Category: Television

  • Jiostar fields big brands for Women’s World Cup 2025

    Jiostar fields big brands for Women’s World Cup 2025

    MUMBAI: Cricket isn’t the only thing hitting boundaries this season, brands are too. As the ICC Women’s World Cup 2025 kicks off on 30th September, broadcaster and streaming partner Jiostar has unveiled a sponsorship squad as glittering as the trophy itself.

    From Google’s tech powerhouses: Gemini, Pay, Android and Pixel, to household giant HUL’s Rexona, banking behemoth SBI, and luxury authority IGI, the line-up underscores how women’s cricket has become the big-ticket stage for global and Indian brands alike. More names are set to join the roster in the weeks ahead.

    “We are thrilled to welcome this incredible mix of sponsors,” said JioStar chief revenue officer-sports Anup Govindan. “Each brings unique strengths and a shared vision to elevate women’s cricket worldwide. With these marquee partners, the tournament will inspire millions and open up high-impact engagement opportunities.”

    For IGI, the tie-up is more than branding. “Just as every diamond is shaped under pressure to shine, so too are these exceptional athletes,” said IGI’s global CEO Tehmasp Printer. “This partnership celebrates brilliance, authenticity, and women embracing their true shine on and off the field.”

    Running till 2 November, the World Cup brings together the best of women’s cricket, with India opening its campaign against Sri Lanka. Fans can watch every ball live on Star Sports or stream exclusively on Jiohotstar.

    This festive season, expect not just fours and sixes, but brand fireworks too.

  • Zee News unveils India’s first media-led deepfake detection system

    Zee News unveils India’s first media-led deepfake detection system

    MUMBAI: Truth just got a new tech ally. Zee News, in collaboration with Neural Defend, has rolled out India’s first AI-powered deepfake verification system for the news media, putting advanced fact-checking directly in the hands of citizens.

    The initiative comes at a time when deepfakes and AI-generated misinformation are fast eroding public trust. Studies reveal that nearly 96 per cent of manipulated videos slip past the average viewer undetected, threatening journalism and democracy alike. By offering a simple drag-and-drop interface where users can upload videos, images, or audio files for instant verification, Zee News is making authenticity accessible to everyone.

    Unveiling the platform during a prime-time broadcast, managing editor Rahul Sinha urged viewers to test any suspicious video themselves. “Trust is the new benchmark,” added  ZMCL marketing head Anindya Khare, noting that the system not only safeguards audiences, particularly younger, digital-first viewers but also provides advertisers with a brand-safe environment rooted in credibility.

    On the tech front, ZMCL CTO Vijayant Kumar explained that Neural Defend’s AI engine can detect even the most sophisticated manipulations within seconds. “This is not just innovation for today but a safeguard for tomorrow’s information ecosystem,” he said.

    By integrating deepfake detection across TV, web, and digital platforms, Zee News is cementing its position as a technology-first newsroom, one that is not only reporting the truth but also helping audiences verify it.

     

  • ICC women’s cricket gets the full broadcast treatment

    ICC women’s cricket gets the full broadcast treatment

    MUMBAI: The ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup 2025 is getting the full broadcast bells-and-whistles treatment, with every match set for live production on ICC.tv with the  tournament kicking off today on 30 September  across five venues in India and Sri Lanka.

    The production, backed by JioStar as production services partner and NEP supplying kit, is serving up a 30-minute pre-game show, in-depth innings-break analysis and comprehensive post-match wrap-ups—the full monty for cricket fans worldwide.

    ICC.tv, working with JioStar, is producing vertical, mobile-first coverage for select games, catering to the thumb-scrolling generation.

    On the tech front, Hawk-Eye’s Smart Replay system is powering the Decision Review System (DRS) whilst also providing Piero graphics for tactical insights and technical analysis. WTVision is handling scoring graphics, collaborating with Cricviz for deep cricket data and analytics. Quidich Innovation Labs rounds out the team with player tracking services and Field 360°, a dynamic virtual field model that showcases evolving fielding positions in real time.

    The tournament’s commercial clout underscores women’s cricket’s surging popularity. The broadcast is reaching audiences via Star Sports, Disney+ Hotstar, Sky Sports, SuperSport, Willow, Prime Video, CricLife, PTV Sports, Ten Sports, ESPN, Sky NZ, TSM, ATN and TV1—a global footprint that would have been unthinkable a decade ago.

    Emirates, Aramco and DP World have signed on as premier partners, whilst Coca-Cola, Sobha, Rexona and Google have joined as global partners. Royal Stag, FanCraze and Near round out the commercial roster as official supporters, with Cricket4Good backing the tournament’s social responsibility initiatives.

    The tournament marks another step forward in broadcasting women’s cricket with production values matching the men’s game—and sponsors queuing up to be part of it.

  • Coca-cola bowls a green over with Maidaan Saaf at Women’s World Cup

    Coca-cola bowls a green over with Maidaan Saaf at Women’s World Cup

    MUMBAI: Forget sixes and stumpings, this World Cup is also about sweeping. As the ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup 2025 kicks off in India, Coca-cola India, in partnership with the International Cricket Council (ICC), has launched its Maidaan Saaf campaign, turning stadiums into test cases for sustainability between 30 September and 2 November.

    The idea is simple but striking: fold responsible waste management into the very fabric of the fan experience. That means volunteers guiding spectators on segregation, safai saathis and waste workers working shoulder to shoulder with stadium staff, and installations crafted from recycled plastic that double as Instagrammable art. Even the giant national flags unfurled during anthem ceremonies have been stitched from recycled PET bottles (rPET), a reminder that waste can wave as a symbol of pride.

    Coca-cola vice president of public affairs communications and sustainability for India & South West Asia Devyani Rana said, “Cricket connects millions of people, and through Maidaan Saaf we want to ensure these shared moments of joy also leave a positive impact. Our work with ICC and grassroots partners demonstrates that major sporting events can inspire communities to recycle more and waste less, while still delivering an unforgettable fan experience.”

    The ICC is equally invested in making sustainability part of cricket’s playbook. ICC chief commercial officer Anurag Dahiya added, “Cricket has the power to inspire positive change well beyond the boundary. Through this partnership with Coca-cola India, we are embedding sustainability into the ICC Women’s World Cup 2025. Fans will see how simple actions like segregating waste or celebrating recycled creations can make our sport more inclusive and responsible.”

    The campaign builds on Coca-cola India’s earlier innings: at the ICC Men’s World Cup 2023, the company ran one of the largest-ever waste management programmes at a sporting event in India. The Rpet flag from that tournament entered the Limca Book of Records 2025, cementing its place in sustainability’s hall of fame.

    With Maidaan Saaf, Coca-cola India is doubling down on its commitment to circularity. Working with NGOs, recyclers and local authorities, the initiative aims to show that cricket can be more than a spectacle, it can be a platform for greener habits.

    So as fans cheer boundaries and wickets this season, they’ll also be part of a quieter but equally important game: proving that stadiums can be as clean as they are loud.

  • Zee Business, Entrecon 2025 team up to fuel India’s startup growth story

    Zee Business, Entrecon 2025 team up to fuel India’s startup growth story

    MUMBAI: Zee Business, one of India’s leading Hindi business news channels, has partnered exclusively with Entrecon 2025, one of the country’s most ambitious entrepreneurship conclaves. Slated for 9–10 October at IIM Lucknow – EIC, Noida, the second edition promises to be a landmark gathering of 400 plus startups, 100 plus investors, 80 plus corporates, and 50 plus powerhouse speakers.

    With its live coverage, Zee Business will beam the energy, ideas, and debates from the venue to millions of living rooms and mobile screens across the nation, ensuring the movement goes beyond the halls of IIM.

    Entrecon 2025 isn’t just an event, it’s a catalyst. After the debut edition connected 200 startups with 70 investors and sparked 1.4 crore worth of business discussions, this year’s conclave aims to bridge the gap between capital and creativity at an even larger scale.

    The star-studded speaker line-up spans business, entertainment, and venture capital, featuring voices like Ashish Agarwal (Resurgent India), Navin Honagudi (Elev8 Partners), Rohit Bhayana (Lumis Ventures), Anish Agarwal (Warner Bros. Discovery), actor-entrepreneur Anupriya Goenka, Deep Bajaj (Sirona), and Anurag Batra (Business World).

    IDPL CBO Priyadarshan Garg framed the collaboration as a national mission, “Through our Live coverage of Entrecon 2025, we are not just broadcasting an event, but igniting a nationwide movement that connects visionaries with millions of aspiring entrepreneurs.”

    Gkconsulting CEO Mukesh Malik added, “Entrecon 2025 is designed to foster innovation, create bridges between startups and investors, and showcase India’s potential as a global hub of entrepreneurship. Partnering with Zee Business ensures these conversations inspire the entire nation.”

    With Zee Business as its official telecast partner, Entrecon 2025 is shaping up to be more than a conclave, it’s a movement set to redefine how India thinks, builds, and dreams entrepreneurship.

  • NSE launches Ideabaaz to fuel India’s startup dreams and entrepreneurial spirit

    NSE launches Ideabaaz to fuel India’s startup dreams and entrepreneurial spirit

    MUMBAI: If stock markets run on bulls and bears, India’s newest marketplace is running on ideas. At the National Stock Exchange (NSE), where fortunes rise and fall by the tick, Ideabaaz, the country’s first integrated startup-investor marketplace and entrepreneurial reality show was officially launched, promising to turn kitchen-table dreams into boardroom deals.

    Ideabaaz pitches itself as more than just another startup show. It combines investor matchmaking, mentorship, professional services, and transparent tracking, all with a strong focus on growing Indian cities. Its mission: to empower a billion dreams and turbocharge India’s economic engine.

    “This is not just about entertainment,” emphasised the team. “It’s about access to capital, to mentors, to opportunities that were once out of reach for small-town innovators.”

    For Della Town founder & CME Jimmy Mistry  the platform resonated with his vision of building “Brand India” on the global stage. “When Subhash showed me the idea of Ideabaaz, he knew how much social impact and brand India meant to me. At Della Township, we’re building the world’s first self-generating townships. My dream is to create India’s first global metal luxury brand something that hasn’t happened in 78 years of our freedom.”

    Mistry called Ideabaaz a movement as irreversible as globalisation in the ’90s, “Every family in India should have one member aspiring to be part of the startup ecosystem. With Ideabaaz, the exponential growth in startups could be 10x. India will never be the same again.”

    Sharrp Ventures managing partner, Rishabh Mariwala praised the grit behind the show itself. “I wouldn’t have imagined something like Ideabaaz happening at NSE. But here we are, it started as an idea, and today it’s a reality. In venture capital, we invest in founders, and what I’ve seen here is grit and determination. From a seed stage, this idea has gone on to an IPO. That’s timeless.”

    He also tipped his hat to the unsung backstage crew: “The titans get the praise, but the team Raj, Mudit, Jeet, Kailash are the heroes. Two years of hard work made this happen.”

    IDFC First Bank head of retail liabilities Ashish Singh spelt out why it was backing the platform financially. “At IDFC First Bank, we believe India’s true strength lies in the aspirations of ordinary men and women with extraordinary dreams. Ideabaaz gives middle-class Indians with ideas the wings to fly. For us, it’s not just about banking, we don’t just provide banking, we provide belief.”

    He laid out how the bank plans to power entrepreneurs “from idea to enterprise”: “Through zero-balance current accounts, digital-first cash management, lending products and an ecosystem of mentors and investors, we want to walk with startups from the earliest stage. Together, we’re not just launching a programme, we’re unlocking the Bharat of our dreams.”

    Adding glamour to grit was Wizcraft co-founder & director Sabbas Joseph who joined as an investor and mentor. His presence underlined the show’s crossover appeal, blending entrepreneurial drama with real-world impact.

    The launch also welcomed IIT Madras Research Foundation CEO Madhav Narayan who brings decades of global tech leadership to the startup fold, and Devostat, global CEO Venkat Raju known for incubating ventures in AI, fintech, healthtech and EVs.

    Rounding out the ecosystem voice was ISBA (Indian STEPs and Business Incubators Association) CEO Prasad Menon who reminded the gathering that: “In India there has never been a deficit of ideas, nor of money. The deficit has been of empathy and compassion. Incubators, like Ideabaaz, exist to bridge that gap. We’re not-for-profit, we’re enablers and when the intent is strong, success is inevitable.”

    From luxury brands to self-generating townships, from Tier 3 innovators to legacy business leaders, the voices at NSE agreed on one thing: Ideabaaz is not just a show, but a movement.

    The platform hopes to democratise entrepreneurship in a way that India has never seen before. As Jimmy Mistry put it, the herd will follow once the first few succeed and Ideabaaz wants to ensure the runway is long enough for everyone to sprint.

    Liberty Shoes executive director Anupam Bansal admitted his initial hesitation, “When Raj (Nayak) first called me about Ideabaaz, I was nervous. We’re real businesspeople, not actors. But when I came to the show, I saw it was about real people and real startups.”

    He added, “Coming from a legacy business, I’ve learnt so much from the youth here, their innovation, their energy. We’ve even started collaborating with engineering institutes thanks to the ideas sparked. Supporting the ‘Made in India’ ecosystem is an honour. Our campaign ‘Mera Joota Hindustani’ aligns perfectly with this spirit.”

    Perhaps the most heartfelt reflection came from V3 Ventures co-founder & managing partner Arjun Vaidya who said: “When I returned to India in 2013, the dream was to leave. Today, the dream is to build here. In 2016, only 500 startups were funded annually. I myself pitched to 75 investors and failed every single time. That’s why platforms like Ideabaaz matter, they give founders validation, not just valuation.

    He recalled a standout moment, “On the show, we saw the largest deal in Indian TV history. But the best moment for me was when a founder’s mother quietly sat in the audience, then broke down in tears as her son won a deal. That’s what entrepreneurship is, it’s about families, sacrifices, and dreams taking flight.”

    The tagline of Ideabaaz “Idea aapka, paisa hamara” summed up the mood. For some, it was about investments. For others, mentorship. For all, it was about creating a democratic platform where every founder, from a village kitchen innovator to a tech disruptor, could showcase their vision.

    As Arjun Vaidya aptly put it, “Entrepreneurship is India’s new cricket, and founders are the new rockstars. Actors and athletes get fame, but every founder is putting in 14-hour days whether they’re doing Rs five lakh, Rs 50 lakh or Rs five crore a month. Ideabaaz finally gives them a stage.”

    The launch at NSE wasn’t just a ceremonial ribbon-cutting, it was a statement. India is no longer content with being a land of job seekers; it is a nation of job creators.

    With Ideabaaz, the bell has been rung. Now, it’s time to see which startups echo loudest across India’s entrepreneurial corridors.

  • Ideabaaz:  NSE takes stock of startups as women-led ideas drive India’s growth

    Ideabaaz: NSE takes stock of startups as women-led ideas drive India’s growth

    MUMBAI: If stock markets run on bulls and bears, India’s newest marketplace is running on bold ideas led by women. At the National Stock Exchange (NSE), where fortunes rise and fall by the tick, Ideabaaz, the country’s first integrated startup-investor marketplace and entrepreneurial reality show, made its debut, promising to turn kitchen-table dreams, especially those of women entrepreneurs into boardroom breakthroughs.  

    The launch, presided over by NSE MD & CEO Ashishkumar Chauhan, brought together an eclectic mix of business leaders, venture capitalists, founders, and dignitaries, signalling that women-led entrepreneurship is now centre stage in India’s economic playbook.

    The emphasis on mentorship is particularly significant. Experienced entrepreneurs, investors, and industry leaders are providing guidance that goes beyond capital helping women navigate regulatory hurdles, refine business models, and scale operations. “Mentorship is the bridge between dreams and execution,” noted one participant. “It’s what transforms ideas into sustainable businesses.”

    Networking opportunities are another cornerstone. Ideabaaz brings together founders, investors, and experts under one roof, enabling women entrepreneurs to learn from peers and industry veterans alike. The connections made here could define the trajectory of India’s next unicorns, and the programme ensures that women are front and centre in these high-value interactions.

    Ideabaaz pitches itself as more than just another startup show. It combines investor matchmaking, mentorship, professional services, and transparent tracking, with a strong focus on women entrepreneurs in growing cities and towns. Its mission: to empower a billion dreams and turbocharge India’s economic engine. “This is not just about entertainment,” emphasised the team. “It’s about access to capital, to mentors, to opportunities that were once out of reach for small-town innovators.”

    Among the most rousing voices was SheThePeople and Gytree founder Shaili Chopra who said: “My introduction often says I’m ‘Women Entrepreneurship’s OG Queen,’ a crown I wear with pride but also with responsibility for the 6.2 million women in our network and 70,000 women entrepreneurs we meet every day. At Ideabaaz, we multiply that number seriously. We are a country of 1.5 billion, half of them women, we deserve half the opportunity and half the voice.”

    She added with characteristic punch: “Indian women entrepreneurs are not the side story, they are the centrepiece. They don’t wait for the stage they take it. From kitchens to boardrooms, women are shaping India’s growth story. And as we build this idea of ‘We the People of India,’ let’s not forget ‘She the People of India.’”

    For The Sleep Company co-founder Priyanka Salot, the moment was emotional: “As a founder, I’ve always got goosebumps watching someone ring that NSE bell. Today, being part of Ideabaaz makes it real. I started in a small town with a very big dream, and in six years of building The Sleep Co, I’ve learnt that India is the best place in the world to be an entrepreneur.”

    She stressed the macro context saying: “We’re on track to a 5 trillion dollars economy, and the backbone of that will be startups. Ideabaaz matters because it’s not just a show, it’s a movement. It gives wings to ambitions, showcases the strength of Indian innovation, and provides not just money, but mentorship and learning. Dream big, execute bigger.”

    Financial empowerment goes hand-in-hand with recognition. By giving women founders a chance to pitch directly to investors, Ideabaaz is fostering an ecosystem where funding decisions are merit-based and inclusive. For many participants, this is the first time their businesses are being assessed purely on potential, innovation, and execution, rather than traditional biases.  

    Rukam Capital founder & managing partner Archana Jahagirdar brought the VC lens: “Next year marks 10 years since the startup boom, and look how far we’ve come. Today, nearly 2 lakh startups are registered with DPIIT. At Ideabaaz, I’ve seen founders from every corner of India, every language, every kind of business. We’ve backed them with money, but more importantly with our time and belief. Capital is critical, but mentorship is priceless.”

    If the stock exchange has long been the temple of capital, then on this night, it became the stage for women-led ideas. The bell has been rung. Now it’s time for female founders across India to take their shot, proving that the next wave of entrepreneurial success will be driven by women with ambition, vision, and the right platform to shine.

  • Flipkart turns Bigg Boss house into a fashion battleground

    Flipkart turns Bigg Boss house into a fashion battleground

    MUMBAI: They said no one dresses well inside their house. The Bigg Boss housemates begged to differ—and proved it by ransacking a Flipkart fashion rack in record time.

    What unfolded inside India’s most-watched reality television house was part retail experiment, part feeding frenzy. When Flipkart installed its Fashion Studio inside the Bigg Boss residence and Salman Khan announced the Flipkart Fashion Icon contest, contestants descended upon the carefully curated collection with the urgency of shoppers at a clearance sale. Within minutes, the rack stood empty, its trendy offerings claimed, worn and paraded before millions of viewers.

    The audacious collaboration, timed to coincide with Flipkart’s Big Billion Days sale bonanza, represented a watershed moment in Indian entertainment commerce. It wasn’t merely product placement or brand integration—it was retail theatre performed live, where the country’s biggest e-commerce player turned a television set into a functioning fashion outlet and contestants into unwitting style influencers.

    The machinery behind this spectacle involved three distinct organisations working in concert. Flipkart deployed a team led by Pratik Shetty and Akash Jain, alongside Nikita Prakash, Pooja Sha, Sneha Narang, Vijay Sharma, Rahul Valecha and Akshay Doshi. Creative agency Essence, steered by Sunny Rangwani and Tejashree R., handled the conceptual heavy lifting. JioStar’s production apparatus, including senior supervising producer Tanya Chopra—who served as creative lead for the Bigg Boss contingent—along with Sameer Tripathy, Nandita Ramesh and Patrick Ignatious, wove the commercial proposition into the show’s narrative fabric.

    The result was seamless, if slightly chaotic. As housemates draped themselves in Flipkart’s latest offerings, the boundary between entertainment and shopping dissolved entirely. Viewers watched contestants model, mix, match and compete in outfits that could be purchased with a few taps on their phones—a real-time fashion show with immediate purchase potential.

    For Flipkart, the payoff extended far beyond traditional advertising metrics. This wasn’t a celebrity endorsement or a sponsored segment; it was organic consumption captured on camera, complete with genuine reactions, styling choices and the implicit endorsement that comes from watching someone actually want to wear something badly enough to compete for it.

    The speed with which the Fashion Studio sold out suggested that Bigg Boss contestants, despite living under constant surveillance in a sealed environment, harbour the same fashion anxieties and aspirations as viewers watching from home. Perhaps everyone, regardless of circumstance, wants to dress well inside their house after all—especially when cameras are rolling and millions are watching.

  • US Open smashes records in India with 877m watch minutes on JioStar

    US Open smashes records in India with 877m watch minutes on JioStar

    MUMBAI: When the ball hit the lines at Flushing Meadows this year, Indian audiences weren’t just watching, they were glued to their screens in record numbers. JioStar Network has revealed that the US Open 2025 clocked a staggering 877 million minutes of watch-time across Linear TV and Digital platforms, marking a watershed moment for tennis in India.

    This year’s edition opened with a twist: a novel mixed doubles format that instantly broadened the tournament’s appeal. On Linear TV alone, the event amassed 388 million minutes of total watch time, the highest ever for the US Open in the BARC era. The Hindi commentary experiment struck gold, drawing in viewers far beyond the sport’s traditional base. In fact, 18 million Indians tuned in, a 96 per cent jump year-on-year setting new records for reach.

    On JioHotstar, the digital stream lit up as fans followed Aryna Sabalenka and Carlos Alcaraz lifting the singles crowns. Together, online audiences clocked 489 million minutes of watch time, a figure that underlines both the pull of tennis and the power of accessible streaming.

    JioStar Sports head of audience engagement and monetization Siddharth Sharma said: “We have a strong belief in the fandom for tennis and the US Open in particular, and our proposition was built around that. The success we achieved across both our linear and digital platforms is a clear sign of the ever-growing passion for tennis in India.”

    The achievement cements JioStar’s positioning as India’s ultimate sporting destination, adding the US Open to a roster that already includes rights to ICC events, India’s men’s and women’s cricket teams, the TATA IPL and WPL, the Premier League, Wimbledon, and the Pro Kabaddi League. With such a calendar, JioStar has created a platform where global and domestic sporting milestones converge for Indian fans.

    The success of the US Open is more than a stat-sheet triumph. It signals tennis breaking through to a wider audience in India, a country where cricket usually reigns unchallenged. With 877 million minutes of passion, it’s clear the sport has found a new gear and JioStar, the perfect stage.

  • ET Now doubles the drama with South Central and Ayesha Faridi’s Interview

    ET Now doubles the drama with South Central and Ayesha Faridi’s Interview

    MUMBAI: Lights, camera, South India! ET Now, India’s leading English business news channel, is spicing up its programming lineup with two brand-new offerings South Central and The Interview with Ayesha Faridi. Both promise to add depth, drama, and dialogue to the channel’s already formidable portfolio.

    First up is South Central, a weekday special airing from 29th September 2025, 5:30 pm–6:00 pm, helmed by ET Now’s Jude Sujendran. More than just a show, it’s a journey into the beating heart of South India, a region that’s equal parts economic powerhouse and cultural trendsetter. From boardroom battles in Bengaluru to cinematic splendour in Chennai, the show will explore everything from politics and policy to food and lifestyle. Its editorial pillars business & economy, politics & policy, cinema & culture, and food & lifestyle ensure that viewers get the full southern thali, not just a side dish.

    Then comes The Interview with Ayesha Faridi, premiering on 3rd October 2025 at 3:30 pm. Executive editor Ayesha Faridi will trade soundbites for substance in a 25-minute deep dive with marquee voices from business, markets, policy, sports, and culture. Expect candid revelations, untold stories, and insights into future strategies from leaders shaping the country’s direction. Designed to rise above the clutter of breaking news, this flagship weekly show aims to bring clarity and context to India’s biggest decisions.

    “Both the shows embody our vision of combining sharp analysis with engaging narratives, offering viewers unmatched perspectives on the people and forces shaping India’s economy, politics, and culture,” Times Network said in a statement.

    For ET Now, already home to marquee programmes like The Market, First Trades and Closing Trades, the new additions reinforce its ethos of Rise with India, with coverage spanning 16 countries.

    So whether it’s the spice of southern stories or the candour of conversations, ET Now’s festive programming treat promises something fresh for every viewer.

    Tune in to South Central every weekday at 5:30 pm, and The Interview with Ayesha Faridi every Friday at 3:30 PM, only on ET Now.