Articles

  • Jul 11, 2024 | nzz.ch | Andreas Babst |Rebecca Conway

    Arnab Goswami is perhaps the most hated – and most loved – journalist in the world. To understand him is to understand the new India Portrait of an Indian journalist who has the transformed country’s media landscape. Arnab Goswami seems smaller in real life than on screen. Softer, too. Goswami is sitting in a backroom office in the south Indian city of Bangalore. He has just bought a new TV station. It is almost midnight, and a few minutes earlier he was live broadcasting.

  • May 31, 2024 | buffalonews.com | Rebecca Conway

    Nivruti Rai, managing director of Invest India, at her office in New Delhi, April 18, 2024. Rai foresees a new cycle of investment centered on health care technology, clean energy and artificial intelligence. (Rebecca Conway/The New York Times)

  • May 31, 2024 | buffalonews.com | Rebecca Conway

    Commuters near BSE Limited, also known as the Bombay Stock Exchange, in Mumbai, India, April 16, 2024. The city is home to the stock market, which has attracted the savings of India’s own rapidly expanding investor class. (Rebecca Conway/The New York Times)

  • May 31, 2024 | buffalonews.com | Rebecca Conway

    Skyscrapers are seen across the water in Mumbai, India, April 16, 2024. In India, the top of the income ladder is spending more than ever, while hundreds of millions of people are stuck near the bottom. (Rebecca Conway/The New York Times)

  • May 31, 2024 | buffalonews.com | Rebecca Conway

    A construction project in Mumbai, India, April 17, 2024. Mumbai has been given a makeover: Suspension bridges span its seaways, and new metro lines have been carved beneath its Art Deco and Indo-Saracenic facades and rumbling commuter railways. (Rebecca Conway/The New York Times)

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