Category: Television

  • Delhi GM Open makes its next move with Triveni Sports in play

    Delhi GM Open makes its next move with Triveni Sports in play

    MUMBAI: When strategy meets sponsorship, it’s more than just a game,it’s a masterstroke. The 21st edition of the Delhi International Open Grandmasters Chess Tournament better known as the Delhi GM Open is going all in with a new strategic ally. Triveni Sports Private Limited has joined hands with the Delhi Chess Association (DCA) as Associate Sponsor, powering India’s most prestigious classical-format chess event into its most ambitious edition yet.

    Backed by the All India Chess Federation and slated to unfold from 7 to 14 June at Tivoli Gardens, Chattarpur, New Delhi, the Delhi GM Open 2025 is gearing up to host over 2,500 players from more than 15 countries. This includes 20 Grandmasters battling it out across three rating-based categories. The pièce de résistance? A record-smashing Rs 1.21 crore prize pool up from previous editions with Rs 51 lakh for Category A (open to all rated players), and Rs 35 lakh each for Categories B (U-1900) and C (U-1700). Each category will run 10 rounds under FIDE’s Swiss system.

    Triveni Sports, a joint venture between Triveni Engineering & Industries Limited and Triveni Turbine Limited, is no stranger to the game. With consecutive Global Chess League titles to its name and deep roots in Indian chess, the company’s involvement brings both credibility and enthusiasm to the board. Expect brand visibility across the tournament from check-in counters to checkmates with digital campaigns and on-ground activations ensuring a seamless partnership presence.

    Adding ceremonial gravitas, Triveni Group chairman and MD former president of the All India Chess Federation, Dhruv M. Sawhney and will be the chief guest at the inauguration. A chess devotee himself, Sawhney remarked, “Chess has always held a special place in my heart… Through Triveni Sports, we are committed to supporting platforms that empower young talent and advance the sport in a meaningful way.”

    Echoing the sentiment DCA president Bharat Singh Chauhan added, “This is where norms are earned and future GMs are born. Triveni Sports understands the demands of chess and shares our vision of growing the game sustainably from the grassroots up.”

    With pawns poised and prize money piled high, the Delhi GM Open is setting the board for a tournament where every move matters. Checkmate never looked this grand.

  • Idemitsu Honda Racing riders battle it out in Malaysia’s heat, gain ground in ARRC

    Idemitsu Honda Racing riders battle it out in Malaysia’s heat, gain ground in ARRC

    MUMBAI: Grit, grind, and throttle defined the second round of the 2025 FIM Asia Road Racing Championship (ARRC) at Malaysia’s Sepang International Circuit, where Idemitsu Honda Racing India’s riders Kavin Quintal and Johann Reeves turned up the heat in the Asia Production 250cc class (AP250).

    In an eight lap, tyre-burning contest against Asia’s finest, 19-year-old Quintal clawed his way from the 19 grid slot in race one to finish 18 with a time of 19:43.239. By race two, he dug deeper, rode smarter, and powered to 15 place with a time of 19:44.506, clinching one championship point.

    His fastest lap? A zippy 2:25.412 — a silver lining on a steamy Malaysian afternoon.

    Reeves, starting from the 24 grid spot, rode a composed first race to place 19 with a total time of 19:44.679. In race two, he crossed the line at 20 after clocking a best lap time of 2:29.021, wrapping up a learning-heavy weekend on one of Asia’s most complex tracks.

    With Kavin’s single-point gain in round two, the Indian team now sits with a total of five points in the AP250 class — slow and steady, but forward.

    “Today’s race at Sepang Circuit was challenging from start to finish. The technical track demanded complete focus and tested every move. It was a tough battle out there. I am taking away important lessons and remain determined to come back stronger in the upcoming races”, said Kavin.

    Johann echoed the sentiment, adding, “Today’s race at Sepang Circuit pushed me on every level. The competition was intense and the track demanding. I have gained valuable experience for the team. There’s a lot to build on. With the completion of Round two, I am focused on coming back stronger in the upcoming races”.

    While the points column may not scream dominance yet, the determination in the pit lane is unmistakably loud. With more rounds to go, both riders will look to translate momentum into podiums.

  • News18 India trumps Youtube news race in May with 3.39 bilion views, leaves Aaj Tak in the dust

    News18 India trumps Youtube news race in May with 3.39 bilion views, leaves Aaj Tak in the dust

    MUMBAI: When it comes to news that clicks, News18 India has cracked the code. In May 2025, the Hindi news giant notched an eye-popping 3.39 billion Youtube views, more than triple its rival Aaj Tak’s 1.04 billion, according to data from Playboard. With that, it firmly entrenched itself as India’s most-watched digital Hindi news brand, drawing a line in the sand that its competitors are still trying to cross.

    While India remained gripped by headlines around the India-Pakistan border tensions and Operation Sindoor, viewers voted with their thumbs and screens.

    The result?

    A wave of digital dominance that News18 rode with conviction.

    The channel’s sharp surge in viewership can be attributed to its trademark focus on factual, impactful, and no-frills journalism that seems to have struck a nerve with a news-hungry nation.

    In a month flooded with mock drills, military commentary, and media grandstanding, News18 India maintained clarity over cacophony. It didn’t just win online. According to Barc Week 2025 data, it also retained its throne as the most-watched Hindi news TV channel. (Source: BARC | Metric: AMA’000s | TG: NCCS All 15+ | Period: Week 20’25 | 24 Hrs | All Days | Market: HSM)

    News18’s omnichannel strength continues to grow, proving its mettle across television and digital alike. As rivals scrambled to manufacture drama, the channel’s steady diet of credibility served it well, bolstered by loyal audiences who have made it their preferred destination for real-time reportage.

    From crisis coverage to day-to-day news, May proved that News18 India doesn’t just inform; it leads.

  • Aamir Khan swaps silver screen for cricket commentary box in IPL playoffs and final

    Aamir Khan swaps silver screen for cricket commentary box in IPL playoffs and final

    MUMBAI: Mumbai’s cricket fever just got a Hindi cinema twist. Aamir Khan, the thinking man’s action hero, is ditching his director’s chair for the commentary box as JioStar unveiled its star-studded lineup for the Tata IPL playoff and final on 1 June and 3 June respectively.

    The Lagaan legend, whose cricket credentials go beyond mere acting, donned the headset alongside seasoned commentators for Qualifier 2 and will also do so for the final showdown. Khan will join the pre-show festivities on Star Sports and JioHotstar with Genelia D’Souza and the cast of his upcoming film Sitaare Zameen Par, promising viewers a heady cocktail of cinema and cricket on 3 June.

    But this isn’t just celebrity window-dressing. Khan plans to roll up his sleeves, dissect match strategies, make bold predictions, and—true to form—inject his trademark perfectionism into play-by-play analysis. The actor-turned-pundit will share the mic with JioStar’s panel of former IPL champions, creating what promises to be television gold.

    “Nothing matches the energy and stakes of the Tata IPL playoffs and I’m quite excited to be at JioStar’s studios for these crucial playoff games,” Khan said. “Personally, I think both matches are going to be a cracker considering the teams still in contention, and I’m looking forward to commentating off the field.”

    The coverage began from 29 May  through 3 June, with Khan’s commentary debut bookending the tournament’s climactic weekend. Cricket purists and Hindi cinema buffs alike can catch the action exclusively on Star Sports Network and JioHotstar.

    If Khan brings half the intensity he showed in Dangal to the commentary box, viewers are in for a treat that’s equal parts sporting spectacle and entertainment extravaganza.

  • Sun TV’s sparkle dims: Profit slips, revenues wobble IN FY25

    Sun TV’s sparkle dims: Profit slips, revenues wobble IN FY25

    MUMBAI: It was less sizzle and more fizzle for Sun TV network in FY25, as the broadcaster reported a dip in both revenues and bottom line, despite pulling in the crowds via its cricket franchises and digital platform Sun Nxt.

    The media powerhouse, led by managing director Mahesh Kumar Rajaraman, posted a standalone profit after tax of Rs 1,654.46 crore for the year ended 31 March 2025 – a near 12 per cent drop from last year’s Rs 1,875.15 crore. Revenue from operations came in at Rs 3,878.86 crore, down 6.5 per cent year-on-year, suggesting the sun isn’t quite blazing like it used to.

    Even its consolidated figures couldn’t bowl over investors. Group revenues dropped to Rs 4,015.09 crore from Rs 4,282.10 crore a year earlier, with consolidated EBITDA slipping to Rs 2,132.75 crore from Rs 2,638.11 crore – a 19 per cent hit.

    The company’s love affair with cricket, however, continued unabated. Its IPL baby Sunrisers Hyderabad and the CSA’s Sunrisers Eastern Cape contributed Rs 641.96 crore in revenue – a respectable innings – but expenses from the franchises ate up over half of that at Rs 351.04 crore. The broadcast business remains the real spinner in Sun TV’s line-up.

    On the quarterly scorecard, Q4 FY25 total income rose 7.4 per cent to Rs 1,135.86 crore, but that wasn’t enough to boost profits. PAT stood at Rs 362.18 crore, down from Rs 398.77 crore in the same period last year.
    One curveball in the results: an exceptional loss of Rs 73.52 crore on account of impairment in a joint venture – a cautionary tale on where not to bet.

    Meanwhile, the board kept investors sweet with four interim dividends through the year totalling Rs 15 per share (300 per cent). Yet, shareholders may be wondering whether that’s lipstick on a slightly fading star.
    Sun TV still boasts hefty reserves of Rs 11,450 crore, but the real question for FY26 is whether the network can reignite its programming mojo and OTT play to counter headwinds in the traditional TV and sports biz.

    With GenAI reshaping content creation and younger audiences tuning out, Sun TV will need more than prime time reruns and T20 thrills to keep shining.

  • NDTV gets real about artificial intelligence with new AI squad

    NDTV gets real about artificial intelligence with new AI squad

    MUMBAI: NDTV is placing its bets on silicon rather than scribes, announcing the formation of a dedicated artificial intelligence team to shake up its digital media game. The news broadcaster has enlisted Aayushman Choudhary, a tech entrepreneur with startup scars and coding credentials, to head up the new unit as head of AI.

    Chief product officer Rohan Tyagi, who has done his rounds at TikTok, Triller and Zee, is clearly betting that algorithms can do more than just sort cat videos. The AI team will focus on three key battlegrounds: automating journalism workflows and mining audience insights, supercharging personalisation engines, and cooking up fresh revenue streams powered by machine learning.

    Choudhary brings a mixed bag of entrepreneurial adventures to the newsroom. The Delhi-based techie spent a year building his own venture, Underhive Inc, before NDTV came calling in May. His CV reads like a startup hopscotch game—co-founding photo editing firm AfterShoot, doing a stint as head of technology at gaming platform Winbee, and even moonlighting as an entrepreneur in residence at venture capital firm Antler.

    The appointment signals NDTV’s recognition that the future of news lies not just in breaking stories but in breaking code. With traditional media houses scrambling to stay relevant in the digital arms race, the broadcaster is hoping artificial intelligence might just provide the human touch it needs to connect with audiences.

    Whether Choudhary can teach machines to sniff out scoops remains to be seen, but NDTV is clearly ready to let the robots have a crack at reinventing the newsroom.

  • Media ‘investment pundit’ Karan Taurani gets his executive stripes at Elara Capital

    Media ‘investment pundit’ Karan Taurani gets his executive stripes at Elara Capital

    MUMBAI: Karan Taurani, Mumbai’s most recognisable media analyst, has bagged the executive vice president role at Elara Capital. The May 2025 promotion caps nearly seven years at the investment firm, where he’s dissected media, consumer discretionary, and internet sectors with surgical precision. Now retail has been added to his watch portfolio. 

    Taurani’s climb from vice president (October 2018) to senior vice president (April 2021) and now to the executive suite reflects his growing clout. His trajectory mirrors his expanding media footprint—from conference circuits to prime-time television punditry.

    The analyst’s journey began at Pioneer Investcorp (2008-2011), covering IT and mid-cap technology during the sector’s boom years. IFCI Financial Services expanded his remit to education whilst maintaining IT expertise. Religare offered broader horizons, juggling 15-plus companies across technology, media, telecoms, and education as lead analyst.

    Dolat Capital Market cemented his media sector reputation before Elara Capital came calling in 2018. What sets Taurani apart is his media savvy—regular television appearances and conference circuit presence make him the go-to voice for sectoral insights, whether streaming wars, retail disruption, or consumer spending patterns.
    His independent directorship at Kavithalayaa since January 2024 adds board-level strategic nous to complement analytical prowess. It’s cross-pollination that makes for rounded market commentary.

    At Elara, Taurani’s executive elevation suggests the firm recognises value beyond pure research. In an era where analyst personalities drive investment decisions, having a media-savvy executive who articulates complex trends across platforms is worth its weight in rupees.

    For Taurani, the promotion validates a career built understanding India’s evolving consumer landscape. His analytical journey mirrors the country’s economic transformation—and executive stripes suggest more commentary ahead.

  • Cricket and other sports pirates get the boot as broadcasters flex their legal muscle

    Cricket and other sports pirates get the boot as broadcasters flex their legal muscle

    MUMBAI: The International Broadcaster Coalition Against Piracy (Ibcap) has been rather busy playing digital sheriff, rounding up streaming rustlers and making pirates walk the legal plank. The coalition’s 2025 annual report, released at its Anaheim gathering  on 14 May, revealed a year of impressive swashbuckling against content thieves who’ve been helping themselves to premium programming without so much as a by-your-leave.

    The real crowd-pleaser was  Ibcap’s cricket crusade, where it showed that protecting live sports requires the reflexes of a wicket-keeper and the persistence of a tail-end batsman. During the 2024 Indian Premier League tournament, its analysts in India and America worked in real-time shifts, sending takedown notices faster than Jasprit Bumrah delivers yorkers. The result was spectacular: 6,723 streams disrupted over the tournament’s duration and more than 2.1 million Facebook Live views blocked worldwide. Its takedown rate on social media and mobile apps achieved a perfect 100 per cent—leaving pirates and would-be viewers equally frustrated.

    The highly popular cricket T20 World Cup saw similar success, with Ibcap’s laboratory removing 3,783 streams and disrupting over a million Facebook Live views globally. On set-top box and IPTV services, it knocked out 2,852 streams with a 77 per cent success rate, whilst web-based live streams suffered even more, with 5,940 removed at a 70 per cent clip. Social media and mobile apps once again proved no match for IBCAP’s digital fielding, maintaining that perfect 100 per cent takedown rate.

    Ibcap expanded it merry band of  crusaders with three notable additions: Japanese public broadcaster NHK, whose programming reaches 160 countries, joined the fray in June 2024, bringing protection for Japanese-language content into the fold. American video distribution heavyweight DirecTV followed suit in March 2025, broadening Ibcap’s reach into mainstream American programming. Most recently, Italy’s national broadcaster Rai signed up, dragging its popular channels Rai Uno and Rai Italia—home to variety shows, sports, and live Serie A football—under Ibcap’s protective umbrella.  With programming available across 174 countries on five continents, RAI’s addition proves that even the land of pasta and beautiful football isn’t immune to streaming skulduggery. Ibcap currently represents over 220 television channels from America, Europe, Brazil, the Middle East and South Asia. 

    The coalition hasn’t just been collecting members like Panini stickers. Its laboratory techies have developed a rather clever automated monitoring system that spots dodgy video-on-demand content on set-top boxes and IPTV services faster than you can say “buffering.” This proprietary digital bloodhound doesn’t just watch—it captures evidence, preserves it for legal proceedings, and fires off automated takedown notices to infringing services, content delivery networks, and hosting companies worldwide. The result? Illegal streams vanish quicker than a Test match in Perth. Ibcap is so pleased with this technological marvel that it’s considering offering the service to non-members and other organisations in the broader anti-piracy battle.

    Ibcap’s legal team has been throwing punches worth millions, building on its successful track record of making hosting providers pay for digital negligence. After pocketing a tidy $3m settlement from hosting provider Datacamp—a warning shot across the industry’s bow—it has trained its legal cannons on Virtual Systems and Innetra PC with lawsuits filed in October 2024 and May 2025 respectively.

    Virtual Systems’ behaviour was particularly brazen, operating what can only be described as a piracy paradise. The company allegedly ran a “DMCA ignored” policy—about as subtle as a brick through a window—advertising that “we ignore DMCA takedown notices” to potential customers. When Ibcap sent over 500 separate infringement notices, Virtual Systems treated them with all the respect of junk mail, allowing numerous pirate services to continue using its servers and network infrastructure to stream copyrighted content. The company’s reward for such cavalier attitudes? A lawsuit seeking over $41m in statutory damages plus a permanent injunction.

    Innetra PC proved equally troublesome, emerging as a major offender in Ibcap’s crosshairs after being identified as responsible for delivering approximately 15 per cent of unauthorised Ibcap member streams on set-top box and IPTV services during the first quarter of 2025. Its comeuppance: a lawsuit demanding more than $25m in statutory damages and, like Virtual Systems, a permanent injunction to stop hosting infringing content.

    Perhaps most satisfying was the legal thrashing handed to the operators of Lemo TV and Kemo IPTV in April 2025. These streaming scallywags had been particularly audacious, continuing to broadcast Ibcap protected content despite receiving approximately 100 infringement notices—roughly one for every boundary in a decent innings. During the first quarter of 2025 alone, the service accounted for almost 30 per cent of all unauthorised streams detected on set-top box and IPTV services monitored by Ibcap’s laboratory.

    The service’s persistence in piracy proved costly. The lawsuit seeks statutory damages exceeding $25m, plus profits from potentially thousands of unregistered works that were illegally distributed. But the legal punishment doesn’t stop at financial penalties—Ibcap wants a permanent injunction to shut down the operation entirely, an order forcing the transfer of domain names used by the service, and recovery of reasonable legal fees and costs. It’s the equivalent of not just getting bowled out, but having your stumps scattered across three counties.

    The message is crystal clear: content pirates may think they’re sailing in international waters, but Ibcap’s legal navy is patrolling every digital sea lane with an arsenal that would make admiral Nelson proud. With automated monitoring systems scanning the digital horizon, a growing fleet of broadcaster allies from five continents, and a track record of multi-million-dollar settlements, the coalition is proving that in the world of content protection, crime doesn’t pay—especially when it’s streaming someone else’s cricket match, Serie A fixture, or prime-time drama without permission.

  • Anushrav Gulati plugs into ABP Network as chief digital officer

    Anushrav Gulati plugs into ABP Network as chief digital officer

    MUMBAI:  Powering up for its next phase of digital evolution, ABP Network has appointed Anushrav Gulati as chief digital officer (CDO), bringing in a battle-hardened media and ad-tech pro with over two decades of deep digital DNA.

    With a career spanning the trenches of Infosys to the command centres of Network18 and Times Internet, Gulati has now taken guard at ABP Network as of May 2025—his latest inning in an already formidable game.
    From cracking programmatic codes at Network18 and leading digital ad sales at Times Internet, to building programmatic revenue models and launching performance-driven platforms at TVOptima, Gulati’s résumé reads like a playbook for India’s digital advertising future.

    Prior to this move, Gulati was head of sales and business development at TVOptima, where he moonlighted as a consultant and rainmaker for ad-tech startups. His work involved sealing high-stakes partnerships, taming tech integrations, and creating monetisation magic—earning him stripes as both a sales strategist and digital fixer.

    His longest tenure was with TCS (eight years), where he cut his teeth in project management, before moving up the product ladder at Infosys, Globallogic, Lime Labs, and letsbuy.com, gaining chops in product development and leadership.

    At Times Internet, he helmed digital ad sales and managed targets across marquee properties. At India TV, as vp – digital, he built the digital vertical from scratch, owning both growth and the P&L. His stint at Network18 saw him leading programmatic revenues for top brands like Moneycontrol, News18 and Firstpost, where he managed everything from SSP relations to syndication.

    Armed with a toolkit of AI, CRM, ad-tech, programmatic smarts, leadership and strategic business development, Gulati now steps into ABP with a clear mission—accelerate the broadcaster’s digital transformation, bolster advertising revenues, and bring the network’s digital game up to global speed.
    If his past playbook is anything to go by, expect ABP Network to double down on product innovation, AI-backed audience strategies, and sleek monetisation models.

    Watch this space—Gulati doesn’t just transform systems, he rewires playbooks.

  • Breaking News18 tops charts with highest hindi news viewership

    Breaking News18 tops charts with highest hindi news viewership

    MUMBAI: Mic drop in the newsroom News18 India has just dialled up the decibels and claimed top honours in the Hindi news genre. According to the latest BARC data (Week 20’25), News18 India has emerged as the most-watched Hindi news channel, notching up 119124 AMA’000s and pulling ahead of long-time rival Aaj Tak, which recorded 117819 AMA’000s. The numbers are part of a fierce race in the Hindi-speaking markets (HSM), where channels jostle for attention 24×7.

    Rounding out the top five are TV9 Bharatvarsh (103286 AMA’000s), Republic Bharat (93207), and Zee News (87641). (Source: BARC | Metric: AMA’000s | TG: NCCS All 15 plus | Period: Week 20’25, 24 Hours, All Days | Market: HSM)

    What’s fuelling this newsroom juggernaut? A combination of hard-hitting reportage, high-decibel debates, and a trusted team of anchors including Kishore Ajwani, Amish Devgan, Rubika Liyaquat, Prateek Trivedi, and Aman Chopra. The channel’s programming dives deep into issues that matter, delivering perspectives that resonate with viewers from every corner of the country.

    News18 India attributes its continued rise to “factual, credible, and accurate coverage” qualities that seem to be striking a chord with the increasingly discerning Hindi news audience.

    Backed by an extensive on-ground reporter network, the channel ensures it’s not just first with the news, it’s everywhere the news is. From political showdowns to ground reports, News18 India is holding the mic and the momentum.