2026 2

Speaking unprepared

I deliver about 3-5 talks a month and usually prepare for them. Thanks to AI (but even otherwise), I have a steady stream of new content. So, I just to assemble the story. For example, in my TEDx Whitefield talk “Prisoners of Birth”, I shared the impact of name, gender, lineage, place, and time of birth. I didn’t execute any new analysis. I just cherry-picked disparate analyses into a theme. (Took me three days to plan, though.) ...

Memorable explanations

Our brains remember some things better. Explaining that way makes it stick. Here are the eight things, most important first, that help you: Structure explanations memorably: Face. You remember faces before facts. So cast characters: “Imagine you’re a courier carrying a packet.” Prefer archetypes to real names — less baggage, more imagination. Place. You’re reading down a list now — and the top feels more important. That’s spatial wiring. Turn any concept into a map. Use higher, deeper, nearer, inside, … Tale. You read #1 and #2 first because they came first. Your brain built a cause from that sequence. Time creates cause for free. “Because” makes anything believable. Scale. “Two feet tall” lands instantly. “60 cm” forces you to convert. Your brain doesn’t measure — it compares. Give it reference objects, not just numbers. Deliver explanations memorably: ...

2024 1

This is the coolest data visualization I’ve seen in a long time. It makes you think about human behaviour. Please try and GUESS why the AirBnB occupancy rates shoot up in the red areas on Apr 7 before you read the comments! LinkedIn

2021 3

Over 30 people have created data comic stories for the #DataComicgen awards. Getting insights from data is hard. Telling stories from these is harder. Telling comic stories is the hardest. Yet, these two dozen stories simplify data into simple (and even interactive) comic narratives. Hats off, participants. Hats off! https://gramener.com/comicgenfriday/awards/gallery2021/ LinkedIn

This is my first Lightboard video – interacting with a data visualization on-camera. Hans Rosling did something like this with BBC 4. That’s been my inspiration. In this video, I share the screen time of the Harry Potter supporting cast. The bar chart race was created in PowerPoint, and the lightboard effect was created with OBS. (I’ll share a tutorial soon.) What do you think of the video? Any comments? Questions? ...

How to direct a data movie

Ganes and I created a data movie on speed-cubing records as part of a Gramener hackathon. Here’s a video of us talking about how we created it. Anand: We picked the Rubik’s cube story for this hackathon. Tell me more about how this excited you. Ganes: Since my son started solving the Rubik’s cube a few months back, I’ve been fascinated with these competitions. I still don’t know how to solve it, but I like watching it. ...

2009 1

Short stories

I fancied Isaac Asimov a lot, and wanted to write. When I was a kid, I wrote a few short stories. They are, unfortunately, very contextual. The jokes can only be understood by those whom the stories were written for. But still, since I’d put in several days of effort…

2006 3

Hrishikesh Mukherji movies

Down the memory lane with Hrishikesh Mukherji’s movies via Shruti.

The man who robbed a robber

The man who robbed a robber.

Inspiration for writing

Inspiration - not motivation - for writing. Comments Madhu 29 Jan 2006 12:26 pm: Forget writing, sometimes it even difficult to find inspiration for working(not motivation)! Chitra 3 Feb 2006 10:04 am: He he too good !!

2003 1

The Perfect Gentleman by Jeffrey Archer

Full text of Jeffey Archer’s short story: The Perfect Gentleman. A nice introduction to Archer’s style, if you haven’t read him. And here’s some more from Harper Collins. PS: Here’s an introduction to backgammon.