Dear editor/friends,Here is a statement for your kind use.Regards,Nava 
Thakuria,Guwahati(m) 098640 44917
Media Orientation Program on July 26 at Guwahati Press ClubParanjoy Guha 
Thakurta will attend Guest of the Month program
Guwahati: A daylong media orientation program with an aim for encouraging and 
developing ethical journalism has been organized on Thursday (July 26, 2012) at 
Guwahati Press Club. Paranjoy Guha Thakurta, an independent journalist and  
educator spanning 35 years of experiences in print, radio, television and 
documentary film-making, will attend the program as the resource person.The 
technical session will start at 10 am, which will be open for the 
journalist-members of Guwahati Press Club. The interested journalists should 
submit their names to the office of the press club by Tuesday evening.It will 
be followed by the Guest of the Month program at 3 pm in the same venue, where 
Guha Thakurta will interact with the media persons on various media related 
issues. 
PS. Profile of  Paranjoy Guha ThakurtaParanjoy Guha Thakurta is an independent 
journalist and an educator. His work experience, spanning 35 years, cuts across 
different media: print, radio, television and documentary cinema. He is a 
writer, speaker, anchor, interviewer, teacher and commentator in three 
languages: English, Bengali and Hindi. His main areas of interest are the 
working of India’s political economy and the media, on which he has 
authored/co-authored books and directed/produced documentary films. He lectures 
on these subjects to general audiences and also trains aspiring – and working 
-- media professionals. He participates frequently in seminars, is a regular 
contributor to newspapers, magazines and websites and is featured on television 
channels and radio programmes as an anchor as well as an analyst and 
commentator.Born on October 5, 1955 and educated at St. Stephen’s College, 
University of Delhi (1972-75) and at the Delhi School of
 Economics (1975-77) in the same university from where he obtained his Master’s 
degree in economics, he started his career as a journalist in June 1977 and has 
been employed with various media organizations including companies bringing out 
publications such as Business India, BusinessWorld, The Telegraph, India Today 
and The Pioneer. He worked with Television Eighteen (now Network 18) for almost 
six years between 1995 and 2001 when he anchored a daily discussion programme 
called “India Talks” on the CNBC-India television channel -- nearly 1,400 
half-hour episodes were broadcast. From March 2007, he has been anchoring two 
one-hour-long weekly programmes for Lok Sabha Television (the channel owned and 
operated by the lower house of the Parliament of India) – a panel discussion 
called “Talktime” (earlier “Headstart”) and an interview called “1-on-One”. He 
has anchored programmes for other television channels.He is (or has been) a
 visiting faculty member at over a dozen reputed educational institutions 
including the Indian Institutes of Management at Ahmedabad, Bangalore and 
Kolkata, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Jamia Millia Islamia (both in Delhi) the 
Asian College of Journalism, Chennai, the Indian Institute of Technology, 
Kanpur, the Film & Television Institute of India, Pune, the Lal Bahadur Shastri 
National Academy of Administration, Mussoorie and the Indian Institute of 
Foreign Trade, New Delhi. In September 2010, he became a visiting professor in 
the Department of Political Science, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of 
Delhi, teaching M.Phil students.He served as a member of the Press Council of 
India nominated by the University Grants Commission between January 2008 and 
January 2011. In April 2010, as a member of a two-member sub-committee of the 
Council, he co-authored a 36,000-word report entitled “Paid News: How 
Corruption in the Indian Media Undermines
 Democracy”.He is a media trainer and a consultant/adviser on India’s political 
economy. He was the founder director of the School of Convergence (SoC). He has 
been a consultant at the Institute of South Asian Studies, National University 
of Singapore, making presentations and writing papers on Indian politics. He 
has been associated with a number of projects of the United Nations Development 
Programme and the International Labour Organization (ILO). He moderated two 
panel discussions at the International Labour Conference at Geneva, 
Switzerland, in June 2009 and at the ILO’s Asia Pactific Regional Meeting in 
Kyoto, Japan, in December 2011. He is currently president of the Foundation for 
Media Professionals, an independent, not-for-profit organization.He is a 
director/producer of documentary films. One entitled “Idiot Box or Window of 
Hope” which examines the impact of television on Indian society – was produced 
by the Public Service
 Broadcasting Trust (PSBT) in 2003 and was broadcast on Doordarshan. In 
2006-07, he produced and directed a five-part documentary series in partnership 
with the PSBT entitled: “Hot As Hell: A Profile of Dhanbad”, different versions 
of which have been broadcast on various television channels including 
Doordarshan and NDTV 24x7. In 2007, he directed a documentary film “Grabbing 
Eyeballs: What’s Unethical About Television News in India” for PSBT that was 
followed up by another entitled “Advertorial: Selling News or Products?” in 
2009. In 2010, he produced and directed a three-part documentary film series 
entitled “Blood & Iron: A Story of the Convergence of Crime, Business and 
Politics in Southern India” on the political, economic and ecological 
consequences of iron ore mining in Bellary (Karnataka) and Ananthapur (Andhra 
Pradesh). The film has been translated into six Indian languages and broadcast 
on different television channels. In
 2011, he produced and directed a documentary film entitled: “The Great Indian 
Telecom Robbery”. He has produced/directed a number of other documentary films. 
(He was one of the first journalists to write about the telecommunications 
spectrum scandal in November 2007 and was one of the petitioners in 
public-interest litigation petitions on the subject in the Supreme Court of 
India.)He has co-authored a book with Shankar Raghuraman entitled: “A Time of 
Coalitions: Divided We Stand”, published by Sage Publications India in March 
2004. The book was able to anticipate the outcome of the 14th general elections 
in India, the results for which came out in May that year. A substantially 
revised, updated and enlarged version of the book titled “Divided We Stand: 
India in a Time of Coalitions” was published in December 2007. He has written 
“Media Ethics: Truth, Fairness and Objectivity, Making and Breaking News” 
published by Oxford University Press
 India in March 2009 – the second enlarged edition of the book was published in 
December 2011. He has contributed articles and chapters to books such as 
“Realizing Brand India” edited by Sharif D. Rangnekar (Rupa, 2005) and “India: 
The Political Economy of Reforms” edited by Bibek Debroy & Rahul Mukherji 
(Bookwell, 2004). He is currently engaged in co-authoring a number of books and 
producing/directing documentary films.
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