Cricket Samrat Pdf

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Self-portrait photograph
Born16 March 1963 (age 56)
NationalityIndian
EducationMasters in Western History
Alma materLucknow University
OccupationAuthor
Years active13 years
Notable work
How United States Shot Humanity: Muslims Ruined; Europe Next
TelevisionIndia TV
TitleExecutive Editor
Term2007–2009
Parent(s)Late P.M.Shukla and Late Vimla Shukla
http://www.ashishshukla.net
Websitehttps://www.newsbred.com

Ashish Shukla is an Indian author on geopolitics and terrorism who runs a news website on international relations, Newsbred.[1] It's also in sync with his lengthy career as a scribe, which began and flourished as a prominent cricket reporter between 1991–2013, reporting for premier national and international newspapers, agencies, websites, radio stations and sports and news TV channels. In between all this, he took time out to edit the English edition of the world's largest circulated Hindi cricket magazine, Cricket Samrat, in 1999, and acted as Chief Operating Officer (COO) of Naradonline, one of India's earliest news portals, in 2000, before the dot.com bubble went bust.

Personal life[edit]

Shukla was born in Lucknow, the capital of India's northern state Uttar Pradesh, on 16 March 1963, the youngest of two brothers and a sister who made up the family of a policeman serving in the state police department. He went to the city's best public schools such as La Martiniere, St. Francis and Colvin Taluqdars’ College before doing his graduation in Lucknow University, where he achieved his masters in Western History. Shukla shifted to India's capital Delhi in 1989, where he married a school teacher, Radhika, in 1993. He presently lives in Noida, part of the National Capital Region, and a suburb of Delhi, with his wife and two college-going daughters, Ashwarya and Rhea.

Career[edit]

Shukla was just out of school when at the age of 16 he accepted an internship at the sports desk of The Pioneer, an English newspaper then operating from Lucknow. He rose quickly to become the sports editor of the newspaper in a matter of a year in 1980 while still in teens. His contemporary in The Pioneer was Neelabh Banerjee, who later went on to become the arts and illustrations National Editor of the Times of India. Shukla followed Banerjee within a year to the Times of India on the sports desk, in 1989, where he quickly began covering national and international cricket tours and tournaments.

Shukla undertook an assignment for Agence France-Presse (AFP) to cover the 1996 Cricket World Cup cricket in the Indian sub-continent and followed it up with India's epochal tour to England the same year which gave India two of its most illustrious batsmen and captains, Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid. Shukla was still employed with the Times of India at this time, a position he found increasingly untenable. He left Times of India in 1996 and then began his long informal association with the Press Trust of India (PTI).

His informal association with PTI quickly took roots and he regularly began covering Indian cricket team's tours worldwide. Such an arrangement also allowed Shukla to be footloose, letting him write articles for Rediff,[2]ESPNcricinfo[3] and voicing his opinion as a cricket expert on British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)[4] and Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)[5] among others. The large reach of PTI gave him a presence in prominent newspapers such as Indian Express,[6]The Economic Times[7]Daily News and Analysis,[8]The Tribune[9] and national magazines such as Outlook[10] and Tehelka.[11]

In the new millennium, Shukla floated two private limited companies, Trans Cricket News Pvt Ltd, which syndicated articles worldwide under the banner of Cricket News, and Outliers Sports and Media Private Limited. Among clients for Cricket News were Gulf News[12] and Khaleej Times, both published from Dubai, UAE.

This was also the spell when Shukla covered cricket tours for national news TV channels, such as Aaj Tak, Zee News and Star News, now known as ABP News, among others. He then formally joined India TV as an executive editor in 2007 before finally quitting in 2009 and resuming his association with PTI.

In 2013, he ended his work in cricket journalism. He changed his focus to geopolitics, which has interested him since childhood and which he now deemed to be in a critical phase of its trajectory, to the growing drumbeats of World War III.[clarification needed]

Books[edit]

During his career as a scribe, Shukla co-authored a biography of the prominent cricketer Sachin Tendulkar.[better source needed] The biography, Sachin Tendulkar: Masterful,[13] was published by Rupa & Co. and went into a reprint order, such was its demand when it first appeared in 2002, even though a few critics didn’t have good things to say about the book.

Now as a full-time geopolitical analyst and commentator on international relations, Shukla has made an immediate impact with his book: How United States Shot Humanity: Muslims Ruined; Europe Next,[14] which reflects the contemporary reality of existential crisis in Europe and Asia and traces its origins to the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s; and the United States’ support for Saudi Arabia which lost little time in exporting its Wahhabism, leading to the creation of the first Muslim state in Europe, Bosnia and Herzegovina.[clarification needed] The book makes an assertion that this began the export of terrorism on a worldwide scale, caused 9/11 and several attacks on major European cities such as the Madrid train bombings in 2004 and the London tube bombings of 2005. Most of the alleged terrorists involved in these heinous crimes had one or other links with the Balkans, and in particular, Bosnia.[15]

The book has been well received by international geopolitical luminaries and intellectuals such as Noam Chomsky, Diana Johnstone, Shen Dingli, Joachim Hagopian and Zlatko Pranjic, winner of Penguin's Decibel prize, who praised the book for its 'uncomprising tone.'[16][better source needed] Dingli opined that such 'voices are much needed these days'.[16][better source needed] Hagopian termed it as an 'important contribution to addressing the truth about the destructive power of the US Empire, perhaps the most important history lesson of modern times.'[16][better source needed]

Shukla is presently writing a book on Russia and its president Vladimir Putin which, among other issues, looks at conflicts in the Caucasus in a fresh light. The book is scheduled for release in 2016. The Caucasus, like the Balkans, is a region that lies at the border of Asia and Europe and thus carries forward the narrative of civilizational conflict of East and West and the global spread of terrorism which Shukla has researched in his work: 'How United States Shot Humanity…'

Website[edit]

Shukla presently runs a geopolitical website, Newsbred,[1] a non-profit enterprise, one of its own kind, especially in the Indian context. It has drawn in some important international voices in this field, such as [[Sara Floundes]], Shen Dingli and Joachim Hagopian, and has content arrangement with TomDispatch[17] and Russia-Insider.[18] It has had a dramatic increase in its readership lately.[citation needed]

Shukla also has a personal website[16] where his columns, tweets and television appearances are housed.

Columns[edit]

Cricket samrat hindi magazineFree

Shukla is a regular contributor on geopolitical and terrorism issues on OpEdNews,[19] which has columns from the world's best-known columnists and authors. He also occasionally pens edit pieces[clarification needed] in leading publications, such as Economic Times.[20]

Bibliography[edit]

Samrat

Cricket Samrat Pdf Download

  • Ashish Shukla and Peter Murray: Sachin Tendulkar MasterfulISBN978-8171678068[13]
  • Ashish Shukla: How United States Shot Humanity: Muslims Ruined; Europe Next;ISBN978-8193163108[14]

References[edit]

  1. ^ ab'Newsbred - what must be said'. newsbred.com. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  2. ^'Ambrose hates talking cricket'. rediff.com. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  3. ^'Ashish Shukla - Read Articles, Quotes, Editorials, Interviews - ESPNcricinfo.com'. Cricinfo. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  4. ^'BBC Asian Network - Nihal, Sachin Tendulkar: What's His Legacy?'. BBC. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  5. ^'India ready to move on from Harbhajan case'. ABC News. 30 January 2008. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  6. ^'Live News Today, Latest India News, Breaking News, Today Headlines, Narendra Modi Swearing-in News'. The Indian Express. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  7. ^http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2005-09-24/news/42801184_1_greg-chappell-senior-players-selectors
  8. ^'Ashish Shukla'. DNA India. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  9. ^'The Tribune, Chandigarh, India - Sport'. tribuneindia.com. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  10. ^'Ashish Shukla: Latest News on Ashish Shukla, Ashish Shukla Photos - Outlookindia'. https://www.outlookindia.com/. Retrieved 31 May 2019.External link in website= (help)
  11. ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2015.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^http://m.gulfnews.com/sport/cricket/indian-cricketers-anguished-by-attacks-1.145438
  13. ^ abhttps://www.amazon.com/dp/8171678068
  14. ^ abhttps://www.amazon.com/dp/8193163109
  15. ^Olchawa, Maciej; Brussels, ContributorAuthor of three books on Ukraine Former European Parliament policy adviser in (24 November 2015). 'From Brussels to Sarajevo: Why Belgium and Bosnia and Herzegovina Are Home to Islamic terrorists'. HuffPost. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  16. ^ abcd'Ashish Shukla'. Ashish Shukla. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  17. ^'TomDispatch'. tomdispatch.com. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  18. ^'Russia Insider: Crowdfunded citizen journalism - with a punch!'. russia-insider.com. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  19. ^'Members Page For Ashish Shukla'. opednews.com. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
  20. ^'Understanding the concept of madrasas as a school of thought'. Economic Times Blog. 11 July 2015. Retrieved 31 May 2019.
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