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Sriram Krishnan | Global Indian | Indian American
Global IndianstorySriram Krishnan: The Indian American helping Elon Musk revamp Twitter
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Sriram Krishnan: The Indian American helping Elon Musk revamp Twitter

Compiled by: Charu Thakur

(November 5, 2022) In less than a week, much drama has unfolded at the Twitter headquarters, ever since Elon Musk took over as the ‘Chief Twit’ of the microblogging site. While the world was still letting that feeling “sink in”, the 51-year-old began making some drastic changes. From firing the once bigwigs of Twitter like Parag Agrawal and Ned Segal to levying a monthly fee of $8 on Twitter users for a blue tick, Musk is busy revamping Twitter. And he has now roped in Sriram Krishnan, an Indian-American, to help him overhaul the company.

According to New York Times, Sriram was holding the fort at Twitter’s San Fransisco headquarters on October 30, while Elon Musk was in New York. The next day, Sriram posted a picture of the Twitter office, and affirmed that he was “helping out” Elon Musk “temporarily.” He added, “I believe this is a hugely important company and can have a great impact on the world and Elon is the person to make it happen.”

Now that the word is out: I’m helping out @elonmusk with Twitter temporarily with some other great people.

I ( and a16z) believe this is a hugely important company and can have great impact on the world and Elon is the person to make it happen. pic.twitter.com/weGwEp8oga

— Sriram Krishnan – sriramk.eth (@sriramk) October 30, 2022

Sriram, who once lead the product team at Twitter, is now a general partner at Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, also called a 16z, which invested in Elon Musk’s buyout of Twitter.

Chennai to the US

Born to a father who worked in the insurance sector and a homemaker mother in Chennai, Sriram comes from a “typical middle-class Indian family”. He aspired to be an engineer, and hence enrolled at SRM Engineering College in Anna University in 2001 to pursue his bachelor’s in Information Technology. Like many young Indians, he too had an American dream and moved to the US in 2005 at the age of 21 to work for Microsoft.

Sriram Krishnan | Global Indian | Indian American

Sriram Krishnan is an Indian American investor and technologist

Dipping his toes in the world of technology

It was in 2003 that he met his now wife Aarthi Ramamurthy when the two were studying software engineering. They had met earlier in a Yahoo chatroom set up for a coding project. Interestingly, both of them were hired by Indian American tech executive S Somasegar for Microsoft, where Sriram “touched numerous projects related to Windows Azure”, according to the Andreessen Horowitz website. After gaining enough experience, Sriram shifted gears and moved to Facebook in 2013, where he built Facebook Audience Network, one of the largest networks in display advertising. Three years later, it was time to move to Snap Inc, where he created and oversaw various mobile ad products, including Snap’s Direct Response ads business.

Sriram Krishnan | Aarthi Ramamurthy | Global Indian

Sriram Krishnan with his wife Aarthi Ramamurthy

Then, in 2017, he landed a job at Twitter to lead the consumer product teams. “Drove Twitter user growth to >20% YoY growth in ~2 years and launched several products including a redesigned events experience. Headed up core product teams including home timeline, onboarding/new user experience, search, discovery, etc,” reads his LinkedIn profile.

Venture Capital Firm and a Podcast

In early 2021, Sriram joined venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, which is a significant investor in Clubhouse, a social audio app released in 2020. The same year, Sriram and Aarthi launched a Clubhouse talk show The Good Time Show that “focuses on organic conversations on anything from startups to venture capitalism and cryptocurrencies.” It was an early appearance by Elon Musk on The Good Time Show that made Clubhouse popular, exceeding the limit of 5000 simultaneous users. If NYT is to be believed, Krishnan and Musk had met earlier during a visit to the SpaceX headquarters in California.

Krishnan, who calls himself an “investor, technologist and engineer” is interested in the “intersection of consumer tech and crypto”. The San Francisco resident, who has a two-year-old daughter with wife Aarthi, has joined hands with Elon to help him revamp Twitter.

  • Follow Sriram Krishnan on Linkedin

 

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  • Aarthi Ramamurthy
  • Andreessen Horowitz
  • Elon Musk
  • Facebook
  • Indian American
  • Indian American Investor
  • Silicon Valley
  • Sriram Krishnan
  • The Good Time Show
  • Twitter
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Published on 05, Nov 2022

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Amritha Shakti: Indian-Australian singer empowering South Asian women through music

(August 2, 2024) Self-love, identity, and spirituality - these purposeful terms beautifully envelop every song of Indian-Australian singer and songwriter Amritha Shakti, whose music has a life of its own. A Tamilian raised in Australia, she often found herself in a constant struggle between the East and West, until the Global Indian discovered her true self through music. And now she is using it to empower South Asian women as well as create a dialogue around issues that matter. "I sing about things that I think matter - love, mental health, social issues, and spirituality. My aim is to represent my beautiful Indian roots in everything I do," she says in a video on her website. Infusing Indian heritage in everything that she does is what makes Amritha different from many others, who are gravitating purely towards the Western. Oscillating between East and West  The Chennai-born was just two when her family immigrated to Australia. Being one of three brown girls in her school, Shakti experienced two different worlds growing up. Her home was a warm cocoon of ‘Indianness’ - filled with the known waft of dosas and rasam and the sounds of MS Subbalakshmi and KJ Yesudas. But as she stepped out of

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e of three brown girls in her school, Shakti experienced two different worlds growing up. Her home was a warm cocoon of ‘Indianness’ - filled with the known waft of dosas and rasam and the sounds of MS Subbalakshmi and KJ Yesudas. But as she stepped out of the comfort of the known, she was met with curious gazes and constant mocking. "They looked at me as though I was the strangest creature they had ever seen," she said in an interview. As a youngster growing up in Australia, she found it hard to fathom that a culture she celebrated at home meant little to others.

[caption id="attachment_26382" align="aligncenter" width="715"]Singer | Amritha Shakti | Global Indian Amritha Shakti[/caption]

"She struggled with her sense of identity and the concept of 'home' for a long time. One obvious thing, however - was her love for India," mentions her website. And she kept this love alive through music. She was just four when she started training in Carnatic music from her mother. While that set the foundation for her as a singer, she taught herself Hindustani and Bollywood vocals during her teens. It was only in her twenties that Amritha discovered her love for soul, jazz, and the blues. But like most, she planned to do an MBA and keep music as a "side hobby" because she had never seen anyone "who looked like her" on mainstream television. Music was "something very private, more of a meditation" for Amritha, she says in her video.

Carving a niche 

After graduating from Columbia Business School in New York, she worked as a consultant with United Nations and World Bank. But after realising that the original plan wasn't the real deal for her, she turned to her first love - music. Things changed for this singer and songwriter after she posted her first video on YouTube, and soon the journey started to take a "path of its own." Being an amalgamation of East and the West, she found music to be a perfect channel to represent both the worlds she grew up in.

[caption id="attachment_26383" align="aligncenter" width="594"]Singer | Amritha Shakti | Global Indian Amritha Shakti is an Indian-Australian singer[/caption]

Empowering South Asian women 

A staunch feminist, she uses her music to explore the topics of female empowerment and South Asian representation. "You realise to what extent not seeing people like you growing up has mentally closed off doors," she said in an interview. It took her years to shut the noise around her. "I spent my teens convinced that I was not quite good enough compared to western ideals of beauty," she added, and it was in her twenties that she understood her "self-worth." This gave way to her first single Deserve Me. "I wrote the song as an act of defiance and as a way for me to vocally and openly reject all the norms that had been imposed upon me from both worlds. And yet, the song also celebrates my bi-cultural upbringing, fusing R&B and neo-soul with Indian classical elements, bringing together my 24 years of Indian musical training and my love for soul and the blues," she said.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEH3WFRi3C4

Featuring 30 South Asian women, the video puts brown women in the centre in all their glory and splendour. "Amritha’s obsession lies in fusing her beautiful Indian roots with the power and strength of soul and neo-soul – and creating music that heals and empowers," mentions her website.

Amritha, who collaborated with Canada-based producer and DJ Khanvict for Kingdom, believes that her work addresses the lack of South Asian representation, and steers away from the tokenistic representation. The world is slowly opening up to representation, and Amritha hopes to see more of such change in mainstream media, creative arts, and leadership to make many Indian girls like her have a sense of belonging.

Amritha's journey shows how powerful music can be in finding your identity and empowering others. By blending her Indian roots with Western music styles, she has created a unique place for herself in the music world. Her work not only celebrates her culture but also challenges society's expectations. Amritha uses her music to speak up for South Asian women, focusing on issues like self-worth and cultural pride. Her songs are full of purpose and passion, inspiring others to embrace their differences and share their stories. As the world becomes more inclusive, artists like Amritha play a key role in making sure everyone's voice is heard and valued.

  • Follow Amritha Shakti on Instagram and Facebook
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Parmesan’s Indian connect: How Sikhs saved the Italian cheese industry

(September 27, 2022) The pale-golden rind and straw-coloured interior, aged for over two years, make Parmigiano-Reggiano rich in flavour and world-famous. The authentic and artisanal cheese from northern Italy, with its rich, nutty, and delicate taste, has brought the world to its knees. But not many know that the Sikh community has a major role in keeping Parmesan alive. Yes, you read it right! Some three decades ago, when the economy was booming, the Italian goivinezza (youth) turned their back on countryside living and the traditional occupation of cheese-making and moved to the main cities in search of better career opportunities. They left a vacuum that was instantly filled by Sikhs who came to the land of wines and cheese seeking work away from their homeland after the insurgency in Punjab. They came armed with a love for farming and innate skills that were in short supply in Italy and played a key role in the resurrection of Italy's Parmesan cheese. [caption id="attachment_29866" align="aligncenter" width="622"] Sikh community has played a pivotal role in saving Italy's cheese industry (Photo courtesy: thecanyonchronicle.com)[/caption] Though it wasn't the cheese that attracted the Sikhs to the green pastures initially, the flat territory with hot and

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Italy's cheese industry (Photo courtesy: thecanyonchronicle.com)[/caption]

Though it wasn't the cheese that attracted the Sikhs to the green pastures initially, the flat territory with hot and humid weather reminded them of a home away from home. For two decades, the Sikhs worked at the stalla (dairy farm) tending to the cows, as language was hardly a barrier while dealing with cattle, but it was only in 2011 that famed writer Khushwant Singh first brought the stories of the Sikh community in Italy to the forefront. In an article for Hindustan Times, he unraveled the secret that was tucked away from the public eye for too long. A trip to village Olmeneta, near Cremona in Lombardy, brought him in contact with the ‘mini-Punjab’, created by Sikhs on Italian soil. Most moved to Italy in the 80s and 90s when Punjab was boiling due to riots. In search of a better life, many sought asylums in Europe, ready to find a footing in Italy.

[caption id="attachment_29869" align="aligncenter" width="736"]Sikh | Parmesan | Global Indian Italy's Parmesan is world-famous for its distinct flavour. (Photo courtesy: Travelandleisure.com)[/caption]

"At home, we have fields and cows, and our relationship with the land and animals is very particular to us. So, when we came here and didn't know the language, this was something in our favour," Amritpal Singh, a Punjab native who moved to Novellara in Italy in the 80s told BBC. While most Sikhs became involved with the cows, others found themselves immersed in the art of cheese-making - something that the young locals were abandoning. “They (Sikhs) saved an economy that would have gone to the dogs because young people didn’t want to work with cows,” the then Mayor Dalido Malaggi of Pessina Cremonese told NYT.

Today, Italy has the largest Sikh population in Europe, only second to the United Kingdom, with an estimated number of 220,000. What started as a safe haven in the 80s for Sikhs escaping the riots has now turned into a land that is dependent on them for keeping their dairy industry and parmesan alive. Khushwant Singh quoted Aldo Cavagnoli, the then director general of Latteria Sorseina, one of the largest cheese factories in the region, saying, "We certainly owe it to the Sikhs for keeping the business of cheese alive."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WZhUM2ojJWc

Around 54 percent of the people involved with producing cheese at Latteria Sorseina are Sikhs. Originally made by the monks near Parma in the Middle Ages, it only got its name Parmesano (of or from Parma) in the 1530s, by Italian nobles. However, in 1954 it officially became Parmigiano Reggiano, popularly called Parmesan.

Sikhs’ hard work and love were reciprocated by the Italians when the Novellara municipality in 2000 granted permission to build Gurudwara Sri Guru Kalgidhar Sahib, touted to be the largest Sikh temple in Continental Europe. Many have now got Italian citizenship but most identify as Indo-Italians. "You can't cut your roots so I keep them alive inside me, but the rest is Italian," Amritpal told BBC. Italy embraced them at a time when they were looking for safety and provided a livelihood in a foreign land. Though the influx of Sikhs to Italy from Punjab is on a rise, the land of cheese is welcoming them with open arms.

Reading Time: 5 min

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Keeping abreast with cancer care: Dr Raghu Ram delivers early diagnosis, saves lives

(April 27, 2022) A woman gets diagnosed with breast cancer every four minutes in India, and one dies of it every 13 minutes, making it the most prevalent cancer among Indian women. Unfortunately, in India, most women are diagnosed at an advanced stage where prognosis is poor. A Hyderabad-based UK-returned doctor is working hard to change this reality. Dr Raghu Ram Pillarisetti has dedicated his life to make a significant and meaningful difference to the delivery of breast healthcare in India. Dr Pillarisetti's foundation, Ushalakshmi Breast Cancer Foundation (named after his mother), is working with a missionary zeal to make significant and meaningful difference to the lives of people affected by breast cancer or with breast-related health concerns. “Breast cancer is a huge concern today. However, the topic is still a closet issue,” explains Dr Pillarisetti, during an interaction with Global Indian, adding, “I am a living bridge between the UK and India, and on an endeavour to replicate the best of British practices into improving breast healthcare in my motherland.” [caption id="attachment_23764" align="aligncenter" width="412"] Dr Raghu Ram Pillarisetti[/caption] The highly-decorated doctor, who is the first surgeon of Indian origin to be conferred the honorary fellowship of the Association of

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th="412"]Dr Raghu Ram Pillarisetti Dr Raghu Ram Pillarisetti[/caption]

The highly-decorated doctor, who is the first surgeon of Indian origin to be conferred the honorary fellowship of the Association of Surgeons of Great Britain and Ireland, was recently appointed as an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. The Padma Shri awardee, who believes that everything is part of god’s plan, shares that he was speechless when the British deputy high commissioner to India, Jan Thompson informed him about it. “Self-nominations are not allowed in the British honours system. So, I am not sure how my work got noticed by the British government. It was a surreal moment. I was, in fact, speechless,” laughs the doctor.

Inspired by his parents

Born in Guntur, Andhra Pradesh to a doctor couple – Prof PV Chalapathi Rao and Dr Ushalakshmi Kumari - who were working at the Guntur Medical College, soon after their son was born, they shifted to Hyderabad. This was where Dr Pillarisetti was brought up. A happy-go-lucky child, he was very inspired by his parents and their work.

“I studied at the Hyderabad Public School,” shares Dr Pillarisetti, “I wasn’t always at the top of the class; however I wasn’t a backbencher either. Mostly, I used to get first class, but never among the students who got distinction,” admits the doctor adding that he would play various sports for the fun and experience.

Following his parents’ footsteps, Dr Pillarisetti graduated in MBBS from Siddhartha Medical College. “The real turning point in my professional career came when I joined Kasturba Medical College, Mangalore to pursue master's in surgery (MS), in 1992. After my MBBS, I worked at the Osmania General Hospital in the general surgery department. I had applied for a six-month exemption at the Kasturba Medical College and gave my exams with seniors, and stood first. I was very studious during my master’s,” shares the doctor.

The Great British Isles

In 1997, Dr Pillarisetti went to the United Kingdom for FRCS. During his first visit, he impressed the Brits. “I was able to satisfy about 100 examiners in three out of the four Surgical Royal Colleges in the British Isles - Edinburgh, Glasgow and Ireland, in just two months. That is a record, which is still not broken by anyone else,” avers the doctor, who couldn’t sit for the London FRCS, since the dates clashed with his other exams. However, he was conferred the FRCS London, without sitting for the exam in 2010.

He then worked in the UK for about a decade, subsequently completing higher surgical training, and training in oncoplastic breast surgery at the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust in London, and at the Nottingham Breast Institute.

While all looked peachy, an incident changed the course of his life. In 2002, while Dr Pillarisetti was working at the Cardiff Breast Unit, one of the foremost breast health centres in the UK, his mother, Dr Ushalakshmi was diagnosed with breast cancer in India. “Being an only child, I was profoundly affected by her illness. While she was undergoing treatment in the UK, I started enquiring about the situation of breast cancer treatment in India. I realised that due to the lack of awareness and absence of an organised screening programme, more than 60 per cent patients of breast cancer are diagnosed at the advanced stages,” he explains.

Homecoming

Although he and his wife, Dr Vyjayanthi, had several great opportunities in the UK, they moved back to India. “My wife, Dr Vyjayanthi, obtained her MRCOG on the very first attempt in London in 1997. She then completed structured training in obstetrics and gynaecology in the United Kingdom & subspecialty training in Reproductive Medicine, leading to CCT (certificate of completion of training), which is essential to work as a consultant Fertility Specialist in the UK. She has established one of the largest Fertility Centres in Telangana & Andhra Pradesh at KIMS Hospitals in 2009,” he shares.

[caption id="attachment_23766" align="aligncenter" width="631"]Dr Raghu Ram Dr Raghu Ram with his wife, Dr Vyjayanthi, after being appointed as an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire[/caption]

After returning to India in 2007, their vision was to start a free-standing, purpose-built, comprehensive centre for breast health. “People assume that breast disease is just breast cancer alone. However, nine out of 10 women who present themselves with a lump, do not have cancer. They require reassurance about the process. So, the first step was to establish a breast centre - so that when a lady walks in the entire medical process to check her breast's health happen under one roof, including mammography, ultrasound-guided breast biopsy, and even counselling,” shares the doctor.

KIMS-Ushalakshmi Centre for Breast Diseases was established in Hyderabad. Dr Raghu Ram shares that while he envisioned and designed it, Dr B Bhaskar Rao, who is the founder of KIMS Hospitals, played a pivotal role in ensuring that the Breast Centre became a reality.

[caption id="attachment_23767" align="aligncenter" width="6000"] His Royal Highness Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, conferring the OBE to Dr Raghu Ram, at the Windsor Castle[/caption]

“I also, however, wanted to establish a not-for-profit organisation under my mother’s name, who is 90 now. So, I established the Ushalakshmi Breast Cancer Foundation, under which I have been able to create the much-needed awareness about breast cancer, through a number of unique activities, over the past 15 years,” he shares. The foundation hosts a pink ribbon walk in Hyderabad during the month of October, which sees a huge participation from people from various walks of life, including breast cancer survivors.

Family first

A tight schedule and numerous patients, that never stops him from spending time with family. “I value my family. I am not in the rat-race of private practice. I never start early and work till late. I spend quality time with them. I have two sons, and would give them both evening baths every day. My older son is studying medicine in the UK, and the younger one in the XII standard, and wants to pursue a career in law,” shares the doctor who spends a hour-and-a-half in the prayer room, meditating, daily.

  • Follow Dr Raghu Ram Pillarisetti on Facebook and Twitter
  • Follow Ushalakshmi Breast Cancer Foundation on Twitter

Reading Time: 7 mins

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Mindy Kaling: The Indian American making representation and inclusivity mainstream

(February 8, 2023)  Clad in a floral block print dress, posing in the vicinity of Jaipur's very popular Amer Fort is how Indian-American producer, actor and screenwriter Mindy Kaling announced her arrival in India recently. Buzz has it that she is in the Pink City to scout for locations for her upcoming film with Priyanka Chopra Jonas. Thanks to the 43-year-old, the underrepresented minorities are finding a voice and visibility in the US pop culture. So much so that the Indian American has become the poster girl for South Asian arts, culture, and even quirks, on every media platform available. Being the first woman of colour to break into an all-white men writers team at American sitcom The Office wasn't an easy feat, but that's Mindy Kaling for you - bold, fearless, and unabashed. For someone who began her journey at 24, the writer, producer, actor, and director has come a long way with immensely successful shows and films to her credit.   View this post on Instagram   A post shared by Mindy Kaling (@mindykaling) An overlooked teenager finds solace in comedy Born Vera Mindy Chokalingam in Massachusetts to a Tamil architect father and a Bengali doctor mother, Kaling's

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A post shared by Mindy Kaling (@mindykaling)

An overlooked teenager finds solace in comedy

Born Vera Mindy Chokalingam in Massachusetts to a Tamil architect father and a Bengali doctor mother, Kaling's life in Buckingham Browne & Nichols School was quite a dampener because, in her words, she was an "average overlooked" student. With no "cool" friends to hang out with, she found solace in comedy shows on American TV. It was Comedy Central, Monty Python sketches, and Saturday Night Live reruns that piqued her interest in comedy.

But this wallflower truly blossomed at Dartmouth College. From writing plays and acting in college dramas to singing, Mindy spread her wings as she graduated with a degree in playwriting.

At 19, this Global Indian got a summer internship at Late Night With Conan O'Brien. She reckons herself as the worst intern that the show had ever seen. "I treated my internship as a free ticket to watch my hero perform live on stage every day, and not as a way to help the show run smoothly by doing errands," she wrote in her memoir.

The play that got her The Office

The internship might have been a facade but Mindy was sure that comedy was her true calling. Soon she packed her bags and moved to Brooklyn. But it wasn't until 2002 that things started to move forward when her comedy play Matt and Ben debuted at the New York International Fringe Festival. Such was the popularity of the play that in no time it was transferred to Off-Broadway venue in East Village. It was here that American screenwriter and producer Greg Daniels saw Mindy perform and offered her a writing gig for the first season of The Office.

Damn this is a #TBT pic.twitter.com/3xk6UL5lbr

— Mindy Kaling (@mindykaling) September 8, 2016

At 24, she became the only woman and the only person of colour to join eight other writers on the show, which was nominated for an Emmy. Along with her writing credits, Kaling made her TV debut as a super sassy and fearless Kelly Kapoor in the hit American sitcom. She fully represented her Indianness with all its quirks on one of the most popular sitcoms of all time. With the progression of the show, she also became an executive producer and director, besides writing 24 episodes.

When sexism rocked her boat

Early on, Mindy faced sexism. Shortly after The Office was received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Comedy Series, the Television Academy told Mindy that she wouldn't be eligible for an Emmy like the rest of the staff because there were too many producers on the show. "They made me, not any of the other producers, fill out a whole form and write an essay about all my contributions as a writer and a producer. I had to get letters from all the other male, white producers saying that I had contributed when my actual record stood for itself," she told Elle. Her name was included in the final list; however, the show did not win an Emmy.

After being part of The Office for eight seasons, she decided to bid goodbye to the show, and released her first memoir, Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? A hilarious account of her highs and lows in life, the book soon made it to the New York Times best-selling list.

The rise of a pop-culture icon

While The Office opened doors of opportunities for her, it was The Mindy Project that got her bigger recognition and fame. The 2012 show, that ran for six seasons, made Mindy the first woman of colour to have her network show. In no time, she broke the barriers of race and became an international pop culture icon. Such was the popularity that when the show moved from Fox TV in 2016 to Hulu's version, she was pulling in an estimated $140,000 per episode. Moreover, she earned the third spot on the Forbes list of the highest-paid actresses on TV in 2017.

[caption id="attachment_6235" align="aligncenter" width="841"]Mindy Kaling in Oceans 8 Mindy Kaling and Sandra Bullock in a still from Ocean's 8[/caption]

A popular name on television, Mindy also dipped her toes in Hollywood with films like A Wrinkle in Time, Ocean's 8, and Late Night. Despite being in the entertainment industry for decades, Kaling felt like an outsider because of the constant reminders that she is different. "We talk about how representation matters in Hollywood, so much that it almost loses its meaning. But it's actually real. Growing up, I realized that there was no one who looked like me on TV, so I often found myself drawing parallels to people who are like me on shows like the Cosby family or characters on white sitcoms. You cannot imagine how excited I was when Bend It Like Beckham came out. The idea that I could actually see people from my community onscreen blew my mind," she told IANS.

Though she was representing Asians with her stories, the actor and producer revealed that her shows weren't ethnicity-driven.

Never Have I Ever

With her 2020 Netflix show Never Have I Ever, Mindy broke barriers for Indians on the global stage. The popular series is one-of-its-kind that brought representation and diversity to the forefront, something that has always been a filler in most American sitcoms. She somehow shattered the glass ceiling by bringing South Asians alive on the screen like never before. Giving them a three-dimensional character got her a huge thumbs up from fans and critics alike.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzVYRST0h3Q&t=20s

However, her latest Velma has received backlash from fans across. Kaling has been a popular figure on American TV for a long time, but despite her fame, it has been a mixed bag for her. "It really doesn't matter how much money I have. I'm treated badly with enough regularity that it keeps me humble," she told Elle.

  • Follow Mindy Kaling on Instagram

Reading Time: 6 min

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MR Rangaswami: From angel investing to mobilising Indian leaders for social change through Indiaspora

(March 12, 2024) These days, MR Rangaswami is a real man about town in the US. He's at the top summits, meeting celebrities like AR Rahman when they're in the US, and rubbing shoulders with the likes of PM Modi, attending parties at the home of Vice President Kamala Harris or rubbing shoulders with Ambassadors Taranjit Singh Sandhu and Eric Garcetti. He's one of Silicon Valley's top angel investors and philanthropists, as he mobilises his vast network of business leaders, politicians, startups and non-profits to bring about social good. It wasn't always the case, though. MR Rangaswami's success came through hard work, failure and the ability to  take a risk, which he has done several times, from becoming the US' first angel investor to organising a CEO retreat for some of the US' biggest names in the corporate world and giving all the proceeds away to charity. Back in 1997, however, when MR Rangaswami was busy organising his first CEO retreat under the banner of his company, Sand Hill, it seemed as if things weren’t destined to go his way. He set up an advisory board, put a programme together and sent out invitations. Nobody registered. CEOs received dozens of

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s received dozens of conference invitations just like this one, and they wanted to know how this one was any different. So, the Global Indian made a bold decision, one that would change his life. He decided to organise the first ever non-profit conference, where 100 percent of the proceeds would be donated. The idea was a huge hit. In the last 15 years, the organisation has given away over $20 million to non-profits, and CEOs pay up to $10,000 per head just to attend. The conference is also a platform for deserving non-profits to network with industry captains, receive advice, feedback and investments.

M.R. Rangaswami is widely regarded as one of the founding fathers of Silicon Valley. He has been profiled on the front page of the Wall Street Journal, named to Forbes' 'Midas' list of investors and has been recognized by CRN as one of the top 25 Tech Executives. He's also the founder of Indiaspora, through which he mobilises high achievers from the Indian diaspora as a force for good. His ethos is simple: Indians are in the top one percent in the US, with an average annual income of $1,50,000. "Our community tends to be very low profile," he said, in an interview. "But we need to be more high profile because all Americans need to know that we are generous and we help." Indiaspora hosts an Annual Leadership Forum, a Philanthropy Summit and the Global Connect Initiative, and engages in community issues as well.

‘Young and naïve’ in Houston, Texas

M.R. Rangaswami first arrived in Silicon Valley "as a young, naive person with absolutely no idea of what the value was about," as he puts it. He had graduated from Loyola College, Chennai and was a techie with a comfortable job in Houston, Texas. One day, when he met a consultant for training, the consultant asked him what he does. M.R. replied that he had an MBA and works with computers. "He says, 'what the heck are you doing in Houston? You better get out to Silicon Valley'. In those days there was no LinkedIn, no Facebook, no internet, nothing. In '82, I'm sitting in  Houston saying, how the hell do I get to Silicon Valley?"

The only way was the long way. He went to the library, starting at what Silicon Valley was in the first place. He made a list of potential employers and software company listings, typed out his resume and mailed it out to them.

The Silicon Valley journey

Sure enough, a company called him, did an interview and offered him a job. What MR didn't know at the time was that he had joined a startup. And he was the only Indian there. The compan did great, doubling in the first year, the second year and third year. Then, in the fourth year, the company asked him to lay off all the employees in his group, until he was the only one left. "Then they called me and said, 'You're laid off as well'."

[caption id="attachment_49924" align="aligncenter" width="528"] MR Rangaswami with PM Narendra Modi[/caption]

However, instead of being bogged down by failure, MR knew the time had come to pivot away from the corporate ladder. "I grew in the industry, seen Steve Jobs, Mary Ellis and Scott McNealy and all the big names in enterprise and consumer tech," he says. "That was my upbringing. I had a terrific career at companies like Oracle and helped take a company public; the stock went from 25 cents to $50." And the sudden break in his career allowed him to ask if he wanted to keep on making money or do something different with his life.

This was the mid-nineties, at the height of the startup boom and the Silicon Valley dot-com bubble. And M.R. Rangaswami chose to do what nobody had done before. He founded the first Angel Investor firm, at a time when the phrase hadn't even come in to use yet. In 1997, he bought sandhill.com for $20, beginning his journey as one of the founding fathers of the Silicon Valley tech startup ecosystem. "I picked up the domain for $20 and thought, that's going to be my exit. One of these days, someone's going to offer me a million bucks." His aim was to help startups, either through feedback and connecting them with investors, or by investing personally. He invested in some 150 companies, a few of them did badly, and others did very well. "I invested in some good companies but that was not my intent," he says. "It was to help founders."

The thrill of giving back

It did, however, invoke his spirit of giving. "Then I wanted to bring the whole ecosystem together, through a conference or a retreat for the top 100 people in business and in tech," Rangaswami recalls. He had seen the Indian community in Silicon Valley grow in leaps and bounds, until they populated the top one percent of the working population in the US. When MR first came to Silicon Valley, it was home to some 10,000 Indians. Fast forward four decades and there are 4,00,000 Indians living there. They're also among the highest earners, at the forefront of major corporations, VCs, angel investor firms and startups.

[caption id="attachment_49925" align="aligncenter" width="443"] MR Rangaswami and Sri Sri Ravishankar[/caption]

When his corporate retreat idea didn't take off, Rangaswami decided to make an even bolder move and pivoted straight into the non-profit space and discovered that he had created a very successful mode. "We have been able to give away over $20 million and also bring the CEOs of non-profits into our network and give them mentorship, advice and even money from many of the CEOs of large corporations," he said, in a talk. "The same CEOs pay a lot of money to attend, today, it's $10,000 per person. All that money goes to non-profits, I don't take a single penny out of it and the model has become a huge success." He also went on to found the Corporate Eco Forum, an invite only community for publicly listed companies with a strong environmental focus in their core business strategy. Members in the Top 100 include Bank of America, Procter & Gamble, Wells Fargo, JP Morgan Chase & Co, Microsoft, Sales Force, The Walt Disney Company and many more.

The birth of Indiaspora

After that, there was no looking back. In 2007, noticing that the Indian diaspora was growing in numbers and in wealth, with no single organisation to unite them, he started Indiaspora. "There are communities for lawyers, doctors and other professions. And there are groups for communities like the Gujarati Samaj and the Tamil Sangam," he says. "The idea was to bring together people from all walks of life to be a force for good." Driven by the idea of 'seva', Indiaspora helps non-profits and different organisations amplify their messages.

A decade later, Indiaspora is a high profile network of global Indian leaders, involved with philanthropy, civic engagement and social impact and entrepreneurship and innovation. Their philanthropic efforts are in the form of a long-term partnership with Give, based in India. In the US, they aim to support over 500 non-profits through philanthropic contributions from over 200 partners and this arm of the organisation is headed by Ashish Shah. The partnership was formed in 2022, as Give India and Indiaspora hosted the Indiaspora-Give Philanthropy Summit at the Consulate General of India, New York, bringing together leading philanthropists, foundations and non-profits.

Their civic engagement deals with a diverse set of issues, including racial justice and gender equality. And MR Rangaswami believes that all enterprises will eventually be social enterprises, that for-profit companies will work for social good. He urges everyone to live by Salesforce's' 1-1-1- model - 'Donate one percent of your time, product, profit to philanthropic causes'.

Follow MR Rangaswami on LinkedIn.

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About Global Indian

Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

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