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Mumbai Diary: Monday Dossier
Updated On: 30 January, 2017 09:59 AM IST | | Team mid-day
<p>The city — sliced, diced and served with a dash of sauce</p>

Fashion forward
Mini Mathur, in her latest column on a fashion website, spoke out against fashion policing and the follies of stereotyping different 'looks'. A look, she writes, is what you create for a character in a soap or a film and not real life. Back when she joined MTV, Mathur recalls leaving her khadi wardrobe back in Delhi as it wasn't cool for a hip VJ to be seen in a cotton sari. She calls out people who question her experiments with the sari, fashion policing for judging a book by its cover, and airport looks.

Mini Mathur
'Who really wants to walk through T3/T2... in impossibly high designer stilettos?' she asked. 'Fashion needn't be vacuous. It has to be personal, fun and ideally shouldn't be judged by the brand you wear. Fashion belongs to everyone. I don't want to be judged. Because I for one, don't feel naked without a Birkin.' We admire the actress and TV host for speaking her mind and shouting down the ever-present fashion police.
The ambassador who knew Hindi
Many ambassadors develop a bond with the country they serve in, but the Russian ambassador to India, Alexander M Kadakin, who passed away on January 26, could be mistaken for an Indian. The witty diplomat, who had seen the relationship between Russia and India from close quarters through decades of political changes, was often called an Indophile.
A few years ago, a professor of Russian was in the city for a language conference, which was followed by a visit to the Russian consulate, where Kadakin was present. As a group picture was being taken, she requested the photographer in Hindi to take one with her cellphone, too. When he didn't oblige, the ambassador translated her exact words into Russian to someone at the consulate and the job was done!
Remembering the Elephant Man
The year has barely begun, and we already have a growing list of personalities that 2017 has taken away. English actor Sir John Hurt, who passed away at the age of 77 recently, starred in acclaimed films including Elephant Man, Alien and Harry Potter.
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