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Simi
Sara
News Anchor and
Host, CityTV Vancouver
Written by Neera
Ajeet |
Confident, charismatic and utterly honest
– Simi Sara can walk into a room and illuminate it
with her warm smile and infectious laughter. Co-host of
CityPulse, City TV Vancouver’s flagship 6o’clock
newscast, host of “City Cooks”, a popular culinary
show and of course, the station’s leading poster girl,
Simi’s list of accomplishments is an exhaustive one.
Simi cannot remember ever having even an iota
of doubt about her desire to be a journalist. She started
pursuing the field at an age most girls are busy discovering
the wonders of lip-gloss, among other things. “From
the time that I was in junior high, I worked on the school
paper,” says Simi. She took a print journalism program
at Vancouver’s Langara College and started off her
career working as a reporter for a local newspaper. She
believed at the time that print media would remain her mainstay.
TV just seemed to happen to her. One day over
a decade ago, Simi decided in a nonchalant way to explore
television while still pursuing her academic program. It
was in 1993 that she visited City TV for the first time
as a student attempting to unravel the mystery of television.
Her practicum landed Simi some part time work with the station’s
newsroom. Eleven years later, she is still very much with
the station – except now she guides others rather
than seek guidance herself.
So what qualities make a successful journalist?
Simi believes that an unquenchable thirst for knowledge
is key. “You must have a real interest in news. You
have to love current affairs…you have to love to know
about what’s going on around you. Too often, you meet
people who want to be on TV just for the sake of being on
TV. You have to be prepared to demonstrate that you are
actually interested in news and that you are prepared to
learn as many aspects of the industry as you can. An aspiring
journalist simply can’t commit the mistake of being
too narrow,” says Simi with a look of conviction taking
over her face. She also advises aspiring journalists not
to shy away from gaining initial experience working in smaller
markets. She believes that industry experience will go a
long way in ensuring one’s success, regardless of
where you gain it.
Simi views her South Asian heritage as being
advantageous to her career, but disagrees with those who
allege that people are hired and promoted purely on the
basis of their ethnic background. She admits, however, that
it may have had “some role in getting the foot in
the door,” and adds, “… but it’s
not going to open the door for you. People may take a second
look at you, but they are not going to hire you unless,
of course, you can do the job. It might, however, help you
get that first look!”
How does a successful public figure view all
the attention surrounding them? She reminisces about a time
last summer when she had taken her daughter and her friends
to Vancouver’s Science World that has a train station
in its backdrop. All of a sudden, Simi noticed excitement
taking over the children as they all started to turn and
stare in one direction. Suddenly her daughter retorted with
glee, “Hey Mummy! Look!” To Simi’s sheer
surprise, every single train passing through the station
displayed larger than life images of her and her CityPulse
co-host Roger Petersen. “I have to admit, it is very
strange to have all that happen to you, but it is definitely
a wonderful feeling. It also reflects the station’s
confidence in you, which is satisfying. Her honesty shines
through when she adds with a chuckle, “Quite frankly,
you do want this attention. You don’t want to be working
in television and not have people know about you…because
that would be bad!”
Simi admits it is can be quite challenging
to find balance between life and work and sometimes the
only available resort is telephone. “I find myself
exchanging a lot of phone calls with my kids through the
day. I want to find out about their day at school, their
homework and just catching up with them – finding
out about things that I don’t get to do with them
as much as I’d like to. Luckily I get help from other
people.” She admits that she has to fight herself
not to feel guilty and overcompensate for the time that
she is not able to spend with them. She cherishes the fact
that her children are proud of her work and that they feel
excited every time they spot her on the screen.
Over and above any other perk her career offers
Simi, what she enjoys the most is to be the first one to
know when anything happens. “I am learning about things
that people do not know yet and I become the first one to
inform them about those things. I find that to be the greatest
thing about my job!” says Simi.
Neera Ajeet is a freelance writer and
broadcaster based in Vancouver. She can be reached at neera100@hotmail.com.
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