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This story is from September 19, 2014

First transgender news anchor says she's rid of her demons

Padmini Prakash, a 31-year-old transgender from Coimbatore, says she's freed herself from her social and personal demons.
First transgender news anchor says she's rid of her demons
CHENNAI: Padmini Prakash, a 31-year-old transgender from Coimbatore, says she's freed herself from her social and personal demons.
At 7pm on Independence Day this year, when the lights went on and the cameras started rolling in the Lotus News Channel studios, and she read out the day's headlines from a teleprompter, Padmini became the first transgender television news anchor in the country.

Padmini has acted in a television serial and she's dealt with various kinds of pressure in the past, especially during her days as a vocal social activist for transgender rights, protesting against the discrimination, harassment and stigma that sexual minorities face. But Padmini says she initially found it daunting to anchor a live news show because there is little leeway for error and it involves the responsibility of being unbiased and connecting with viewers.
"I was very worried because I also had to focus on my diction and maintain a steady narrative pace to ensure that there was clarity and viewers could understand me," Padmini said.
But she hit the ground running and has won praise from her employers, members of the transgender community and media veterans. A month after she started, Padmini has become the face of the Coimbatore-based Lotus News Channel's daily 7pm special bulletin.

"We are supportive of Padmini because she is very hard-working," Lotus News Channel chairman GKS Selvakumar said. "After initial trials, we were convinced that she had the potential to be an excellent news anchor."

Padmini, who grew up in RS Puram in Coimbatore, was a first-year BCom student when she cut off all ties with her family and dropped out of college because she could no longer take the stigma and pressure. She travelled across the state and beyond and later returned to Tamil Nadu and became a Bharathanatyam dance instructor. Padmini, who now stays with her partner in Vellakinar in the suburbs of Coimbatore, also participated in and won several transgender beauty contests.
Rose Venkatesan, first transgender to become a television talk show host, says when representatives of the television channel asked her about Padmini, she had no doubts about recommending her. "I knew that she was a tough and determined person. I knew she was capable of handling the pressure," she said.
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