Soha Ali Khan plays a television journalist in her newest release War Chhod Na Yaar.
How she pulls off the role is something we'll know only after the film releases on October 11.
Meanwhile, here's looking at the many shades of journalists we have seen in Hindi movies over the years.
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The strong, silent type
Image: Nargis Fakhri in Madras CafeAs British war correspondent in Madras Cafe, Nargis plays the strong, resilient journalist who sympathises with war-torn civilians as well as an intelligence agent in the film.
The activist
Image: Kareena Kapoor in SatyagrahaKareena Kapoor's lovely Yasmin, an activist who finds herself drawn to the people's struggle for corruption-less governance, is the leading lady of Prakash Jha's last directorial venture Satyagraha.
The romantic
Image: Shah Rukh Khan with Malaika Arora Khan in Dil SeThe passionate and doe-eyed Shekhar Verma (Shah Rukh Khan) is a radio journalist working with All India Radio and is prone to singing love songs glorifying his lady love atop moving trains.
His obsessive love for the reclusive and often hostile Meghna leads to life-altering events in his and his family's life.
The fighter
Image: Rani Mukerji in No One Killed JessicaMeera Gaity is a feisty and aggressive journalist, who resolves to fight for justice and stays in the fight till the very end.
Rani Mukerji's cuss words-laden performance was much feted.
The cynic
Image: Konkona Sen Sharma in Page 3In Madhur Bhandarkars hard-hitting Page 3 that unravels the ugly truth of high society parties and the revelers who populate them, Konkona Sen Sharma's Madhavi is initially the reluctant lifestyle scribe but is quickly taken in by its glamour.
The idealist
Image: Atul Kulkarni in Page 3In the same film, Atul Kulkarni plays the idealist crime reporter Vinayak Mane, who briefly takes Madhvi under his wings.
The self-motivated kind
Image: Preity Zinta in LakshyaPreity Zinta's Romi in Farhan Akhtar's 2004 film Lakshya is a motivated youngster who has great plans for her future and expects a similar commitment from her boyfriend for his own.
She also believes in tough love -- she dumps him when he runs away from the army -- and goes on to become a dedicated journalist.
The cacophonous kind
Image: Deepal Shaw in A WednesdayDeepal Shaw's ditzy television journalist mindlessly trying to score a byte evokes genuine annoyance not so much from her portrayal of the character as from her nasal voice and weird diction.
Conniving and corrupt
Image: Bhakti Barve with Ravi Baswani and Naseeruddin Shah in Jaane Bhi Do YaaronKundan Shah's cult comedy Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron has Bhakti Barve's impressive turn as Shobha Sen, the editor of whistle-blowing magazine Khabardar.
Sen is a scheming woman who aligns with the bad guys in the end to save herself.
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