LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohua-chinappa/âșFor any queries, EMAIL: hello@themohuashow.comCopyright ©2025 The Mohua Show. All Rights ReservedDisclaimer: The views expressed by our guests are their own. We do not endorse and are not responsible for any opinions expressed by our guests on our Show and its associated platforms.
268. The Dark History Of LGBTQ Desire In India | The Mohua Show
31:06||Season 1, Ep. 268This episode of The Mohua Show is a powerful and deeply reflective conversation about queerness, colonial memory, and the politics of desire in India.Academic and Author of the book âForbidden desireâ, Sindhu Rajasekaran speaks candidly about growing up queer under Section 377, uncovering erased queer histories in Indian archives, and how colonial morality reshaped the way gender, sexuality, and womenâs bodies are policed today.From Victorian ideas of âmodestyâ and the criminalisation of queer lives to the forgotten histories of sexually agentive women locked up in colonial institutions, this episode confronts how much of what we consider âtraditionâ is actually inherited repression.A conversation about memory over amnesia, desire over shame, and why reclaiming queer histories is essential to imagining freer futures.What this episode is REALLY aboutNot nostalgia for the past.Not Western feminism.Not fixed identities.Itâs about:Growing up queer in India: Life under Section 377 and criminalised loveColonial sexual politics: How the British rewrote Indian moralityQueer archives: What history tells us about gender fluidityVictorian modesty: Exporting shame and regulating bodiesLock hospitals: The sexual prisons nobody talks aboutErased literatures: How queerness was removed from Indian memoryPostcolonial amnesia: Why we forgot our own historiesSmashing the patriarchy: Everyday feminist resistanceGen Z & feminism: Redefining gender, identity, and politicsQueer feminism: Why the future of feminism must be fluidUndoing hierarchies: Power, equality, and dismantling gender binariesVisual storytelling: Representation, responsibility, and imaginationHonest conversations: Creating space beyond performative politicsIf youâve ever wondered whether India was always this conservative â or what we lost between colonial shame and modern fear â this episode offers a rare, honest rethinking of gender, sexuality, and freedom.Support the PodcastIf this conversation made you rethink history, gender, or freedom â share it with someone who believes the past still shapes the politics of the present.Subscribe for conversations that question power, identity, memory, and resistance with honesty and depth.Music Credits : https://pixabay.com/music/ambient-butterfly-113600/â Subscribe To Our Channel: /themohuashow  Stay updated!đFollow Us OnThe Mohua ShowâșWebsite: www.themohuashow.comâșInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/themohuashow  âșLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/themohuashow  Connect with the Host: Mohua Chinappaâș Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mohua_chinappa/âș LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohua-chinappa/âșFor any queries, EMAIL: hello@themohuashow.comCopyright ©2025 The Mohua Show. All Rights ReservedDisclaimer: The views expressed by our guests are their own. We do not endorse and are not responsible for any opinions expressed by our guests on our Show and its associated platforms.#themohuashow #podcast #queerhistory #section377 #smashingthepatriarchy #queerindia #feminism #colonialism #genderpolitics #lgbtqindia #indianhistory #postcolonial #sexuality #desire #genderequality #queerfeminism #indianliterature #storiesthatmatter #identity #cultureandpolitics
267. âYouâre too pretty to be a lawyerâ Sana Raees Khan on inequality | The Mohua Show
25:18||Season 1, Ep. 267This episode of The Mohua Show is a deeply incisive conversation about the Constitution, justice, and the dangerous consequences of letting public sentiment replace due process.Renowned Supreme Court Lawyer, founder of SRK Legal and former Bigg Boss star, Sana Raees Khan speaks candidly about why defending unpopular clients is not a moral failureâbut a constitutional duty. From media trials and social-media verdicts to gender bias in the legal profession, deepfakes, personality rights, and the misuse of protective laws, this episode confronts some of the most uncomfortable truths about Indiaâs justice system today.A conversation about law over outrage, evidence over emotion, and why constitutional guarantees exist precisely for moments when morality turns volatile.What this episode is REALLY aboutNot moral policing.Not public opinion as justice.Not performative outrage.Itâs about:Defending the Constitution: Why legal representation and fair trial are non-negotiable rightsMedia trials & social media verdicts: When public judgment precedes evidenceWomen in criminal law: Visibility, bias, and breaking stereotypesEthics vs strategy: Why ethical advocacy is not manipulationDeepfakes & personality rights: Law struggling to keep pace with technologyCelebrity cases as precedent: How visibility protects ordinary citizensSeparating law from noise: Handling high-profile and vilified casesPre-trial punishment: When the process itself becomes the penaltyReputation & dignity: Article 21 and the limits of free speechMisuse of protective laws: Addressing abuse without erasing genuine victimsGender justice & feminism: Fairness over denialCourts vs public outrage: Why evidence must outlast emotionAdvice for young lawyers: Courage, clarity, conscience, and resilienceIf youâve ever questioned whether justice can survive in the age of viralityâor where the line lies between accountability and intimidationâthis episode offers rare, unfiltered insight from inside the courtroom.Support the Podcast  If this conversation made you pause, question, or rethink justiceâshare it with someone who believes the law must stand firm when public opinion wavers.Subscribe for conversations that examine power, rights, and society with depth, honesty, and constitutional clarity.Music Credits : https://pixabay.com/music/ambient-butterfly-113600/â Subscribe To Our Channel: /themohuashow  Stay updated!đFollow Us OnThe Mohua ShowâșWebsite: www.themohuashow.comâșInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/themohuashow  âșLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/themohuashow  Connect with the Host: Mohua Chinappaâș Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mohua_chinappa/âș LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohua-chinappa/âșFor any queries, EMAIL: hello@themohuashow.comCopyright ©2025 The Mohua Show. All Rights ReservedDisclaimer: The views expressed by our guests are their own. We do not endorse and are not responsible for any opinions expressed by our guests on our Show and its associated platforms.
IndiaâUK Cinema: The Women Changing the Game | The Mohua Show
39:58||Season 1This episode of The Mohua Show is a powerful conversation about storytelling as civic actionâand why entertainment, when done right, can move people to remember, feel, and act.Filmmaker and producer, Anushka Shah, Founder of Civic Studios speaks about building stories that travel across borders while staying rooted in purpose. From IndiaâUK collaborations and global co-productions to climate storytelling and gender equity, this episode explores how cinema can hold both commercial ambition and moral responsibility at the same time.A conversation about imagination as action, stories as bridges, and why hope may be the most radical narrative of our time.What this episode is REALLY aboutNot messaging alone.Not âissue-basedâ cinema.Not art without an audience.Itâs about:IndiaâUK creative collaboration: What cross-border storytelling makes possibleChristmas Karma: Reimagining Dickens through a South Asian, global lensGlobal Indian stories: Taking diaspora narratives to international audiencesEntertainment first: Why stories must engage before they can impactClimate storytelling: Moving beyond doomsday narratives to hope and actionCivic imagination: Awareness, emotion, and action as a storytelling frameworkWomen and representation: Who gets to tell storiesâand who gets centeredFeminism in leadership: Empathy, trust, and confidence without aggressionSocial impact media: Measuring change without diluting creativityChoosing stories wisely: Audience, format, reach, and real-world relevanceIf youâve ever wondered whether stories can truly change the worldâor how creators decide which stories are worth tellingâthis episode offers rare clarity from inside the process.Support the Podcast  If this conversation stayed with you, share it with someone who believes stories can do more than entertain.Subscribe for conversations that explore culture, power, and imagination with depth, intention, and heart.Music Credits : https://pixabay.com/music/ambient-butterfly-113600/â Subscribe To Our Channel: /themohuashow  Stay updated!đFollow Us OnThe Mohua ShowâșWebsite: www.themohuashow.comâșInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/themohuashow  âșLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/themohuashow  Connect with the Host: Mohua Chinappaâș Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mohua_chinappa/âș LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohua-chinappa/âșFor any queries, EMAIL: hello@themohuashow.comCopyright ©2025 The Mohua Show. All Rights ReservedDisclaimer: The views expressed by our guests are their own. We do not endorse and are not responsible for any opinions expressed by our guests on our Show and its associated platforms.
265. AI in the Job Market, Beyond Quotas & Leadership in Tech | The Mohua Show
43:57||Season 1, Ep. 265This episode of The Mohua Show is a thoughtful exploration of leadership, technology, and what it means to stay human in an age of constant change..As the Managing Director of Planview India, Shalini Sankarshana reflects on a career shaped by curiosity, mentorship, and the courage to say yes. From navigating global work cultures to rethinking leadership in an AI-driven world, she shares why adaptability, creativity, and learning are no longer optionalâbut essential.A conversation about evolution over certainty, courage with humility, and why the future of work may demand more humanity, not less.What this episode is REALLY aboutNot buzzwords.Not hype.Not fear of change.Itâs about:Saying yes: How openness creates opportunity when overthinking closes doorsLeadership in evolution: Why adaptability matters more than past successTechnology as an equalizer: A platform that can democratize opportunityWomen in tech: Financial independence, systems vs. quotas, and real inclusionGlobal cultures at work: What Indian, European, and American teams teach usCreativity & synthesis: The leadership muscle every future leader must buildThe future of work: AI, emotion, and why even machines are reshaping creativityCourage with humility: Conviction without rigidityLearning as leadership: Why no leader can ever have all the answersIf youâve ever wondered how to lead, learn, and stay relevant while the world keeps shifting, this episode offers clarity without clichĂ©s.Support the Podcast  If this conversation resonated with you, share it with someone navigating change right now.Subscribe for more conversations that explore leadership, culture, and the future with clarity, courage, and care.Music Credits : https://pixabay.com/music/ambient-butterfly-113600/â Subscribe To Our Channel: /themohuashow  Stay updated!đFollow Us OnThe Mohua ShowâșWebsite: www.themohuashow.comâșInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/themohuashow  âșLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/themohuashow  Connect with the Host: Mohua Chinappaâș Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mohua_chinappa/âș LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohua-chinappa/âșFor any queries, EMAIL: hello@themohuashow.comCopyright ©2025 The Mohua Show. All Rights ReservedDisclaimer: The views expressed by our guests are their own. We do not endorse and are not responsible for any opinions expressed by our guests on our Show and its associated platforms.
264. Patruni Sastry on Drag, Devotion & the Stranimal Truth Beneath the Makeup | The Mohua Show
01:05:32||Season 1, Ep. 264This episode of The Mohua Show is a vibrant reclamation of identity and tradition.Drag artist and expressionist Patruni Chidananda Sastry dismantles Western imports to reveal the deep, ancient Indian roots of dragâfrom spiritual rituals to folk theatreâarguing that this art of gender expression was born here, stylised abroad, and is now coming home.A conversation about the masks we wear to tell the truth, and the stagesâfrom temples to railway platformsâwhere transformation becomes revelation.What this episode is REALLY aboutNot a trend.Not just performance.Not a Western import.Itâs about:Expression as gender: orange hair, cruel masks, and the deliberate confusion of the âstranimalâRedefining drag: Dressing Resembling A Gender is an ancient, pan-Indian skeletonThe sacred vs. the sensual: From ritualistic Theyyam to the erotic LaundanachA bold reclaiming: âDrag is something which was stolen from IndiaâBeyond the âWestern importâ label: Seeing drag as integration, not just outer spectacleThe LGBTQ+ tag: How it raises eyes and alters perceptionDrag as public service: An HIV consultation at a railway stationCalling out appropriation: The pain of cisgender actors in exaggerated trans rolesIf youâve ever wondered where tradition ends and queer expression begins, this episode blurs the line.Support the Podcast  If this conversation moved you, share it with someone who needs to hear it today.  Subscribe for more voices that rewrite the rules with truth, heart, and courage.Music Credits : https://pixabay.com/music/ambient-butterfly-113600/â Subscribe To Our Channel: /themohuashow  Stay updated!đFollow Us OnThe Mohua ShowâșWebsite: www.themohuashow.comâșInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/themohuashow  âșLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/themohuashow  Connect with the Host: Mohua Chinappaâș Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mohua_chinappa/âș LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohua-chinappa/âșFor any queries, EMAIL: hello@themohuashow.comCopyright ©2025 The Mohua Show. All Rights ReservedDisclaimer: The views expressed by our guests are their own. We do not endorse and are not responsible for any opinions expressed by our guests on our Show and its associated platforms.