Pranay Gupte is a New York-based journalist. For nearly two years, he wrote a column at the New York Sun called ‘Lunch at the Four Seasons with…,’ where he interviewed politicians, educators, prominent businessmen — basically, anyone who is vaguely famous (or wants to be) in New York. There’s a comprehensive list of these articles at Gupte’s website.

Officially, he’s quitting the column and the Sun because the newspaper “can’t afford to pay him.” Unofficially, however, it appears he’d gotten a series of nasty letters from colleagues at the paper, and resigned when nothing was done to discipline the senders. Did the letters he received contain racial slurs? [Update: The answer is no.] Gawker has a copy of the letter he wrote to the Sun where he stated his dissatisfaction with how he’d been treated:

For a guy who works 24/7 for The New York Sun without pay — out of friendship toward you and a commitment to the Sun’s success — I think I deserve better than these disgusting notes that your general manager and other wet-behind-the-ears toddlers in the business staff have been sending to me.

Not only am I dismayed, I am also perplexed that you would allow these idiots to continue their attacks on me. What seems to be their problem? Are they resentful of the efforts I make on behalf of the Sun? Do they have a color issue? Do these white boys and girls believe that a person of Indian origin — however accomplished in journalism, and however well known — doesn’t really belong at a newspaper such as the Sun? (link)

First thought: Wait, he was writing for free? Isn’t that a bit weird? You write a blog for free. You don’t need to write for a major (if struggling) newspaper for free. People pay to read it, they sell advertisements — so why not get paid? I hope the Sun was paying for lunch at least; I presume it was.

Second thought: it’s not 100% clear to me reading this that the notes Gupte is referring to in this letter contained specific racial or ethnic slurs. If so, the newspaper’s failure to act looks really, really bad. (Indeed, possibly actionable.) The reason I have my doubts is Gupte’s use of the rhetorical question: “Do they have a color issue?” If there were slurs, the question would be redundant. [Update: My speculation turns out to be correct.]

Incidentally, here are links to Desi-related Pranay Gupta columns and interviews from recent months: Sreenath Sreenivasan, Mumbai Blasts, Durga Jasraj, Shashi Tharoor, Suvir Saran, Srikumar Rao, Passage to a New India, Bush Visits India, and In India, the Communists Still Matter.