| Cultural differences, unforgiving time zones and management misunderstandings can make companies involved in outsourcing want to cry. But as with many difficulties in life, a better strategy is to laugh. - ITBusinessEdge | |
| Common knowledge suggest you can’t squeeze water from a rock, but Sandeep Sood is trying to do something just as challenging – finding humor in the outsourcing industry. - IndUS Business Journal | |
| Apparently in Hindi, “badmash” roughly translates into “naughty,” while “dishoom” is the onomatopoeic equivalent to “pow” or “bang.” - NewTeeVee | |
| ARE YOU bored with the primaries and caucuses and all things related to the US presidential elections? How about directing your attention to the election of the “Prime Minister” of America? - MAIL TODAY | |
| Communications expert Jackie Sloane can count on one hand the number of people she has worked with over the years who became true partners - Chicago Tribune | |
| Sandeep Sood never intended to pursue comic strip creation full-time, but like many slashers, enjoys having a flexible career so that he can devote enough time to watch it thrive - Little India |
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| Sandeep Sood manages to recreate himself more intelligently than Madonna every couple of years - Hyphen | |
| For entrepreneur Sandeep Sood, the misunderstandings of two worlds are fodder for his cartoon strip. - LATimes |
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| Something that you don’t often see a lot written about in new media is the strong trend by startups to outsource a lot of their work - TechCrunch | |
| By their own admission, they are a couple of “smart asses” — so you are never reeeally sure when they’re being funny and when they are deadly serious. - Little India | |
| Sandeep Sood, asesor y conferencista del seminario Estrategias Efectivas en Internet, que se llevará a cabo esta tarde en el Hotel Radisson Plaza, arribó ayer a nuestro país procedente de Estados Unidos - elsalvador | |
| Growing up in Southern California, Sandeep Sood dreamed of becoming a hip-hop star and he even came up with a cool handle based on his name: DeepSun - San Francisco Chronicle | |
| There is a common belief that pursuing a non-traditional career necessitates turning away from the South Asian community a la Bend it Like Beckham. But Badmash a weekly comic strip about South Asian-Americans - India Currents |
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| No Bush & Kerry, it's Big B for US the Economic Times. | |
| Comic strip business' is a euphemism for poverty." On a more serious note (if it is possible to be serious about a comic strip), Badmash originated in e-mails when the guys would write to each other at work in 'he said/she said' format about their weekends - Vijay Times | |
| "Who wants some dishoom?" is a Flash spoof cartoon about the US presidential elections - Boing Boing. |
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| Newsweek speaks with SNL, Rocketboom, and badmash about the internet as an entertainment platform. | |
| The founder of badmash talk to nirali magazine | |
| Continuing our laughing-our-way-to-the-polling-station theme, now that you’ve run that Jibjab clip into the ground, we suggest you click over to Badmash - USA Today | |
| The Singhsons gets a shout-out in San Francisco magazine | |
| Sun Micro asks DeepSun to Deep Six its name - India West | |
| Daily Californian | |
| Badmash is the very first South Asian comic strip. Their humor is political, socially stimulating and downright hilarious - Desiclub | |