Category: News Headline

  • McCartney hits the right note with Man on the Run

    McCartney hits the right note with Man on the Run

    MUMBAI:  He may have left The Beatles behind, but Paul McCartney never missed a beat. Man on the Run, a new documentary streaming globally on Prime Video from 25 February, takes audiences on a front-row journey through McCartney’s life after the world’s most famous band split up.

    Directed by Academy Award-winner Morgan Neville, the film charts McCartney’s creative rebirth alongside his wife Linda, as the two form Wings and redefine what it means to start again under the glare of fame. Packed with never-before-seen footage and rare archival treasures, the documentary offers an intimate glimpse at the man behind the music, facing both artistic challenges and personal triumphs.

    Produced by Tremolo in association with MPL and Polygram Entertainment, Man on the Run will first hit select cinemas before landing on Prime Video in more than 240 countries and territories.

    But that’s not all, the film headlines a larger partnership between McCartney, Universal Music Group, and Amazon, set to roll out over the coming year. Fans can look forward to exclusive music releases, limited-edition merchandise drops, and even McCartney’s own commentary on Amazon Music.

    The collaboration also coincides with the November release of Wings: The Story of a Band on the Run, his companion book, and Wings, a self-titled definitive music collection arriving on vinyl and streaming platforms. Add to that his upcoming Got Back tour across North America, and it’s clear Sir Paul’s still flying high.

     

  • Bite-sized drama is eating the internet: Ampere Analysis

    Bite-sized drama is eating the internet: Ampere Analysis

    MUMBAI: The attention span may be shrinking, but the audience for micro-drama is exploding. More than one in ten internet users worldwide now regularly watch drama episodes lasting ten minutes or less on social media—a format that’s turning Hollywood’s traditional playbook on its head and forcing commissioners to rethink everything from episode length to distribution strategy.

    Ampere Analysis surveyed over 100,000 consumers in two separate waves across 30 global markets, polling 56,000 internet users aged 18–64. The findings reveal that these “mini-dramas” and “micro-dramas”—the shortest clocking in at under two minutes—are thriving on YouTube and TikTok. The platforms have become both primary distribution channels and discovery engines for premium subscription apps like DramaBox and ReelShorts, which are betting big on vertical video optimised for phone viewing.

    The numbers tell a compelling story about changing consumption habits. Average internet users now spend nearly 50 minutes a day watching videos on social media. For younger audiences, that figure jumps dramatically: 18- to 34-year-olds are clocking over an hour daily, creating a captive audience for bite-sized content that fits neatly between scrolls.

    The demographic split is predictable but stark. Viewers aged 18–34 are 21 per cent more likely than average to have watched a mini-drama in the past month. Nearly half of internet users in that age bracket—46 per cent—are already hooked, consuming short-form scripted content as readily as they consume traditional social media posts.

    But the format isn’t exclusively a young person’s game. Among 35- to 44-year-olds, 23 per cent have watched a micro-drama in the past month—the highest proportion of any age group surveyed. Some 19 per cent of 18- to 24-year-olds reported the same, with the 45-to-54 cohort close behind at 18 per cent. Even the 55-to-64 demographic is getting involved, with 13 per cent tuning in. The data suggests mini-dramas are breaking out of their youth-oriented niche and moving into the mainstream.

    AGE OF VIEWERS

    Geography tells an equally revealing story. Engagement is strongest in Thailand, Malaysia and the Philippines, where mobile-first viewing habits dominate and vertical video has become the default mode of content consumption. The Asia-Pacific region leads consumption overall—hardly surprising given that nearly all existing micro-drama platforms hail from China, where the format has already matured into a lucrative industry. The market is soon to be flooded with Western competitors trying to replicate that success. European audiences, by contrast, remain largely unmoved by the format, suggesting cultural preferences or viewing habits that haven’t yet shifted to accommodate ultra-short storytelling.

    YouTube commands 44 per cent of mini-drama viewership, with TikTok capturing 38 per cent. Together, the two platforms account for a commanding 82 per cent of all short-form drama consumption on social media—Instagram picks up the scraps. YouTube’s sheer scale gives it the edge: in September, it accounted for 12.6 per cent of all television usage, according to Nielsen, compared with Netflix’s 8.3 per cent. No other service claimed even five per cent. While vertical video may feel like TikTok’s natural domain, YouTube’s reach makes it nearly impossible to overcome.

    Romance, anime and fantasy are the genres pulling the biggest crowds—commissioners would be wise to treat these as priority areas for future productions. The preference for escapist, emotionally-driven content suggests audiences are using mini-dramas for quick hits of entertainment rather than deep narrative engagement.
    Minal Modha, research director and head of sports media, sponsorship and consumer research at Ampere Analysis, says shorter scripted drama platforms are “capitalising on the increasing use of vertical videos customised for phone viewing, particularly among younger audiences”. The format’s success, she notes, stems from its perfect alignment with existing social media behaviour patterns.

    The industry is pursuing two distinct strategies, both designed to maximise the format’s commercial potential. The first: dump entire series on YouTube and monetise through advertising revenue, treating the platform like traditional broadcast television but with shorter episodes and higher frequency. The second: seed clips and teasers on TikTok or Instagram to build buzz and audience interest, then drive viewers into subscription apps such as DramaBox or ReelShorts for the full experience. It’s a funnel approach that transforms social platforms into massive marketing engines.

    The format may be miniature, but the business model is anything but. Short attention spans, it turns out, can generate long revenue streams—and potentially more reliable ones than traditional hour-long dramas. Production costs are lower, turnaround times are faster, and audiences can consume entire story arcs in a single lunch break. As Hollywood scrambles to jump into mini-drama production, the question is no longer whether bite-sized content works—it’s who can scale it fastest, and whether Western producers can crack the code that’s already minting money in Asia.

  • ITC Hotels unveils an ‘Epiq’ new chapter in luxury

    ITC Hotels unveils an ‘Epiq’ new chapter in luxury

    MUMBAI: ITC Hotels is spelling epic with a ‘q’. The hospitality giant has unveiled its newest premium brand, Epiq Collection, marking a fresh chapter in its growth story and adding sparkle to its ‘Asset-Right’ expansion strategy.

    The first destinations to host this new brand are two of India’s most culturally vibrant cities, Puri and Tirupati. The 118-key Epiq Collection Puri, an owned property, and the 201-key Epiq Collection Tirupati, a managed hotel, are set to open within the next two years, both joining the Club ITC rewards programme. Together, they signal a refined blend of modern sensibility and soulful Indian hospitality.

    “The launch of Epiq Collection marks an important milestone in the evolution of ITC Hotels’ brand architecture,” said ITC Hotels Limited managing director Anil Chadha. “We are curating experiences that are contemporary in sensibility yet timeless in their connection to place.”

    The brand aims to add around 1,000 rooms in the medium term and will feature premium hotels and resorts, each with its own distinctive character, design language and culinary identity. Staying true to ITC Hotels’ reputation for sustainability and culinary excellence, the Epiq Collection will celebrate regional cuisines with a modern twist, where local inspiration meets global sophistication.

    Designed to host both new builds and repositioned premium properties, Epiq Collection promises to be a reflection of social vitality, service finesse, and that unmistakable Indian warmth that defines ITC’s hospitality ethos.
     

  • Kabeer Biswas quits Flipkart after brief stint scaling quick-commerce arm

    Kabeer Biswas quits Flipkart after brief stint scaling quick-commerce arm

    BENGALURU: Kabeer Biswas has skipped out from Flipkart after barely ten months, leaving behind the quick-commerce outfit he helped scale to over 300,000 daily orders. The Dunzo co-founder, who joined the e-commerce behemoth in January 2024 as vice-president of Flipkart Minutes, is already eyeing his next move—likely within the cut-throat world of ten-minute delivery.

    Flipkart confirmed the exit, with company veteran Kunal Gupta, currently vice-president, taking the reins. “Biswas has contributed notably to the growth of Flipkart Minutes and strengthening of customer experience,” a spokesperson told Moneycontrol, which first reported the departure.

    During his blink-and-you’ll-miss-it tenure, Biswas expanded Flipkart Minutes to multiple cities including Guwahati, marking the firm’s deeper thrust into India’s north-east. He built out a network of roughly 800 dark stores, narrowing the gap with established rivals Blinkit, Zepto and Swiggy Instamart. Executives reckon the platform pulled in over 50  million new visitors to Flipkart’s ecosystem last year—proof that rapid delivery has become a potent customer magnet.

    Biswas founded Dunzo in 2015 before stepping down from the Reliance-backed startup ahead of his Flipkart move. Industry watchers now expect him to resurface at one of the big three quick-commerce players, either at the helm or whispering strategy from the sidelines. In India’s breakneck delivery wars, a ten-month pit stop counts as a breather.

  • Bhavesh Dalmia switches from pharma to power as Torrent Electricals’ new marketing chief

    Bhavesh Dalmia switches from pharma to power as Torrent Electricals’ new marketing chief

    MUMBAI: Bhavesh Dalmia has traded pills for plugs. The marketing veteran, who spent over six years steering consumer campaigns at Cipla, has joined Torrent Electricals as general manager for marketing this month.
    It marks a sharp pivot from the Bay of Bengal to what Dalmia calls “the rich Amethyst”—a poetic nod to Torrent’s signature purple branding. More practically, it’s a move from pharma marketing to the industrial heft of the Torrent Group’s electrical manufacturing arm.

    Dalmia brings two decades of brand-building chops across consumer health, fast-moving consumer goods and financial services. At Cipla, where he served as associate director for consumer marketing from September 2019, he championed digital transformation and omnichannel strategies. His portfolio includes campaigns such as #BerokZindagi, #SaridonMovieReview and #Fairsexfairsay—efforts that blended social media punch with traditional media muscle.

    Before Cipla, he spent over eight years at Piramal Enterprises as senior brand manager for consumer products, and five years at Madison World handling the Godrej account. His CV also includes a stint at Delhi Press Group.
    At Torrent Electricals, Dalmia says he’ll focus on building brand presence and driving growth through “impactful marketing strategies”. Whether that means bringing his pharma playbook to circuit breakers and switchgear remains to be seen. But if his track record is any guide, expect data-driven campaigns and plenty of hashtags.

  • Dulcoflex has a gut feeling about change

    Dulcoflex has a gut feeling about change

    MUMBAI: Looks like it’s time for some toilet talk with a twist! Dulcoflex, India’s trusted digestive wellness brand, has launched its cheeky yet impactful campaign, ‘kNOw Constipation’, to get Indians talking about something we all do, but rarely discuss.

    Constipation affects one in every five Indians, yet the topic remains hushed behind closed doors. Dulcoflex wants to change that with a dose of humour and heart, turning an everyday discomfort into an open, stigma-free conversation.

    What makes this campaign stand out is its refreshing tone. Instead of awkward metaphors or exaggerated ads, ‘kNOw Constipation’ brings together popular comedians like Aanchal Aggarwal, Srishti Dixit, Soumya Venugopal, Gurleen Pannu, Jamie Lever, and Shreya Roy, using relatable stand-up sets to break the silence without mocking those who suffer.

    Opella CHC India head of brand & innovation Nupur Gurbaxani explained, “Campaigns around constipation often centre on men and trivialise the issue. With ‘kNOw Constipation’, we want women to lead the conversation, understand the problem, and address it right. Only when we know constipation, can we truly say no to it.”

    The campaign goes beyond laughs and likes. It will roll out across digital, radio, and grassroots initiatives, bringing awareness to both urban and rural communities.

    With 276 million Indians struggling daily and many relying solely on home remedies, Dulcoflex’s initiative brings a fresh, fearless voice to a subject long flushed out of public dialogue. Because, as Dulcoflex cheekily reminds us, it’s time to let it out.
     

  • Eicher Motors’ electric vehicle chief heads for the exit

    Eicher Motors’ electric vehicle chief heads for the exit

    NEW DELHI: Mario Alvisi is revving off into the sunset. The chief growth officer for electric vehicles at Eicher Motors has tendered his resignation, effective from the close of business on 31 December 2025. His departure marks the end of a standalone EV push at the Indian automotive firm.

    The company, better known for its Royal Enfield motorcycles, says it is strategically integrating its electric vehicle brand and commercial teams with its core operations. Translation: the EV experiment is being absorbed into the main business. Eicher reckons this will harness the company’s “full strength, scale and expertise” to execute its electrification strategy with speed and precision.

    The regulatory filing to India’s stock exchanges was notably thin on gratitude or future plans for Alvisi and was dated 13 October.  It focused squarely on the reorganisation—a signal that Eicher is betting its EV future on integration rather than isolation.

    Whether folding the cards or going all in remains to be seen. But for Alvisi, the road ahead lies elsewhere.

  • Hyatt Finds its star in Karisma Kapoor

    Hyatt Finds its star in Karisma Kapoor

    MUMBAI: Looks like luxury just got a little more Karisma! Hyatt has launched its latest World of Hyatt campaign in India, starring Hindi cinema icon Karisma Kapoor, inviting travellers to discover a world where loyalty isn’t just rewarded, it’s recognised and felt.

    Rooted in Hyatt’s purpose of caring for people so they can be their best, the campaign celebrates the World of Hyatt as more than just a loyalty programme. It’s a global community that turns every stay into a personal story, offering guests everything from free nights and upgrades to experiences that feel uniquely their own.

    “In a world where travel can feel impersonal, World of Hyatt stands apart for the way it makes people feel,” said Hyatt India & SWA regional vice president – commercial Kadambini Mittal. “Welcoming Karisma Kapoor allows us to express our purpose of care in a way that’s warm, relatable, and inspiring. This isn’t just a campaign, it’s an invitation to belong.”

    Radiating her signature charm, Karisma Kapoor shared, “I’m thrilled to be part of a campaign where personalised care meets unforgettable experiences. It’s more than a stay, it’s about creating moments that feel like home, wherever you are.”

    The campaign, now live across digital, social, and offline platforms, captures the heart of modern travel, luxury that listens, recognises, and remembers. With Kapoor as its muse, Hyatt isn’t just promising a room; it’s promising a feeling.

  • Carlsberg and Liverpool FC recreate a miracle

    Carlsberg and Liverpool FC recreate a miracle

    MUMBAI: It’s time to raise a can to one of football’s greatest comebacks! To mark 20 years of Liverpool FC’s unforgettable “Miracle of Istanbul”, Carlsberg India has unveiled the Carlsberg smooth limited-edition ‘Miracle of 2005’ Can, a stylish tribute to the night the Reds turned a 3–0 deficit into Champions League glory.

    The campaign, aptly titled Live the Miracle, invites fans across Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Goa to relive the emotion of that night, one sip at a time. The can design fuses Liverpool’s iconic red with Carlsberg’s signature green, featuring timestamps of every pivotal moment from the match, echoing the highs, lows, and that unforgettable lift of the trophy.

    But the celebration doesn’t stop at the can. Through the campaign, fans can step into goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek’s shoes in an interactive online game accessed via Carlsberg India’s Instagram or QR codes on retail displays. Winners stand to claim exclusive prizes, from Carlsberg x Liverpool FC merchandise and screenings with club legends to an all-expense-paid trip to Anfield.

    “The Miracle of 2005 is more than just a match, it’s a story of resilience and passion,” said Carlsberg India vice president – marketing Partha Jha. “With ‘Live the Miracle’, we’re not just commemorating that night; we’re bringing it alive for Indian fans through experiences that go far beyond watching the game.”

    The partnership between Carlsberg and Liverpool FC dates back to 1992, making it one of football’s longest-running collaborations. From the treble of 2001 to the miracle of 2005, the Carlsberg logo has stood proudly on the Reds’ chest through their most iconic victories.

    Now, two decades later, that spirit of belief and camaraderie is bubbling over once again, in every limited-edition can that invites fans to live the miracle, sip by sip.
     

  • Cipla Health and Dcell unfold a bold new look

    Cipla Health and Dcell unfold a bold new look

    MUMBAI: When it comes to intimate wellness, Cipla Health is ready to turn the page, or rather, Unfold it. The healthcare major has entered the sexual wellness space with Unfold, a brand that dares to redefine intimacy with trust, style, and self-assurance at its core.

    To bring this bold vision to life, c teamed up with Dcell, the specialist design arm of Mullenlowe Lintas Group, to craft a striking, stigma-free identity that feels as global as it is grounded in Indian sensibilities.

    “With Unfold, we’ve entered the sexual wellness category guided by strong consumer insights, where trust and packaging play a pivotal role,” said Cipla Health managing director and CEO Shivam Puri. “Dcell has translated these insights into a modern, fresh design that reframes intimacy while remaining stigma-free.”

    Unfold’s design breaks away from the conventional cues of the category. Its sleek, metallic holographic finish and layered visuals symbolise the idea of “unfolding” passion and connection, while vibrant colours bring modernity and warmth to the fore.

    “Unfold is more than just a product, it’s a step towards normalising conversations around intimacy in India,” said Dcell executive design director Bhumika Shah. “Its aspirational yet discreet design reflects a shift towards products that combine aesthetics with confidence and quality.”

    With an identity that’s as confident as its message, Unfold doesn’t just sell wellness, it invites India to open up to it.