Scaachi Koul (born February 7, 1991) is a Canadian culture writer who has written for BuzzFeed and Slate. She is the author of the book of essays One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter and was one of the reporters in BuzzFeed's Netflix documentary series Follow This. Before BuzzFeed, Koul worked at Penguin Random House Canada, the acquiring publisher of her book. Her writing has appeared in Flare, HuffPost Canada, The Thought Catalog, The Guardian, The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Globe and Mail, and other publications.
In March 2015, while Koul was still employed by Penguin Random House Canada, they announced publication of a collection of her essays. Originally the collection was titled The Pursuit of Misery then it was changed to One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter. The book covers subjects including family, race, feminism, body image, and rape culture from her perspective as an Indian-Canadian woman growing up in the suburbs of Calgary. She also discusses her writing career and social media, including temporarily deactivating her Twitter account as a result of invective and threats following a request for long-form submissions from people who were "not white and not male". Koul was praised for her wit and humour, ability to mix sarcasm and sentimentality, and for her effective use of confessional writing as a complement to analytical rigour. She received a shortlisted nomination for the 2018 Stephen Leacock Award for the best book of humour written in English by a Canadian writer. "Scaachi Koul, Laurie Gelman and Jennifer Craig shortlisted for 2018 Stephen Leacock Memorial Medal for Humour". CBC Books, May 2, 2018.
She hosts the Scamfluencers podcast with Sarah Hagi, which covers scammers who are . Scamfluencers won the Ambies in 2023 for best podcast covering the entertainment industry.
She also co-hosts a BBC production podcast Where to be a woman with Sophia Smith Galer.
In March 2024, she appeared in 4 episodes of the Nickelodeon documentary “Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV” as a consultant.
, Slate lists Koul as a senior writer.
Koul is an Indian Canadians of Kashmiris descent, and her writing on race and shadism draws from her own life. Of her ethnicity, she has stated although she is of Indian descent herself, her fairer skin has given her a privilege when she goes to India.
Girls Gone Wild: The Untold Story
Personal life
References
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