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Under Cover Bloopers

For the trivia minded (note how we smuggle in our goof-ups)

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Under Cover Bloopers

For the trivia-minded (note how we smuggle in our goof-ups) -- stats you don'tneed.

Under Covers

Digital Divide: Designer covers that got sanghis and kangressis angry

Fare Of Bill: The cover that winged its way to 1600, Pennsylvania Avenue

ActingStaffers: Production manager Anup Dwivedi and the editor’s secretary,K.Sashidharan

Number of times editor-emissary R. Gopal has gone to meet Veerappan in five years: 7. 
Number of audio and video cassettes sent by the brigand: 11

Politicising Crime? There were 77 elected politicians facing civil, criminal charges in’98.

In March 1999Ottavio Quattrochi told Ranjit Bhushan: "Bofors didn’t pay meanything."

Trivia That Tells A Tale

63/98 Number of staff members on our masthead at launch five years ago: 63 
Number now:98

252/6 Number of diaries: 252.Most featured city Delhi: 92. No. of diaries from SouthIndia: 6

14/9 Number of political cover stories: 137 Most featured politician: Sonia 14,Vajpayee 9, Rao 6, Gujral 2, Gowda 2

27/3 Total number of cricket stories: 227 Cricketcovers: 27 Most featured player—Sachin: 6 Azhar: 3

3,284 Number of Polscape and Glitterati items in five years: 3,284Polscape: 1,987Glitterati: 1,297

4327 Number of published letters to the editor: 4,327 Number of corrections: 57

Bloopers And Goof-ups

Closer Than You Think, was what we said on the race in the 1999 elections. Final tally:NDA: 302; Congress: 134!

In our 1999 opinion poll on top dotcoms, our pollsters ranked a non-existent cricket website as one of India’s most popular!

TV doesn’t lie? One of our reporters stopped the presses to add "breakingnews" on Chandrababu Naidu. TV goofed. We goofed.

In Rohini Nilekani’s story in ‘Stree’, September 2000, we captioned fourout of five pictures wrongly, including the author’s!

In May 1999, we listed 11 reasons why India would win the World Cup! Fortunately, we also had 11 ready alibis if they didn’t.

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In our May 1997 special issue on Partition, we gave cop-columnist B.P. Saha a new moniker: Bomkesh Padulia Saha!

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