Category: News Headline

  • India launches its heftiest satellite yet

    India launches its heftiest satellite yet

    SRIHARIKOTA: India just flexed its space muscles. On 2 November, the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) hurled its heaviest communications satellite ever into orbit from home soil—a 4,400 kg behemoth called CMS-03 that will keep the navy’s ships, submarines and aircraft chattering across the Indian Ocean. The launch from Sriharikota at 5:26 pm marked the end of an embarrassing era: no longer must India send its bulkiest satellites abroad for a lift.

    The rocket doing the heavy lifting was LVM3, ISRO’s most powerful launcher and now nicknamed “Bahubali” for its Herculean payload capacity. This souped-up version sports a beefier cryogenic upper stage—the C32, carrying 32,000kg of fuel and belching 22 tonnes of thrust, a 10 per cent upgrade on the previous model. It can now haul 4,000kg to geosynchronous orbit and 8,000kg to low Earth orbit without breaking a sweat.

    Until now, India’s chunkier satellites hitched rides with foreigners. France’s Arianespace launched the 5,854kg GSAT-11 and 4,181kg GSAT-24. Elon Musk’s SpaceX ferried the 4,700kg GSAT-20. No more. Isro chairman V Narayanan crowed about the mission being “a shining example of Atmanirbhar Bharat”—self-reliant India, in case the point wasn’t clear enough.

    The CMS-03, also known as GSAT-7R, isn’t just heavy; it’s clever. Bristling with indigenous components, the multiband satellite will provide encrypted voice, data and video links for 15 years, giving the Indian Navy real-time situational awareness across a vast oceanic region. The navy called it a testament to national self-sufficiency in maritime defence.

    This was LVM3’s eighth consecutive successful launch, following triumphs like Chandrayaan-2, Chandrayaan-3 (which made India the first nation to land near the lunar south pole), and OneWeb satellite deployments. The upgraded rocket also feeds directly into Isro’s Gaganyaan programme, which aims to send astronauts into space. Three uncrewed missions are planned first, including one carrying Vyommitra, a robotic astronaut, later this year.

    Narayanan said the space organisation is eyeing seven more launches by March 2026, with another LVM3 mission slated for December. India’s space sector, he declared, is “soaring high.

    With launches this meaty, it’s hard to argue.

  • Krafton plots India’s path to esports glory

    Krafton plots India’s path to esports glory

    MUMBAI: Indian esports just got its marching orders. Krafton India chief executive Sean Hyunil Sohn has rolled out an ambitious 2026 roadmap designed to transform bedroom gamers into international champions. Speaking before thousands at the BGMI International Cup 2025 in New Delhi, Sohn unveiled an expanded tournament calendar spanning multiple cities—and a new awards ceremony to boot.

    The plan is deliciously simple: build a ladder. At the bottom sits BGMIS (Battlegrounds Mobile India Series), open to anyone with thumbs and ambition. Registrations open in late December 2025, with battles running January through March 2026. Survive that gauntlet and you graduate to BMPS (Pro Series) in May and June, where the winner bags a ticket to the Esports World Cup in Riyadh come July. Then comes BMSD (Showdown), a high-octane LAN slugfest running August to October. The cherry on top: BMIC (International Cup) in October, where India squares off against Korea and Japan on home turf.

    “This is more than a tournament calendar—it’s a structured pathway for Indian gamers to rise from grassroots to the global podium,” Sohn declared. The company is putting its money where its mouth is. In 2025 alone, Krafton’s tournaments offered a collective prize pool exceeding Rs 4 crore.

    The timing couldn’t be better. India’s esports scene has shed its scrappy underdog skin. Stadium-scale events now replace dingy internet cafés. Government recognition and corporate cash are flowing in. Krafton’s BGMI has racked up 240 million downloads, and the company has sunk over $200 million into Indian startups since 2021.

    Krafton India  associate director for esports Karan Pathak reckons the roadmap will democratise opportunity. “We want to give every player—from underdogs to champions—a platform to showcase their skill and represent India on the global stage,” he said.

    Krafton is also launching the inaugural Krafton India Awards on 9 January 2026 in Mumbai, a new annual bash to recognise the country’s gaming talent.

    The message is clear: India isn’t just playing anymore. It’s coming to win.

  • Celebrating Piyush: Mumbai’s ad world gathers to remember the maestro who made advertising human

    Celebrating Piyush: Mumbai’s ad world gathers to remember the maestro who made advertising human

    MUMBAI: At 10am on a Sunday morning, 1,500 of India’s advertising elite crammed into Mumbai’s Grand Hyatt to do what the industry does best: tell stories. This time, though, the subject was one of their own. Piyush Pandey, the creative titan who died last week, got the send-off befitting a man who transformed Indian advertising from borrowed jingles and forced sophistication into raw, real-life observation. The numbers would have swelled far higher had Ogilvy thrown open the doors, but this was an invitation-only affair—a gathering of those who’d worked alongside, been mentored by, or simply marvelled at the man who made “front foot pe khelo” the rallying cry of an entire generation.

    The two-hour tribute played out like a masterclass in the man himself—equal parts emotion, irreverence and creative brilliance. Hepzibah Pathak, Ogilvy India’s executive chairperson, took the stage visibly shaken, setting the tone for what would become an outpouring of stories that captured Pandey’s essence better than any obituary could. She was followed by a caravan of speakers: WPP’s chief operating officer Devika Bulchandani, Ogilvy India group chief executive Rajesh VR, chief strategy officer Prem Narayan, chief creative officers Kainaz Karmakar and Harshad Rajadhyaksha, vice-chairman and director client relations Madhukar Sabnavis, the legendary R Balki, McCann Erickson’s Prasoon Joshi, Pidilite director Madhukar Parekh, marketing guru Suhel Seth, his nephew and agency boss Abhijit Avasthi, and Asian Paints chief executive and managing director Amit Syngle. Even commerce minister Piyush Goyal made time to pay tribute, underscoring the breadth of Pandey’s influence beyond advertising’s narrow confines.

    PIYUSH GOYALThe 6:30am phone calls became the event’s leitmotif. Most speakers wore them as badges of honour—those dawn raids when Pandey would ring, sometimes to share a creative idea that had struck him in the shower, other times to help them excavate their own. His Ogilvy team recalled in granular detail how he mentored them: kind words when they delivered good work, sharp rebukes when they didn’t push hard enough. “Front foot pe khelo,” he’d say, deploying his favourite cricket analogy to urge aggression over timidity. Karmakar captured the bittersweet mood: “Who will make those 6:30am calls now?” she asked, confessing she’d hated being woken but lived for those conversations. Others complained they’d been left out of the dawn club, wondering aloud why Pandey’s Rolodex of early-morning confidants hadn’t included them.

    His creative team peeled back the curtain on his teaching methods. At a Cannes Lions masterclass, he’d begun not with case studies or charts but with meditative breathing. Inhale deeply and slowly, he’d instructed global participants. That’s observation—riding trains, chatting with taxi drivers, watching life unfold in its messy, unscripted glory. Exhale. That’s the creative work that connects with real audiences, not the manufactured personas of focus groups. It was vintage Pandey: grounding the lofty business of advertising in the quotidian rituals of simply paying attention.

    Syngle, who worked with Pandey for 37 years across Cadbury, Pidilite and Asian Paints, painted a portrait of a man allergic to pretence. He recalled being dragged from formal dinners during overseas trips—the kind with white tablecloths and wine lists—to eat dal chawal and bhindi at hole-in-the-wall Nepalese joints. “That was Piyush,” Syngle said. “Authentic. You got what you saw.” When invited to join the Pidilite board, Pandey made clear he wouldn’t wear formal clothes to meetings. Not as rebellion, but as declaration: this is who I am. Take it or leave it.

    Friends and cricketers Amit Mathur and Arun Lal delivered the comic relief Pandey would have demanded. They shared his joke about why actress Sridevi wouldn’t marry Lal: “Because she wouldn’t want to be called Sridevi Lal”—a reference to politician Chaudhary Devi Lal that sent Pandey into his trademark loud guffaws. The joke was terrible. The memory was priceless.

    PRASOON PANDEYGoyal’s recollection offered a window into Pandey’s principles. In 2014, the minister spent six hours at Pandey’s Shivaji Park home trying to convince him to handle BJP’s election advertising. “Despite years of friendship, he was stubborn every time I approached him for days,” Goyal explained. “I thought I’d failed. Next morning, relief: he called saying he’d do it.” The result was “Ab ki baar, Modi Sarkar”—a slogan that became the soundtrack of that election. What persuaded him remains unclear, but the episode revealed a man who wouldn’t be rushed or arm-twisted, even by friends in high places.

    Balki and Joshi traded admiration for Pandey’s work, but Balki’s anecdote cut deeper. They’d once decided to quit smoking together after visiting a hypnotherapist. Pandey called daily to compare notes—until he didn’t. When Balki rang, Pandey admitted he’d started smoking again. Balki lasted longer, then folded too. But Balki struck a defiant, almost evangelical note: at a time when advertising has become dreary—all performance metrics and programmatic buying and jargon-stuffed decks—Pandey’s death has ironically handed the industry its biggest campaign. “To bring advertising back into focus,” he said. “No amount of jargon, no amount of people trying to distract us from the fact that we have to do great stuff will work now. People are looking and saying: this is advertising. We’ve got the best opportunity for great work.” It was a call to arms wrapped in a eulogy.

    Prasoon Pandey, Piyush’s younger brother and an accomplished film-maker, delivered perhaps the most wrenching tribute. After seeing the industry’s outpouring, he wondered if his own love had been enough. “He was my elder brother, my father, my hero,” he said. “We’d speak six or seven times a day—not about work, but jokes, vicious pranks he wanted to pull on family or friends.” On work, the dynamic was pure Piyush: he’d hand Prasoon the soul of an idea in three or four words and expect execution. “We were drinking beer on our balcony when he asked: how strong would eggs be from a hen that feeds from a Fevicol container?” Prasoon recalled. “I thought it brilliant. He told me to go do it.” The result was one of Indian advertising’s most memorable campaigns—born not in a conference room but over beers and brotherly banter.

    The event was interspersed with screenings of Pandey’s greatest ads—the Fevicol campaigns, the Cadbury work that made Indians fall in love with chocolate again, the Asian Paints spots that turned home décor into emotion. The audience responded with applause, oohs, ahs, and more than a few tears.

    Lunch followed the stories: a spread of his favourite Indian dishes, the kind he’d have sought out in that Nepalese eatery instead of rubber chicken at a five-star buffet. Attendees left smiling, bellies and hearts full, having spent two hours remembering a man who’d taught them that the best advertising doesn’t sell products—it celebrates life.

    Piyush would have approved: tears, laughter, great work on screen, and damn good food to finish. Front foot pe khelo, indeed.

  • BonV Aero takes flight with defence honours

    BonV Aero takes flight with defence honours

    MUMBAI: When it comes to innovation, this startup isn’t just flying high, it’s soaring into the nation’s defence hall of fame. Odisha-based aerospace firm BonV Aero has clinched the SIDM Champion Award (Special Jury) under technology/product innovation to address defence capabilities gap, a proud recognition of its indigenous advances in aerial systems.

    The award was presented by defence minister Rajnath Singh to BonV Aero co-founder and CEO Satyabrata Satapathy, who dedicated the win to the nation and the armed forces. The Society of Indian Defence Manufacturers (SIDM) instituted the awards to honour excellence in home-grown defence manufacturing and technology breakthroughs.

    BonV Aero’s work in high-altitude, heavy-payload, and autonomous aerial systems has drawn national attention for expanding what unmanned aircraft can achieve in India’s tactical and logistics landscapes. The startup’s indigenous propulsion systems, rugged airframes, and self-flying technologies enable these drones to carry heavy loads, operate independently in complex terrains, and adapt to mission-critical defence operations.

    As the only Odisha-based startup to receive this recognition, BonV Aero has put the state’s deep-tech ambitions on the national map. The company’s blend of design precision and operational reliability is creating aerospace solutions that are as strategic as they are self-reliant, aligning seamlessly with India’s Aatmanirbhar Bharat vision.

    “This recognition from SIDM and the Ministry of Defence is a proud moment not just for BonV Aero, but for Odisha’s entire innovation community,” said Satyabrata Satapathy, adding that the firm’s mission is to “build systems that perform where it matters most, from high-altitude frontiers to rapid-response tactical environments.”

    The awards jury, chaired by Satheesh Reddy, former DRDO chairman and scientific adviser to the Defence Minister, featured a distinguished panel including Prahlada Ramarao (padma shri), air marshal Anil Chopra (retd.), vice admiral S.K.N. Ghormade (retd.), and maj gen P.K. Saini (retd.), among others.

    Endorsed by defence minister Rajnath Singh, the SIDM Champion Awards continue to highlight the power of collaboration between industry and the armed forces, spotlighting innovation as the new arsenal of modern defence.

    With this recognition, BonV Aero has not just lifted off, it’s redefining flight itself, positioning India for a future where indigenous ingenuity leads the way in aerospace and defence technology.

  • Making sense of success, one click at a time

    Making sense of success, one click at a time

    MUMBAI: If taste had a strategy and smell could sell, brands would already be halfway to market glory. At a Mumbai session titled “Winning With The Senses: How Sensory Science Drives Market Success”, industry experts dived nose-first into the subtle science of sight, sound, touch, taste, and smell, and how these sensations can turn ordinary products into emotional experiences.

    The panel brought together Supriya Dang, independent consultant and ex-Unilever strategist; Sandeep Budhiraja, director and promoter of Spark Sensory; and Nirmala Metwal, consumer sensory insights leader at Mondelez International. Moderated by Sunder, the discussion explored how brands can quite literally strike the right chord, or scent, with consumers.

    Supriya opened the floor by showing how sensory design acts as a bridge between product and perception. She cited Surf Excel’s packaging “click,” the lid’s sound mimicking a washing machine shutting, as a clever cue for reliability and completion. Touch also took the spotlight, with tactile beads in handwash formulations creating a more interactive, premium experience. And who could ignore the irresistible pull of freshly baked cookies? Their aroma, Supriya said, doesn’t just smell good, it sells.

    Sandeep followed with a more technical look at how sensory science replaces guesswork with data. From quantitative descriptive analysis to temporal dominance tests, he explained how trained sensory panels map out taste, texture and aroma, turning subjective preferences into measurable insights. He noted that in a market flooded with “me-too” products, sensory cues are the secret ingredient for differentiation. “When brands blend science with storytelling, loyalty follows,” he said.

    Nirmala brought in the brand perspective, sharing how her Mondelez team cracked what “refreshing” really means for an orange drink. It wasn’t just about flavour, it was about the right hue of orange, a balanced sweet-sour taste, and a smooth mouthfeel that left a clean finish. Aligning sensory cues with consumer expectations, she said, is what keeps products both loved and remembered.

    As the discussion wrapped up, all agreed that in today’s cluttered market, sensory science is no longer just about testing, it’s about translating feelings into formulas. From the satisfying click of a cap to the comfort of a familiar scent, brands that appeal to the senses are the ones that make sense to consumers.

  • Candyman gives Halloween a tangy desi twist

    Candyman gives Halloween a tangy desi twist

    MUMBAI: This Halloween, ITC’s Candyman Sourzzz is serving up scares with a splash of sour. The candy brand’s new campaign, “A Desi Halloween,” swaps haunted mansions and carved pumpkins for eerie banyan trees, bhoot banglas and Indian-style mischief, all packed with its signature lip-puckering twist.

    While the world celebrates Halloween with witches and werewolves, Candyman Sourzzz has resurrected a trio of homegrown legends, tangy tantrik, sour sundari and meetha khatkula, to reclaim India’s own folklore of fright. These zesty spirits star in a digital-first campaign that unfolds like a mini Hindi cinema horror flick, complete with neon chaos, comic chills and nostalgia-laced spookiness.

    “With Candyman Sourzzz, we’ve always aimed to make sourness fun for young India,” said ITC Limited vice president and head of marketing – chocolates, coffee and confectionery, foods division Anuj Bansal. “This Halloween, we wanted to localise the thrill by celebrating our own folklore in a playful, modern way.”

    Candy man

    Conceptualised by FCB India, the campaign takes inspiration from the delightfully campy Hindi cinema horror of the 90s, think smoky graveyards, echoing laughter, and a bhoot with attitude. “Halloween may be new to India, but horror isn’t,” said FCB India national creative director Suchitra Gahlot. “We wanted kids to meet our own spooky icons, tantriks, daayans and bhoot banglas, and make ITC Candyman the brand that owns Halloween, desi style.”

    The fun doesn’t stop on screen. The brand’s special edition Halloween pack, complete with a mask that doubles up as a candy bag, is now available on quick-commerce platforms in Bengaluru. Meanwhile, the desi Halloween spirit is spilling into the streets with RWA activations, vibrant OOH displays and influencer collaborations featuring spooky storytellers and GRWM content inspired by the campaign’s folklore icons.

    With its mix of flavour, folklore and fright, Candyman Sourzzz has turned Halloween into a deliciously desi affair, where every scare comes with a splash of sour.

  • Durex finds the other G-spot for early detection

    Durex finds the other G-spot for early detection

    MUMBAI: Who knew pleasure could be a lifesaver? This World Breast Cancer Day, Durex swapped seduction for self-care with its provocative new campaign, The Other G-Spot, proving once again that the world’s most playful brand can also be its most purposeful. The campaign redefines protection by linking the language of pleasure to the power of prevention, urging women to discover a spot that could truly save lives.

    For years, pop culture has obsessed over the G-spot, that elusive zone of discovery and delight. Durex, however, has uncovered another, one where “G” stands for “gland”, the mammary glands where most breast cancers begin. And like its better-known namesake, this one too can only be found by touch, by women themselves.

    At its heart, the campaign is a call to action, encouraging women to conduct self-examinations, schedule screenings and normalise conversations around early detection. The statistics are sobering, one woman in India is diagnosed with breast cancer every four minutes, yet only a small fraction know how to perform a self-check. Durex wants to change that, one confident conversation at a time.

    In the digital film, a woman opens with the teasing line, “I found a new G-Spot, and I can’t wait to show you.” Viewers lean in, expecting a familiar Durex twist, and they get one, just not the kind they anticipated. The reveal? She’s referring to the life-saving self-exam spot.

    The campaign cleverly blurs the line between sensuality and self-care, using curiosity to drive awareness. The message lands powerfully, self-touch isn’t just about pleasure, it’s about protection.

    But The Other G-Spot isn’t just an ad, it’s an interactive movement. Durex is taking the conversation into private DMs, users who message the brand with “The Other G-Spot” receive a video tutorial guiding them through the art of self-examination, all explained in the familiar, confident Durex tone.

    Reckitt South Asia regional marketing director, health Kanika Kalra said, “At Durex, we believe confidence and awareness go hand in hand. This campaign turns prevention into empowerment, encouraging women to see self-care as an act of strength and love.”

    With The Other G-Spot, Durex once again pushes boundaries, and this time, they might just save lives doing it. Because real protection, as the brand reminds us, starts long before the bedroom.

     
     
  • Coke hits refresh at Women’s World Cup halftime

    Coke hits refresh at Women’s World Cup halftime

    MUMBAI: When cricket took a break, Coke turned up the beat. The ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup semi-final in Navi Mumbai turned into more than just a sporting spectacle, it became a festival of fizz, folk and feel-good vibes. As players walked off for the mid-innings break, Coca-Cola’s halftime campaign made its sparkling return, transforming the pause into a celebration of rhythm, refreshment and real connection.

    Taking centre stage, singer Aditya Gadhvi performed his Coke Studio Bharat chart-toppers Khalasi, the Cannes Lions-winning anthem of wanderlust, and Meetha Khaara, a love letter to Gujarat’s folk roots. The crowd swayed, phones lit up, and for a few minutes, the cricket stood still while music took the spotlight.

    Coke Studio Bharat, Coca-Cola’s reimagined music platform, has become a cultural bridge, celebrating regional sounds and giving homegrown artists a global stage. Its authenticity and accessibility have made it one of India’s most-loved music movements.

    “It’s not every day you get to perform at an event watched across the world,” said Gadhvi. “With Coke Studio Bharat, I’m bringing the sounds I grew up with to cricket fans everywhere, it’s amazing to see music unite people in such a lively way.”

    Coca-Cola INSWA IMX lead Shantanu Gangane added, “Fans today want more than just sport; they want connection. Coke’s Halftime showcase turns a pause into a shared moment where sport, music and refreshment meet, a celebration that’s both distinctly Indian and universally relatable.”

    For ICC’s chief commercial officer Anurag Dahiya, it’s about expanding what cricket means to fans. “The Halftime integration deepens engagement by blending sport and culture. It’s about making cricket inclusive, dynamic and memorable beyond the boundary.”

    And just as the music echoed through the stands, fans at home joined in, with Blinkit’s “Coke at half price” offer ensuring the halftime spirit reached living rooms too.

    From stadium to sofa, it wasn’t just a break in the game; it was a moment that united millions in the simple joy of music, sport and a cold Coke in hand.
     

  • Story TV tests love with Sach Ya Kalesh

    Story TV tests love with Sach Ya Kalesh

    MUMBAI: Now that’s what you call a match made in microdrama heaven! Story TV, India’s leading microdrama platform from the Eloelo Group, is set to shake up digital entertainment with Sach Ya Kalesh, the country’s first-ever microdrama reality show.

    Hosted by the nation’s favourite matchmaker, Sima Taparia, the show dives headfirst into the messy, magical world of modern relationships. Featuring nine real-life couples, each episode will see them face a lie detector test that puts their love, and their honesty, to the ultimate test. The tagline says it all, Har relationship ka asli test.

    Shot in a crisp vertical format designed for mobile-first viewers, the show blends the drama of reality TV with the bite-sized fun of micro content. Expect Sima ji’s trademark sass, awkward confessions, emotional meltdowns, and maybe even a few breakups, all in real time.

    Sach Ya Kalesh marks a new chapter for India’s entertainment industry,” said  Story TV founder and CEO Saurabh Pandey. “It’s raw, relatable and designed for today’s spontaneous audiences. This is TV 2.0, right in the palm of your hand.”

    Sima Taparia, thrilled about her new hosting role, added, “Modern love is complicated. This show is honest, emotional and full of surprises. What you see on screen is real, the love, the fights, and the chaos.”

    Produced by Aarambh Entertainment, Sach Ya Kalesh will drop new episodes daily starting 2nd November exclusively on the Story TV app.

    With this launch, Story TV continues to lead the microdrama revolution, aiming to release over 800 titles and onboard 100 million users in the next year. And if Sach Ya Kalesh is any hint, drama and love, just found a brand-new format to thrive in.

  • Lights, camera, boo! &pictures turns full on spooky

    Lights, camera, boo! &pictures turns full on spooky

    MUMBAI: Trick or treat, but make it filmi! This Halloween, &pictures is turning up the spook-o-meter with ‘Full On Halloween’, a fun-horror movie marathon airing all day on 31 October 2025. Promising goosebumps, giggles and ghostly surprises, the channel is set to deliver a perfect mix of fright and fun.

    From eerie small-town tales to supernatural showdowns, the line-up packs in something for everyone. The chills kick off at 8:45 am with Kakuda, starring Sonakshi Sinha and Riteish Deshmukh, followed by the mischievous The Bhootni at 3:15 pm, featuring Sanjay Dutt, Palak Tiwari and Mouni Roy. At 5:30 pm, Phone Bhoot dials up laughs and scares with Katrina Kaif, Ishaan Khatter and Siddhant Chaturvedi, before the visually rich folklore fantasy Tumbbad closes the night at 10:40 pm.

    Adding to the fun are K3 Kaali Ka Karishma, Om Bheem Bush, and Bhaagmathi, keeping the thrills fresh and spooky spirits high. With a blend of humour, horror, and high-energy storytelling, Full On Halloween promises a day where jump scares meet joyrides.

    So this 31 October, grab your popcorn and your courage, because Halloween on &pictures isn’t just on… it’s Full On!