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Balaji Telefilms prepares for its most diversified year, announces plans for Balaji 2.0

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MUMBAI: For decades, Balaji Telefilms has shaped how India watches stories. From daily soaps that became national rituals to films that pushed cultural boundaries, the company has never simply followed the market. It has defined it. As the industry enters one of its most decisive years, Balaji is once again stepping forward with clarity, scale and conviction.

Nitin Burman, group chief revenue officer at Balaji Telefilms, lays out how the company is preparing to reshape the content industry. “The groundwork has already been laid,” he says. “What comes next is Balaji 2.0.” For Burman, 2026 is not the beginning of this transformation, but the moment it becomes visible to the world.

At its core, this next phase is about expansion. Not just into new platforms, but into every format where audiences exist. Films remain a crucial pillar. Balaji’s 2026 movie slate is set to be its strongest yet, with multiple titles already locked, including big-ticket releases that will anchor the year. “Cinema continues to be a big focus for us,” Burman notes. “Our film calendar for 2026 reflects that confidence.”

Digital, however, is where the scale truly multiplies. Balaji has five long-format premium shows locked with Netflix, spanning both fiction and non-fiction. These are binge-led, high-quality series designed for global audiences. “This is not something we started planning yesterday,” Burman says. “We have been working on digital for years. 2026 is when the results start showing.”

Alongside this, Balaji has launched Balaji Studios, a strategic move that allows the company to collaborate with independent creators and writers. The studio operates on a global model, similar to leading international production houses. One project with Amazon is already locked, with more in active development. These projects are independently created, platform-commissioned and produced under Balaji’s creative and business leadership. “We want to increase volume and work with new creators,” Burman explains. “That is why the studio model is important for us.”

YouTube has also emerged as a serious content pillar. Balaji has launched its own YouTube originals channel, where it has already released two shows and is rolling out three more. The ambition is to produce six to eight advertiser-funded shows in 2026 alone. Unlike typical short-run YouTube content, Balaji is investing in longer formats, brand integrations and sustainable monetisation. “We have already broken even and made profits on YouTube,” Burman says. “That tells us this model works.”

Beyond entertainment content, Balaji is also building consumer-facing digital businesses. The Balaji Astro Guide app, launched recently, crossed one million downloads within just two months. “That growth has been very fast for us,” Burman says. “We now want to scale the app into something much bigger.”

Another key vertical is Hunar, Balaji’s talent management arm. The company has already signed multiple artists and locked projects featuring them. Hunar will focus on discovering, managing and nurturing talent, while integrating them into Balaji’s content ecosystem across platforms. “We have already locked projects with our artists,” Burman says. “Now the focus is to build Hunar into a strong talent vertical.”

The most keenly watched launch, however, is Balaji’s return to owned OTT with its new app, Kutingg, which is set to launch on 19 January. After regulatory disruptions halted earlier plans, the company is now ready to come back stronger, smarter and more focused. Kutingg is designed around daily engagement and habit creation, summed up in its positioning, “Entertainment ka doze harr roz”. “We want to offer entertainment every single day,” Burman says. “That is the core idea behind Kutingg.”

The programming strategy is sharply defined. From Monday to Thursday, the app will offer daily episodic entertainment, releasing at least two new episodes every day. Fridays are reserved for binge drops, with a limited series of six to eight episodes released in parts. Saturdays will focus on micro-dramas, with a new title released every week. Sundays will feature non-fiction formats such as chat shows. “Every day has a different kind of entertainment,” Burman says. “So the audience always has something fresh to watch.”

Kutingg’s pricing strategy reflects Balaji’s understanding of audience behaviour. A one-day vertical-only trial will be available at Re 1, converting into a Rs 199 monthly plan. Another option offers a week-long trial at Rs 99. The full Rs 199 subscription unlocks both vertical and horizontal content across the app. The positioning is summed up in the app’s tagline, entertainment’s dose.

Technology plays a central role in this ecosystem. Balaji has built a large in-house AI team that handles advanced visual effects and AI-driven production. Much of the work seen in its fantasy and supernatural shows is already powered by this capability. The company has launched an AI-led vertical series, Kaal Nagari, and is now developing a fully AI-generated horizontal series with around 16 episodes. “All our AI work is done in-house,” Burman says. “We see this as the future of production.”

Micro-dramas are another area where Balaji has quietly built dominance. The company currently produces more than 20 micro-drama shows every month for other platforms, making it one of the largest producers in the segment in India.

For Kutingg, one exclusive micro-drama will be released every week. “Micro-dramas are not a bubble,” Burman says. “They are becoming a major format.”

Despite the aggressive digital push, television remains a core business. Balaji continues to deliver top-ranking shows on TV, many of which also dominate connected platforms like Hotstar. As televisions increasingly become connected devices, the line between TV and digital is blurring. “At the end of the day, it is about content quality,” Burman says. “If audiences did not like these stories, they would not be number one.”

Balaji’s confidence comes from history. It revived legacy shows when few believed it was possible. It entered OTT early. It invested in micro-dramas when the format was dismissed. It experimented across genres long before genre-bending became fashionable, from The Dirty Picture and Udta Punjab to mainstream entertainers and bold reports. “We have always been ahead of the curve,” Burman says. “And we will continue to be.”

The philosophy remains unchanged. Balaji does not chase platforms. It follows audiences. “Wherever the audience is, on whichever platform, we want to make content for them,” Burman says.

As 2026 approaches, the focus is firmly on execution. Balaji knows not every initiative will scale equally. “If even three out of the six or seven things we are doing grow big, we will double down on those,” Burman says.

The formats may change. The screens may multiply. But one thing remains constant. Balaji Telefilms will always find a way to entertain.

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Banijay-backed CreAsia Studios unveils crime thriller and space reality show

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BANGKOK: CreAsia Studios is stretching the boundaries of Asian entertainment—from the crime lab to outer space.

At the True Visions Now event in Bangkok, the Banijay Asia–EndemolShine India-backed studio unveiled two sharply contrasting yet equally ambitious projects, signalling its intent to push format innovation across scripted and unscripted television.

The first, My Chef In Crime, is an original crime thriller that fuses forensic science with food. Set against the backdrop of diverse Asian culinary cultures, the series explores how culinary science intersects with crime-solving, offering a fresh spin on the well-worn investigative genre. Backed by a strong cast, the show promises high suspense, originality and a distinctly regional flavour rarely seen in crime drama.

The second reveal went even bigger. Race to Space – Thailand is a reality series with a literal mission: to find and send the first Thai citizen into space. Designed as both entertainment and national milestone, the show will see Thai participants compete for the chance to become astronauts, turning space travel from distant aspiration into televised reality. The project is being developed in collaboration with the Space Exploration and Research Agency.

Both shows have been in development for some time, and the Bangkok event marked the first public unveiling of images and teasers, offering an early glimpse into their scale and ambition.

Deepak Dhar, founder and group ceo of Banijay Asia and EndemolShine India, described the moment as a milestone for CreAsia Studios, pointing to the breadth of storytelling, from grounded, science-led crime to aspirational, future-facing reality—as a reflection of where Asian content is headed.

From dissecting crimes through cuisine to launching dreams into orbit, CreAsia’s message is clear: safe bets are out, bold formats are in—and the ambition is only getting bigger.
 

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Q3 FY26: Shemaroo’s digital rise is real, but losses keep mounting

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MUMBAI: Shemaroo Entertainment’s long-running pivot to digital is showing traction—but not nearly enough to stem the bleeding from its traditional media business.

The Mumbai-based media company reported consolidated revenue of Rs 1,607 million for the December quarter, down 2.25 per cent year-on-year, as a 13.8 per cent jump in digital media revenue failed to offset a 14.4 per cent slide in traditional segments. For the nine months ended December 2025, revenue slipped 7.75 per cent to Rs 4,436 million.

Losses, however, widened sharply. The company posted a consolidated net loss of Rs 554 million for the quarter, compared with a loss of Rs 364 million a year earlier. EBITDA plunged to a loss of Rs 674 million, pushing margins deeper into negative territory, with EBITDA margin deteriorating to minus 41.93 per cent.

For the nine-month period, net loss ballooned to Rs 1,465 million, while EBITDA losses swelled to Rs 1,776 million. Earnings per share for the period stood at minus Rs 53.60, underscoring the scale of the deterioration.

Costs told much of the story. Operational expenses climbed to Rs 1,501 crore in Q3, while employee benefit expenses rose to Rs 360 crore. Finance costs remained elevated at Rs 75 crore for the quarter and Rs 223 crore for the nine months, reflecting sustained balance-sheet stress. Loss before tax widened to Rs 756 crore in the December quarter.

Management attributed the weak performance to a bruising mix of industry headwinds: the return of major broadcasters to FreeDish, an overcrowded sports calendar and persistent softness in FMCG advertising, which hit traditional entertainment revenues hardest. While a recent GST rate cut is expected to stabilise advertising spends, margins are likely to remain under pressure in the near term.

Digital, however, continues to be the clear bright spot. Digital media contributed Rs 807 million in Q3 revenue, lifting its share of the business to 37 per cent, up from 20 per cent in the pre-2018 era. The company’s YouTube network clocked more than 9.5 billion views during the quarter, with Shemaroo FilmiGaane crossing 74 million subscribers and the flagship Shemaroo Entertainment channel topping 61 million.

On the content front, ShemarooMe released six new Gujarati titles across films, web series and plays, including world digital premieres such as Jai Mata Ji Let’s Rock, Auntypreneur, Shubhchintak and Vicki Ki Baraat, as it doubled down on regional and language-led storytelling.

Despite the red ink, the company maintained that much of the pain is accounting-driven. Inventory charge-offs linked to initiatives launched eight quarters ago, it said, have no bearing on content monetisation or free cash generation. The focus now is on shoring up the balance sheet, tightening operations and extracting long-term value from its digital assets.

Standalone numbers mirrored the pressure. Shemaroo Entertainment’s standalone net loss widened to Rs 557 crore in Q3, with nine-month losses touching Rs 1,489 crore, even as standalone revenue for the period reached Rs 4,166 crore.

Beyond the income statement, legal risks continued to loom. GST authorities have raised demands of over Rs 7,025 lakh, alongside penalties exceeding Rs 6,334 lakh, with additional penalties of Rs 133.61 crore each imposed on senior executives. While interim stays were granted by the Bombay high court, an appeal was disposed of in the department’s favour during the quarter. The company has since moved the Goods and Services Tax Appellate Tribunal and filed an updated writ petition, with hearings pending.

The unaudited results were reviewed by the audit committee and approved by the board at a meeting held on January 29, with statutory auditors Mukund M. Chitale & Co issuing a limited review and flagging no material misstatements.

Investors remain unconvinced. The stock closed December at Rs 108.70, well below its 52-week high of Rs 184, and has lagged the Sensex over the past year.

For Shemaroo, the verdict is stark: digital momentum is undeniable, but until legacy media, costs and legal overhangs are brought to heel, the recovery story remains unfinished.
 

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Fox Entertainment inks deal with Dhar Mann Studios for slate of 40 scripted vertical-video shows

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CALIFORNIA: Fox Entertainment is making its boldest play yet in the vertical-video boom, striking a multiyear global partnership with Dhar Mann Studios to produce a slate of 40 original scripted microdramas.

The agreement, announced on Tuesday, marks one of the largest deals ever signed with a creator-led studio. It will see Dhar Mann Studios develop and produce narrative-driven vertical shows exclusively for Holywater’s MyDrama app, with Fox Entertainment Global handling worldwide distribution after the initial release window. The first titles are expected to premiere this spring.

“This is one of the biggest deals in creator history,” Dhar Mann said in a LinkedIn post announcing the partnership. “This is the first time Fox Entertainment has partnered at this scale with a creator-led studio in the vertical space, the first slate partnership between Holywater and a creator studio, and the first time Dhar Mann Studios is opening our universe to a global distribution partner of this magnitude.”

Fox, which took an equity stake in Holywater last year, is positioning vertical storytelling as a core growth engine rather than an experiment. “Dhar Mann’s inspiring, undeniable storytelling excellence and passionate audience have made him one of the most powerful and consequential voices in entertainment today,” said Rob Wade, chief executive of Fox Entertainment. “We’re primed to expand Dhar Mann Studios’ reach by super-serving his new and existing fans everywhere with this all-new, original vertical content.”

Founded in 2018, Dhar Mann Studios has built a multigenerational audience of more than 163 million followers across platforms, generating an estimated 20 billion views. The studio operates a 125,000-square-foot, three-stage production facility in Burbank, California, and has become a force in short-form scripted storytelling built around moral drama and emotional payoff.

Despite Fox’s global reach, Dhar Mann will retain full ownership and creative independence. “Full creative ownership and independence—so our stories stay true to the heart of why people watch,” he said, outlining the deal’s structure.

Reflecting on the journey, Dhar Mann struck a personal note. “When I started making videos from my small living room, I never imagined that one day we’d be collaborating with one of the most iconic entertainment companies in the world. I just wanted to tell stories that helped people feel seen.”

The partnership also marks Dhar Mann Studios’ first formal entry into vertical-first production at scale. To lead the push, the studio recently appointed Erin McFarlane as head of vertical content. McFarlane previously oversaw creative development at vertical-video platform SaltyTV.

Sean Atkins, chief executive of Dhar Mann Studios, said in a joint statement with McFarlane that Fox and Holywater stood out as partners willing to back ambition. “Rob and his team are embracing innovation and investing in it, affording us an unprecedented level of creative autonomy and the resources needed to build something that has never been done before at this scale,” Atkins said.

Holywater’s co-founders and co-chief executives, Bogdan Nesvit and Anatolii Kasianov, called the deal a strategic inflection point. “This represents the first step in our broader strategy to attract global creators and top-tier talent to vertical storytelling at scale,” they said.

Momentum is accelerating. Earlier this month, Ukraine-based Holywater raised $22 million in its largest funding round to date. Fox Entertainment Studios is already producing around 200 original microdramas and vertical series for the platform, alongside projects with other studios and creators.

For Dhar Mann, the message is clear—and pointed at the industry. “Vertical video isn’t just the future,” he said. “It’s the present.”

The phone is now the screen. And Fox is betting that the next global studio will be built one swipe at a time.

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