Category: News Headline

  • India Today tops Comscore July 2025 with 295 mn digital news readers

    India Today tops Comscore July 2025 with 295 mn digital news readers

    MUMBAI: When it comes to news online, India Today is truly today’s choice. The India Today Group has clinched the No. 1 spot in Comscore’s July 2025 rankings, emerging as the biggest digital news network in the country with a total digital population of 295 million unique visitors. That towering figure puts the Group ahead of Network18’s 275 million and well clear of Times Internet Limited’s 204 million, cementing its dominance in India’s cut-throat digital news race. In the News/Information category, no other publisher reached as many eyeballs, marking India Today as the go-to destination for nearly 300 million Indians each month.

    The secret sauce? A blend of credible journalism, innovative storytelling formats, and a relentless push across platforms that keeps its content everywhere the audience is. For advertisers, that scale is gold dust: no other digital newsroom commands a reach this wide or consistent.

    In an era where trust and traffic rarely go hand in hand, India Today seems to have cracked the code serving both with impact. With nearly one in four Indians online visiting its platforms, the Group isn’t just chasing the news cycle, it’s setting the benchmark for how news is consumed in the digital age.

  • Game on as Parliament clears Bill giving esports its sporting stripes

    Game on as Parliament clears Bill giving esports its sporting stripes

    MUMBAI: India just hit “start” on a new sporting era. On 21 August, Parliament passed the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Bill, 2025, a landmark move that bans all online money games but officially elevates esports to the league of legitimate competitive sport. For the first time, esports has been uncoupled from gambling, betting, and fantasy money play, and placed firmly under the ministry of youth affairs and sports, which will set tournament standards, support academies, and weave esports into India’s sporting fabric.

    The timing was pixel-perfect. Days earlier, 19-year-old Ved Bamb, better known by his gamer tag Beelzeboy, became India’s first esports World Champion by defeating Spain’s Leo Marin at the Pokémon Go Worlds. Esports has been steadily climbing the podium: officially recognised by India in 2022, it debuted as a medal sport at the Asian Games in Hangzhou and snagged a historic bronze in DOTA 2 at the 2022 Commonwealth Esports Championships. Next year, it returns to the Asian Games medal tally and will also feature at the 3rd Asian Youth Games in October.

    Back home, esports is levelling up from grassroots to glory. This year’s Khelo India Youth Games in Bihar featured esports as a demo sport, with states like Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Nagaland, and Bihar championing tournaments. Nationally, the Waves Esports Championships, backed by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, signalled that esports is no longer niche, but mainstream. Nodwin Gaming’s flagship Battlegrounds Mobile India Masters Series (BGMS), with a Rs 1.5 crore prize pool in its fourth season and female athletes competing for the first time, shows the professional rigour that mirrors cricket or football.

    “The Bill unlocks a zero-to-hero pipeline from state-level championships to global majors,” said Nodwin Gaming cxo-founder & MD Akshat Rathee which is grooming players for EVO, Esports Nations Cup, and even Counter-Strike Majors. S8ul, India’s most celebrated esports org, has its athletes training in Navi Mumbai bootcamps and recently competed at the Esports World Cup in Riyadh, where the prize pool crossed Rs 600 crore. Nodwin Gaming co-founder Animesh Agarwal called the government’s clarity a “game-changer” that will win parents’ trust and bring more young talent into the fold.

    The ecosystem’s growth isn’t just about skill but also kit. With PC and console titles set to feature in the 2026 Asian Games and possibly the Olympic Esports Games in 2027, high-performance gear is becoming non-negotiable. Cyberpowerpc India COO Vishal Parekh noted: “If cricket needs pitches, esports needs world-class rigs.” His company has donated PCs worth lakhs to bridge the infrastructure gap and prepare India’s next champions.

    As India marks National Sports Day, esports now stands shoulder to shoulder with traditional sports. With structured training, global tournaments, and government backing, the nation’s gamers are no longer just chasing high scores, they’re chasing history.

  • Sweet victory as Fortune cooks up record 800 kg modak for Ganesh Chaturthi

    Sweet victory as Fortune cooks up record 800 kg modak for Ganesh Chaturthi

    MUMBAI: When it comes to Ganesh Chaturthi, size clearly does matter especially if you’re serving up an 800 kg modak. Fortune Foods, India’s No. 1 staples brand and part of AWL Agri Business Ltd (formerly Adani Wilmar Ltd), has officially entered the World Record Book of India with the “Biggest Modak Using Traditional Ingredients.”

    Crafted from Fortune Besan, Fortune Sugar, milk and mawa, the mammoth sweet took centre stage at Girgaon Cha Raja, one of Mumbai’s oldest and most revered mandals. The giant creation wasn’t just a crowd-puller but also a statement of Fortune’s presence in 1 out of every 3 Indian households. With 5,000 sq. ft. of branding at the pandal, Fortune made sure its name was as much a part of the celebration as the devotional chants.

    The brand went full throttle with its 360-degree festive campaign rolling out branding across 25 pandals in Mumbai, Thane, Navi Mumbai, Pune, Nashik and Nagpur, covering an eye-popping 166,800 sq. ft. Add to that Mygate activations in 132 societies, branding in 800 plus lifts, two LED screens at Lalbaugh Cha Raja, and a quirky digital contest where users built virtual Ganeshas to unlock festive greetings. Influencers only helped sweeten the buzz.

    AWL Agri Business Ltd joint president of sales & marketing Mukesh Mishra summed it up: “At the heart of every festival lies food, and for Ganesh Chaturthi, nothing says devotion like modak. We wanted to celebrate tradition at scale.” The Girgaon Cha Raja Mandal echoed the sentiment, calling the unveiling a “historic moment that blended tradition with grandeur.”

    Founded in 1928, Girgaon Cha Raja is known for its eco-friendly clay idol and emphasis on heritage over spectacle. This year, Fortune’s record-breaking sweet offering gave devotees a story to remember proving once again that festivals are as much about flavour as they are about faith.

  • UMI strikes the right chord with Maddock Films in global music alliance

    UMI strikes the right chord with Maddock Films in global music alliance

    MUMBAI: The movie business just got a new soundtrack partner and this time, it’s playing to a global beat. Universal Music India (UMI), the Indian arm of Universal Music Group, has inked a strategic tie-up with Maddock Films and its new music label, Mad For Mussic, founded by producer-director Dinesh Vijan. The deal will see UMI serve as Maddock’s worldwide strategic partner for future film soundtracks and allied offerings.

    For UMI, it’s more than just a duet, it’s a full-blown re-entry into India’s most dominant music category: film soundtracks. With UMG’s global network as its amplifier, Maddock’s repertoire will now find international stages, while UMI cements its foothold in a market where movies and music are inseparable.

    Maddock Films, which has carved its niche with hits like Stree, Bhediya, Munjya and the upcoming Thama, has long treated music as central to its storytelling. Its chartbuster “Pardesiya” from Param Sundari is a case in point, having ruled social media and streaming platforms alike. “Our cinema is the cinema of real India,” said Vijan. “Music has always been one of its pillars. With UMG, we’re ready to scale that ambition.”

    Universal, of course, is no stranger to Hindi film soundtracks. Its catalogue has spanned classics from Sholay and Deewar to Devdas and Bombay. But this partnership marks a sharp pivot to contemporary hindi film industry, with an eye on both local dominance and global resonance.

    Calling the deal “a crucial step forward,” UMG’s Adam Granite hailed Vijan as “a first-class storyteller with an unparalleled ear for music.” UMI’s India MD Sanujeet Bhujabal called Maddock’s output “fearless, forward-thinking storytelling,” while India SA chairman & CEO Devraj Sanyal noted that the move comes at “the perfect time” for UMI to re-enter the Indian film music market.

    With Maddock’s track record of genre-defining cinema from horror-comedies to mainstream hits and UMI’s global muscle, the stage is set for Hindi soundtracks to travel farther and louder than ever. Call it a match made in musical heaven, with India’s stories and songs primed for a world tour.

  • Z rolls out Zee Spotlight; Hyundai drives in as inaugural partner

    Z rolls out Zee Spotlight; Hyundai drives in as inaugural partner

    MUMBAI: Zee Entertainment Enterprises has launched Zee Spotlight, a high-impact advertising package under its Z Rise initiative, with Hyundai Motor India stepping in as the exclusive first partner.

    Billed as a clutter-busting innovation, Zee Spotlight combines premium brand touchpoints across general entertainment and movie channels — from stings, branded windows and in-show funnel placements to carousels, QR-code astons, L-bands and tags. The package is also designed to extend onto Zee5, ensuring brands reach audiences seamlessly across broadcast and digital in line with the AIDA model of awareness, interest, desire and action.

    Laxmi Shetty, head of advertisement revenue for broadcast and digital at Zee, said the move was about “reimagining how brands engage with audiences in a fragmented media ecosystem.”

    Hyundai’s avp and vertical head of marketing, Virat Khullar, called the tie-up “a cutting-edge platform that redefines brand storytelling,” adding that the partnership would deepen connections with consumers across India’s entertainment landscape.

    With Zee Spotlight, the network is pitching a sharper value proposition to advertisers: high-frequency, high-visibility brand presence baked into viewers’ content journeys, with Hyundai leading the charge.

  • Milind Soman gets a healthy slice of fun in The Health Factory’s new film

    Milind Soman gets a healthy slice of fun in The Health Factory’s new film

    MUMBAI: Even the fittest man in India can get schooled especially when it comes to bread. In its latest campaign, The Health Factory (THF), makers of India’s first zero maida and protein bread, ropes in fitness icon Milind Soman for a witty twist that puts health on the daily menu. The brand film flips the script with humour at its core: a bemused Milind finds himself playfully corrected by health-obsessed youngsters who introduce him to “the fittest bread in town.” The irony is deliberate positioning THF as the everyday essential that champions exactly what Milind embodies: authenticity, simplicity, and consistency in health.

    The campaign is part of THF’s rebranding push under its philosophy All for Health. Health for All. With refreshed packaging, clean-label promises, and a sharper brand voice, THF wants to shift focus from being “just the zero maida bread brand” back to being a lifestyle choice for better eating.

    “We wanted to bring the spotlight back to The Health Factory as the brand, not just the product,” said The Health Factory senior brand manager Meghraj Bangera, noting that Milind’s cross-generational appeal made him the perfect fit. The Health Factory CEO Vinay Maheshwari added, “Health shouldn’t be complicated, it’s about simple, right choices every day.”

    For Milind, the fit was natural: “Bread is a staple in so many diets. Making it healthier without losing taste is such a powerful idea,” he said.

    With a presence in 16 cities and retail, q-commerce, and e-commerce channels, THF has already entered over 2 million households across India. Now, with Milind in its corner and a playful slice of humour, the brand is hoping to make every bite count in its mission to turn bread into a symbol of cleaner eating.

  • Mathemedia: Shripad Kulkarni launches podcast for media’s next era

    Mathemedia: Shripad Kulkarni launches podcast for media’s next era

    MUMBAI:  Shripad Kulkarni, veteran media maven and former ceo of Vizeum, is launching MatheMedia, a first-of-its-kind podcast that promises to crack the code of India’s fast-changing media landscape.

    Streaming from 1 September 2025, the long-format series blends a CMO briefing with a masterclass, featuring over 25 industry heavyweights from advertising, tech, publishing, and brand leadership. The opening episode, aptly titled ‘The New Media Code’, will bring together voices such as L.V. Krishnan (TAM Media Research), Puneet Avasthi (Kantar), and Ajay Gupte (WPP Media) to decode the seismic shifts shaking the industry.

    “We live in a world of channel chaos, with more platforms and fragmented audiences than ever before,” said MatheMedia, founder, Shripad Kulkarni. “Gone are the days when we could think & work linear & measure with a linear mindset. Today’s marketer faces multiple challenges. With more category entry points, brand assets & personalised messaging needs, brand strategy is being redefined. Brand custodians face growing pressure from a crowded network of channels and partners. It’s time for new rules in strategy, media, measurement, and collaborations.”

    The podcast’s 12-episode debut season will tackle hot-button issues: the rise of AI in advertising, quick commerce, evolving consumer journeys, and the urgent need for unified, privacy-compliant measurement systems. Expect candid debates, sharp insights, and a dash of storytelling to simplify complex industry jargons.

    Guests lined up include Schbang’s Akshay Gurnani, Google India’s Priya Choudhary, Dentsu Creative Isobar’s Sahil Shah, and India Today’s Vivek Malhotra, to name just a few. Think of it as a roundtable where India’s top media minds redraw the playbook for marketers navigating chaos.

    Kulkarni, who has advised marquee brands from Fevicol and BMW to Airbnb and Yes Bank, brings his three-decade expertise and signature wit to the mic. His goal is to help professionals not just adapt to disruption, but shape it.

    Episodes will drop every Monday across Spotify, YouTube, LinkedIn and Instagram. So, whether you’re a CMO, a curious marketer, or just wondering why your ads keep following you around the internet, MatheMedia might just be the formula you need.

     

  • Lufthansa takes off with Sreeleela for Insider 2.0 travel storytelling

    Lufthansa takes off with Sreeleela for Insider 2.0 travel storytelling

    MUMBAI: When a rising star meets Europe’s sky-high classic, you know the journey won’t be ordinary. Lufthansa German Airlines has rolled out the latest chapter of its Insider campaign, this time headlined by actress Sreeleela, who brings a touch of homegrown charm to the airline’s premium global pitch.

    The campaign steered by Mindshare India with its UK counterparts and supported by WPP Media reimagines Lufthansa not just as a carrier but as a travel-lifestyle brand. Dubbed Insider Guide 2.0, it turns the spotlight on London’s cultural and culinary secrets, with Sreeleela exploring the city alongside UK creator Anastasia. From hidden haunts to haute cuisine, the duo presented a version of London few tourists ever see.

    For today’s premium Indian traveller, the sweet spot lies in blending indulgence with authenticity. The campaign taps into that appetite: immersive journeys that go beyond glossy itineraries, mixing Lufthansa’s signature service with storytelling that feels personal.

    Lufthansa Group head of marketing for South Asia, Southeast Asia & Pacific Sng Ju Stephanie summed it up as “experience-led travel, powered by authentic influencer engagement,” while WPP Media South Asia’s Amin Lakhani called it a “cross-border collaboration that raises the bar for cultural nuance and consumer connection.”

    With Insider 2.0, Lufthansa isn’t just chasing wanderlust; it’s serving up a menu of global discovery with an Indian garnish. For a brand that has long been a bridge between continents, this campaign ensures the story soars just as high as the aircraft.

  • What has made Saiyaara a Rs 300 crore box office wonder?

    What has made Saiyaara a Rs 300 crore box office wonder?

    MUMBAI: The box office success of Saiyaara has been a topic of wide discussion over the past month. The film has performed exceptionally well, crossing Rs 300 Cr at the domestic box office, and becoming the second-highest grosser of 2025 in India, behind Chhaava, at the time of writing this report. A popular theory attributes this success to the influence of Gen Z (those born between 1997 and 2012, currently aged 13-28). It’s an easy conclusion to draw, given the film’s genre and debutant cast. But is it really true? Can one audience segment alone propel a film with no franchise or star value to cross the Rs 300 Cr mark? This analysis explores that question.

    According to Ormax Media analysis, the remarkable box office success of Saiyaara is less about a single generation’s love affair with a fresh romance and more about how different cohorts engage with emotion on screen. On paper, the culprit seemed obvious. Gen Z—those aged 13 to 28—looked tailor-made for the film’s youthful leads, moody soundtrack, and breakneck visuals. Social chatter, sneaker fashion and music streams all suggested the movie was “their” moment. But Ormax Media’s data complicates the narrative.

    The firm’s proprietary OPR (Ormax Power Rating), a 0–100 index that tracks likeability and advocacy, is a trusted predictor of word-of-mouth and sustained collections. A score above 60 typically signals robust engagement, translating into strong box office legs beyond opening weekend. Over four weeks of tracking, Saiyaara notched a sturdy OPR, with Gen Z audiences scoring it at 68 and those aged 29+ close behind at 63. A respectable gap, but not wide enough to explain the runaway commercial phenomenon.

    Saiyaara

    The real story, says Ormax Media, emerges when the data is split by gender. Women across generations responded almost identically strongly, suggesting that themes of love, empathy and sacrifice cut across age barriers. Among men, however, the divergence was stark. Gen Z men mirrored women’s enthusiasm, while older men slipped sharply, delivering an OPR of just 56.

    Why does this gap matter? For Ormax analysts, it reflects shifting life priorities. Gen Z men—many still students, young professionals or in early relationships—saw in Krish Kapoor, the protagonist, an avatar of their own anxieties and aspirations. At 22, Krish is all swagger and style: racing bikes across Mumbai flyovers, flaunting Air Jordans, and smoking defiantly. But when his girlfriend Vaani is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, he doesn’t flee. Instead, he pauses his rising music career to stay by her side. The arc resonated with younger men who are wrestling with questions of identity, love and loyalty in their own lives.

    “Cinema becomes a tool of self-discovery for this cohort,” Ormax Media notes. “It validates emotions that are difficult to articulate, reassuring them that ‘forever’ love is not entirely a myth.”

    Older men, by contrast, appear to want films to serve as escape hatches from the daily grind of careers, mortgages, and parenting. For them, Saiyaara may be admirable cinema, but not essential viewing. As Ormax points out, this explains the 10-point OPR gap between the two male groups.

    For women, the generational divide all but vanishes. Ormax’s data highlights how relationship-driven storytelling continues to resonate across age brackets, aligned with academic research suggesting women are both socialised, and to some extent biologically primed, to prioritise empathy and relational bonds in narrative consumption. Saiyaara capitalised on this, shaping Krish’s trajectory not as a melodramatic sacrifice but as a nuanced portrait of resilience and commitment.

    The outcome: a Rs 300 cr-plus blockbuster that defied industry cynicism around non-franchise, debutant-led films. Saiyaara’s triumph is not solely Gen Z’s doing. Rather, it is the uncharacteristic enthusiasm of young men—an audience often elusive for romantic dramas—that Ormax Media credits with tipping the film from respectable hit to cultural juggernaut.

  • Kochi hosts conclave of power as Manorama News sparks national dialogue

    Kochi hosts conclave of power as Manorama News sparks national dialogue

    MUMBAI: When Kochi talks, the nation listens and this weekend, it was all ears. The Manorama News Conclave 2025 lit up the Lulu Bolgatty International Convention Centre on 22 August, reaffirming its position as one of India’s most influential platforms for political dialogue. Inaugurated by union home and co-operation minister Amit Shah, the conclave’s theme “India: Pace & progress – progressive leap to the future” set the tone for a day where governance, economic reforms, trade, internal security, and social cohesion shared the spotlight.

    The gathering was nothing short of a who’s who of India’s policy and political circles. From seasoned national leaders to sharp policymakers and opinion makers, the panels dissected not only the present but also the pathways shaping India’s future. True to Manorama News’ ethos, the debates crackled with credibility, depth, and a regional voice that echoed well beyond Kerala.

    The ripples of the conclave were felt far outside Kochi. Coverage across top national media amplified the arguments and insights, proving once again that this annual gathering is more than a conversation starter, it is a conversation shaper.

    For Kerala, the conclave has become its most impactful news forum. For India, it has emerged as a vital bridge between leadership and citizens, carrying the promise of democratic debate that informs, provokes, and nudges the nation forward.