Category: TV Channels

  • Travelxp expands Baltic footprint with Cgates launch in Lithuania

    Travelxp expands Baltic footprint with Cgates launch in Lithuania

    MUMBAI: Travelxp, the Mumbai-headquartered travel content powerhouse, has made its Lithuanian debut through a launch on Cgates, one of the country’s leading TV platforms—marking another milestone in its aggressive Baltic expansion.

    From 1 September, Cgates subscribers have been tuning into Travelxp HD via the “Laisvalaikio” (Leisure) thematic package, unlocking a world of adventure, culture, cuisine, and discovery in high definition. The channel promises more than just travelogues—viewers can expect adrenaline-packed explorations, wildlife documentaries, and local lifestyle stories that transport them across continents.

    Travelxp now beams into over 119 countries in 25-plus languages, reaffirming its position as a global leader in 4K HDR storytelling. “This launch deepens our footprint in Lithuania and the Baltics,” said Travelxp  managing director, Europe & Africa Sumant Bahl. “Together with Cgates, we’re igniting curiosity and connecting Lithuanian audiences to the world.”

    Cgates’ director of legal and TV content Dina Adomavičiūtė-Matulė called the tie-up a natural fit. “Travelxp’s blend of inspiration, education and entertainment perfectly complements our offering,” she said.

    With this move, Travelxp continues to chart new frontiers—turning television screens into global passports and reminding viewers everywhere that the journey never ends, it only widens.

  • From print to AI how news keeps up with times

    From print to AI how news keeps up with times

    MUMBAI: Wake up, check your phone, catch a podcast, scroll a story, news never sleeps. At a lively session on “Credibility in the Age of Chaos & Media’s Role in Shaping India’s Identity,” India Today Group vice chairperson and editor-in-chief Kalli Purie joined Business Standard columnist and author Vanita Kohli-Khandekar, to explore how a 50-year-old brand stays relevant in a 24 by 7 media whirlwind.

    Purie reflected on longevity and adaptation. “Fifty is the new 25. Men age, magazines don’t,” she said, highlighting how India Today has evolved from a fortnightly publication to producing over 120,000 content pieces every month across print, video, podcasts, social media, and live events.

    Kohli-Khandekar added a sharp perspective on the challenge of capturing audience attention in a saturated media environment. “Where does news lie in this era of short stories, micro dramas, and podcasts? How does it stay relevant and profitable?” she asked, emphasising the need for integration across platforms to maintain trust and impact.

    The discussion turned to technology and AI, where Purie revealed some pioneering initiatives. From AI anchors covering Bihar elections to AI-assisted translations and folk music storytelling, India Today has been embracing innovation to increase efficiency, reduce monotony, and explore new revenue streams. “AI is like a sandwich,” she quipped. “Human bread with AI in between. The human touch has to remain.”

    Purie stressed that technology alone cannot replace credibility. “You are a primary source. People want news from a human perspective, on the ground. AI cannot tell that story… yet,” she said, hinting at a future where robots might cover hazardous assignments while humans oversee the narrative.

    The session also highlighted India’s media identity in a global context. Purie noted, “People want sources from their own country. Digital imperialism is real, but Indian media has to assert its relevance.” Kohli-Khandekar added that 24 by 7 connectivity requires news organisations to adapt fast, integrate teams across platforms, and keep audiences engaged with stories that matter locally and globally.

    The conversation showcased how a legacy brand like India Today balances tradition and innovation, human insight and artificial intelligence, local identity and global perspective. Purie’s parting thought summed it up perfectly: staying credible, creative, and connected is the ultimate headline.

  • Streaming Dreams and Story Schemes Mark Netflix’s Decade in India

    Streaming Dreams and Story Schemes Mark Netflix’s Decade in India

    MUMBAI: When Netflix arrived in India ten years ago, the streaming giant wasn’t just entering a new market, it was stepping into a nation obsessed with stories. From cricket to cinema, India has always lived in 16:9 emotion. A decade later, as Netflix celebrates its 10th anniversary here, it has become more than just a platform, it’s a pop-culture mood board, a social mirror, and occasionally, the nation’s favourite debate topic over dinner.

    At FICCI Frames 2025, Netflix India, vice president of content Monika Shergill revisited the platform’s decade-long journey not as a corporate milestone, but as a cultural chronicle. “It’s been ten years of discovering stories that surprise even us,” she said with a smile. “India has taught us that there’s no such thing as one audience.”

    Shergill’s words carried weight. In 2016, when Netflix launched in India, data plans were expensive, the idea of binge-watching was alien, and cable television ruled the roost. Yet, as she pointed out, “audiences were already hungry for something different, they just didn’t know where to find it.” That ‘something different’ soon arrived in the form of gritty, genre-bending originals like Sacred Games and Delhi Crime, titles that not only redefined Indian streaming but also caught the attention of global viewers.

    “Shows like Delhi Crime proved that our stories don’t have to be diluted for global audiences,” Shergill noted. “They resonate precisely because they are authentic, rooted, and unapologetically Indian.”

    Over the years, Netflix’s slate has stretched from the heartlands to the Himalayas, serving up thrillers, romcoms, docuseries, and biopics that mirror the country’s diversity. From Kota Factory’s monochrome melancholy to Khufiya’s cloak-and-dagger intrigue, every title seems to tap into a different emotion, language, and landscape proof that India doesn’t just contain multitudes, it streams them too.

    But as Shergill highlighted, the real game-changer has been regional storytelling. “Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, and Bengali stories are not just finding local audiences, they’re travelling globally,” she said. “When you keep the essence local, you end up going global.” Indeed, viewership of Indian regional content on Netflix has shot up by more than 60 per cent in the past three years, while global viewing of Indian titles has doubled.

    Beyond the data, there’s a shift in creative dynamics. Netflix’s approach to nurturing over 200 Indian writers, directors, and creators has created what Shergill calls “a sandbox for fearless storytelling.” Unlike theatrical cinema, where success is often measured by box-office numbers, the streaming space has allowed creators to focus on experimentation, representation, and emotional truth.

    “Streaming has democratised creativity,” she said. “You could be a first-time director from Shillong or a veteran from Mumbai, your story gets the same chance to be discovered.”

    That discovery is also increasingly shaped by technology. Shergill spoke of how algorithms, AI tools, and personalisation engines have made every viewer’s journey unique. “We often joke that no two people have the same Netflix,” she said. “But the magic lies in how tech quietly helps stories find the right audience, not the other way around.”

    Of course, Netflix’s decade in India hasn’t been without its plot twists from the rise of fierce competition (DisneyPlus Hotstar, Prime Video, JioCinema, Zee5, SonyLiv, and more) to debates on pricing, censorship, and content localisation. Yet, as Shergill pointed out, these challenges have only sharpened the industry’s creative instincts. “Healthy competition means better stories,” she said. “It’s proof that the audience is winning.”

    As India becomes one of Netflix’s fastest-growing markets, the company is doubling down on localisation not just through language, but through themes that reflect real India. Small-town aspirations, gender fluidity, generational conflict, and cultural nostalgia are no longer niche; they’re mainstream. “The stories that come from the heartland are the ones making it to hearts worldwide,” Shergill quipped.

    The conversation also drifted to how streaming has blurred the lines between entertainment and experience. “Today, entertainment is no longer consumed,” she observed. “It’s lived, shared, and replayed. When people cry over a character or cheer for a show, they’re not just viewers, they’re participants.”

    As FICCI Frames explored the theme of India’s creative economy, Shergill’s reflections summed up a decade where the screen became both a stage and a storyteller. “Streaming is not just about algorithms and recommendations,” she said. “It’s about emotion, connection, and the thrill of seeing your story on a global map.”

    For Netflix, that map is only expanding. With new content partnerships, investments in regional studios, and a growing slate of originals, the next chapter seems poised for even more ambitious storytelling.

    Ten years on, the red N has gone from being an app icon to an emotional bookmark in India’s entertainment story. And as Shergill reminded the audience, “Our best stories are still buffering and that’s the most exciting part.”

  • TV9 Network hosts News9 Global Summit 2025 Germany edition in Stuttgart

    TV9 Network hosts News9 Global Summit 2025 Germany edition in Stuttgart

    MUMBAI: TV9 Network is set to host the second News9 Global Summit – Germany Edition in Stuttgart on 9–10 October 2025, celebrating 25 years of India-Germany strategic partnership.

    The Summit, themed “Democracy | Demography | Development: The India-Germany Connect,” brings together policymakers, corporate leaders, and thought innovators from both nations to explore trade, technology, and collaborative opportunities.

    Presented by the Government of Maharashtra and MIDC, co-hosted by Vfb Stuttgart and supported by the State of Baden-Württemberg, the event promises high-level dialogue and actionable insights. Gold partners Fintiba and Barmer, Silver partners MHP – A Porsche Company and Tata Ace Pro, alongside other institutional and strategic partners, anchor the discussions.

    The Germany edition began in Berlin on 6 October at the Axica Convention Centre, adjacent to the Brandenburg Gate. Over 200 innovators, startups, and investors attended, with keynotes from India’s Ambassador to Germany HE Ajit Gupte, and spotlight sessions featuring Vijay Chauthaiwale, Anandi Iyer, Stefan Halusa, and Jörg Müller. The journey continues through Munich and Karlsruhe, culminating in Stuttgart for the main Summit dialogue.

    TV9 Network, MD & CEO Barun Das said, “The Summit is about more than dialogue; it’s about building trust in a multipolar world. Stuttgart, a hub of engineering, innovation, and diplomacy, is the perfect stage for India’s narrative as the world’s fastest-growing major economy.”

    Vfb Stuttgart chief marketing & sales officer Rouven Kasper added, “Sport and dialogue share a common language, teamwork, resilience, and innovation. Co-hosting the Summit reflects these shared values and celebrates the India-Germany connect beyond trade and technology.”

    The Summit’s lineup is a blend of policy, industry, and culture: From Germany and Europe Johann David Wadephul, Nina Warken, Maroš Šefčovič, and state leaders including Winfried Kretschmann and Frank Nopper; Industry voices Andreas Lapp, Joachim Erdle, Bernd-Otto Hörmann, alongside innovators like Honza Ngo and Jan-Frederik Dammenhain; Strategic experts Karl-Heinz Grossmann (Airbus Defence & Space), captain Michael Giss (Bundeswehr), cultural innovators Alexander Heinrich and Thomas Diehl.

    From India, the Summit includes Piyush Goyal and Devendra Fadnavis (virtual), with in-person participation from Anurag Singh Thakur, Uday Samant, and HE Ajit Gupte, supported by policy and economic thought leaders like Arvind Virmani and Sachin Kumar Sharma, as well as industry leaders including Vivek Lall, Pankaj Vyas, Anandi Iyer, and Ujjwal Jyoti.

    Cultural and creative perspectives feature chef Kunal Kapur, captain Zoya Agarwal, and new-generation innovators Siddharth Bhasin and Markus Besch.

    The News9 Global Summit 2025 – Germany Edition continues TV9 Network’s mission of placing India at the heart of global dialogue while redefining bilateral cooperation, innovation, and strategic partnerships for the next 25 years.

  • Globecast unveils content-sharing platform for sports rights holders

    Globecast unveils content-sharing platform for sports rights holders

    MONACO: Sports broadcasters are getting a new weapon in the battle for eyeballs. Globecast will showcase Content Exchange, its latest media platform solution, at Sportel 2025 in Monaco from 20 to 22 October.

    The platform, designed for rights holders and sports federations, offers a unified, all-IP infrastructure combining satellite, fibre and hybrid cloud technologies. It enables seamless acquisition, processing and delivery of both live and on-demand content, creating a secure hub that connects content owners with broadcasters and unlocks new monetisation opportunities.

    “With the launch of Globecast Content Exchange, we’re transforming the way sports content is delivered and shared,” said Globecast head of digital media development Steve MacMurray. “It gives rights holders unmatched flexibility and control to distribute highlights, live feeds and on-demand content to partners and fans worldwide, all through a simplified, scalable and secure platform.”

    Visitors to stand G.05 can experience the technology first-hand. The solution promises scalable transmission and processing for demanding media applications, offering rightsholders greater control over distribution in today’s hybrid media landscape.

    Globecast will also spotlight its recent sports collaborations. Racer  Network, which will broadcast over 300 live motorsport events in 2025, has partnered with the company to enhance quality and streamline delivery using advanced graphics and cloud playout. Meanwhile, Globecast’s extended partnership with Premier Padel as global delivery partner for the 2025 and 2026 seasons supports the sport’s international expansion through a fully IP- and cloud-based distribution model.

  • Doordarshan and Collective Media reimagine the Mahabharat with AI

    Doordarshan and Collective Media reimagine the Mahabharat with AI

    NEW DELHI: India’s most celebrated epic is getting a technological makeover. Collective Media Network’s Historyverse has unveiled an AI-led reimagining of the Mahabharat, set to premiere on Waves OTT on 25 October 2025. Doordarshan will broadcast it every Sunday at 11:00 AM from 2 November 2025.

    The collaboration pairs Prasar Bharati’s nationwide reach with the creative firepower of a next-generation media network. Advanced AI tools have been used to reconstruct the epic’s sprawling universe—its characters, battlefields and moral quandaries—with cinematic scale and striking realism.

    “Like millions of Indians, I grew up watching the classic Mahabharata on television every Sunday. It was an experience that shaped my imagination and my connection to our culture,” said founder & group chief executive Vijay Subramaniam. “With Mahabharat, our hope is to give today’s generation a similar touchstone that feels as immersive and unifying as it did for us, but told through the possibilities of today’s technology.”

    Prasar Bharati chief executive Gaurav Dwivedi noted that the original Mahabharat‘s re-telecast during lockdown reminded viewers how deeply these narratives bind families together. “Partnering on this AI-led reimagining allows audiences to experience one of India’s greatest epics anew—honouring tradition while embracing cutting-edge technology in storytelling.”

    Waves, Prasar Bharati’s official OTT platform, has quickly amassed millions of users with its credible, family-friendly and multilingual content. The platform offers video-on-demand, live events and an extensive library of television, radio, audio and magazine programming. The Mahabharat project exemplifies how heritage and innovation can converge to create contemporary narratives that resonate across India and beyond.

  • Runs Reels and Revenue Knight Riders Boss Mysore Hits a Six at FICCI Frames

    Runs Reels and Revenue Knight Riders Boss Mysore Hits a Six at FICCI Frames

    MUMBAI: If cricket and cinema are the twin gods of India, then Venky Mysore is their high priest. At the FICCI FRAMES 2025, the CEO of Knight Riders Group and Red Chillies Entertainment took the stage to lay out the playbook for India’s sports-entertainment juggernaut, mixing statistics, storytelling, and a dash of showbiz flair.

    Mysore, reflecting on his journey across two industries, described himself as straddling India’s “two religions,” cricket and movies. “Live sports is unscripted spectacle,” he said, contrasting it with scripted films where even action scenes follow a pre-determined cut. That unpredictability, Mysore explained, is what keeps audiences riveted, game after game.

    The numbers speak volumes. Celebrating 15 years with the Kolkata Knight Riders, Mysore revealed he has witnessed 228 matches with the franchise. The IPL alone commands an astonishing 165-169 million viewers on television, surpassing even the Super Bowl’s 155 million. “The real-time tension, the tribalism, the emotional stakes, it’s a thrill that no scripted entertainment can replicate,” he emphasised.

    The magic of live sports extends beyond the pitch. From merchandising and ticket sales to broadcasting and sponsorship, Mysore highlighted the massive economic engine behind cricket. “We do economic impact studies for every city we play in from Kolkata to Trinbago to Abu Dhabi and now Los Angeles,” he said, pointing out the ripple effect on tourism, hospitality, and local businesses.

    Mysore also gave a glimpse into the global ambitions of Knight Riders, noting the establishment of the L.A. Knight Riders and their stadium plans ahead of the 2028 Olympic Games. “Stadium naming rights discussions are already underway, which shows the value that live sports can create economically,” he added.

    Entertainment, of course, is never far from cricket. Mysore explained how live events are being personalised for different audiences, citing innovations like multi-cam viewing, vertical video feeds, social gaming integrations, and interactive features mirroring the kind of bespoke content that digital platforms thrive on. “Every live moment can be a story, a connection, and a commercial opportunity,” he said, highlighting how AI, gaming, and the creator economy are poised to transform live sports in the next three to five years.

    While cricket remains the anchor, Mysore is betting on expansion. “Other sports like kabaddi, tennis, golf, and football can adopt our model,” he said, citing Pro Kabaddi as a successful adaptation. Women’s cricket, too, is high on the agenda. “It’s about making the sport representative and inclusive. Young girls are now aspiring to play because of the WPL, and that’s a flywheel that will keep spinning,” Mysore noted, emphasising the cultural and social impact of sports beyond the commercial.

    Mysore’s keynote also shed light on the convergence of sports, entertainment, and commerce. He noted how live spectacles like the IPL, Super Bowl, and Olympics attract diverse audiences through music, fashion, and celebrity appearances, creating a hybrid ecosystem where culture meets business. “Entertainment today isn’t just consumed, it’s experienced, shared, and lived,” he said, neatly summarising his vision for the future.

    On valuations, Mysore remained measured yet optimistic. Comparing cricket franchises to US sports teams, he suggested India has only scratched the surface in terms of economic potential. “In LA, the lowest valuation for a sports team is over a billion dollars. Cricket has similar global appeal, and there’s huge investment yet to come,” he said.

    From his high-octane reflections to the meticulous statistics, Mysore’s address offered a masterclass in the business and cultural power of sports. The underlying message was clear: cricket and entertainment are no longer just games or films, they are engines of connection, commerce, and culture, shaping the future of live experiences in India and beyond.

  • Wickets Widgets and Wow Moments Make India’s Sports Playbook a Big Hit

    Wickets Widgets and Wow Moments Make India’s Sports Playbook a Big Hit

    MUMBAI: It’s no longer just about cricket bats, it’s about data stats, fandom maps, and digital laps. At FICCI Frames 2025, Ishan Chatterjee, CEO for Sports, JioStar, set the ball rolling on how India’s sports and media ecosystem is stepping into its biggest growth spurt yet fuelled by inclusivity, innovation, and a nation hooked on both wickets and Wi-Fi.

    Chatterjee painted a picture of an industry at “an inflection point”, quoting a Deloitte study that pegs India’s sports economy to leap from 30 billion dollars in 2023 to 70 billion dollars by 2030. “To put that in perspective, Brazil stands at 6–8 billion dollars, and the UK, one of the most advanced markets, is at about 40 billion dollars,” he said, underscoring India’s ascent as a sporting superpower in the making.

    But even as men’s cricket continues to mint viewership gold, Chatterjee said the real growth story lies beyond the boundary. “The big trend we’re betting on is the rise of other sports in India whether established ones like tennis, football and kabaddi, or newer ones like e-sports. As soon as Indian athletes start delivering world-class results, fandom accelerates. Just look at what Neeraj Chopra did for the javelin,” he said, drawing cheers from the audience.

    If cricket remains the heartbeat, the pulse is diversifying fast. Chatterjee believes the next decade belongs to multi-sport India, where technology and storytelling will be as crucial as talent. “India’s young audience is discovering, following, and even betting emotionally on new sports. What used to be once-a-year cricket fever has become a 12-month sports calendar,” he noted.

    At the heart of this transition, he said, lies fandom, a force as unpredictable as it is powerful. “We’ve moved from viewership to ownership. Fans no longer just watch; they participate, react, and create. That’s why sports is no longer just an event, it’s an experience.”

    Chatterjee also touched upon what he called one of JioStar’s biggest responsibilities, inclusivity especially in women’s cricket. “Our role as broadcasters is to give women’s cricket visibility, prime-time slots, and the right storytelling so it inspires the next generation. The WPL is one of our biggest priorities,” he said.

    He emphasised that women’s cricket is not just a symbolic cause but a commercial and cultural imperative. “From a consumption standpoint, there’s a lot of headroom. From a business perspective, it makes sense to invest in it. But more importantly, for our sporting culture to become truly representative, women’s cricket has to grow,” he added.

    Naturally, the talk couldn’t skip India’s favourite sporting spectacle the IPL. “The great thing about the IPL is the scale it operates on. During the last season, we lit up over 1.1 billion screens across TV and digital,” Chatterjee said.

    But the magic, he added, lies in customising the experience. “To grow consumption whether it’s more viewers, more matches, or longer watch time, we have to appeal to different interests. For the core fan, it’s about depth and stats. For the casual viewer, it could be entertainment, creators, or even Motu Patlu engaging kids. That mix keeps the IPL ecosystem buzzing.”

    If fandom is the fuel, technology is the engine driving this new sports era. “India has always been at the cutting edge of tech adoption,” Chatterjee said. “At JioStar, we are led by consumer behaviour, and our vision for sports viewing is a completely personalised one-to-one feed. Two people can watch the same match, but the experience camera angles, commentary, interactive features will be entirely different for each.”

    From AI-driven smart highlights to multi-cam viewing and vertical formats, Chatterjee said technology is already reshaping how fans engage with sport. “This is just the beginning,” he smiled. “Imagine a future where your favourite player’s perspective, the commentator you like, or even the memes you enjoy all are woven into your viewing experience.”

    Chatterjee pointed out that India’s unique combination of youth demographics, mobile-first audiences, and insatiable appetite for entertainment positions it perfectly for sports innovation. “Our sports consumption is growing not because we’re copying Western models, but because we’re creating an Indian one built around community, interactivity, and scale,” he said.

    From e-sports tournaments drawing millions online to local leagues popping up in tier-two cities, the momentum is unmistakable. “The beauty of India’s sports journey,” he said, “is that every new fan adds to the market, not just shifts within it. Every new sport that takes off expands the universe.”

    As the fireside chat wrapped up, one thing was clear, India isn’t just playing more sports; it’s reimagining how sports are played, viewed, and loved.

    Chatterjee’s closing line summed up the sentiment perfectly: “For us, sports is not just entertainment, it’s identity. As long as our athletes keep pushing boundaries and our fans keep breaking the internet, India’s sporting story will only get bigger.”

    And with a wink to the future, he added, “We’re just in the warm-up. The real game begins now.”

  • Sport and showbiz join forces to power India’s live entertainment boom

    Sport and showbiz join forces to power India’s live entertainment boom

    MUMBAI: There was once a time when cricket was just a sport, concerts were a luxury, and event organisers were the unsung heroes behind the scenes. Fast-forward to 2025 and the boundary lines between sports, entertainment and live events have blurred into one big, buzzing spectacle.

    At a recent industry discussion that brought together some of the biggest names in sports, media and live entertainment, the conversation spanned everything from job creation and infrastructure to AI, accessibility, and the rise of the “fake wedding” phenomenon. If there was ever a moment that captured how deeply India now lives, breathes and monetises experience, this was it.

    “Cricket is a great vehicle,” said one of the panellists, noting how the sport in India transcends language, geography and generations. “It’s not just entertainment, it’s an ecosystem.”

    And it truly is. From regional commentary to AI-assisted streaming and immersive experiences, cricket has evolved into a multimedia juggernaut. Broadcasters no longer deliver just a match, they curate a universe of emotions, languages, and second-screen stats. “We’ve gone from peering through neighbours’ windows in 1983 to watching replays from six angles in six languages,” quipped one speaker. “Each fan now has their own version of the match.”

    But the conversation wasn’t just about cricket’s cultural dominance, it was about its economic ripple effect. As panellist Sabas Joseph pointed out, the government has finally recognised the events and entertainment sector as a vital part of India’s economic engine.

    “The government of India has created a joint working group with ten ministries to develop greenfield venues and reform licensing norms,” he revealed. “Event management is now part of state policy and economic policy.”

    The statistics speak for themselves. The events industry now supports over 10 million jobs, with more than 150,000 companies across India 30 per cent of them women-owned. “We’ve gone from pleading for recognition to being written into policy,” Joseph said, to applause.

    And the vision ahead? Transforming India’s cricket stadiums into multi-purpose venues for concerts, festivals and even international shows. “Stadiums already have the best infrastructure, why not use them for entertainment too?”

    Kunal, another panellist from the ticketing side of the business, spoke of India’s “culture of going out” something unthinkable two decades ago. “People are attending midnight runs, 5 a.m. DJ parties, even fake weddings complete with baraat, food and music, but no bride or groom,” he laughed.

    What’s powering this shift is trust and tech. “Our job now is to make live experiences predictable from clean bathrooms to clear directions,” Kunal said. Platforms like his are introducing digital-only, QR-based tickets that can’t be duplicated or resold, curbing black marketing and ensuring safety.

    He also highlighted growing accessibility efforts, including partnerships with disability rights advocates to make events more inclusive from wheelchair access to seat mapping. “We want every person to experience live entertainment comfortably and safely,” he added.

    If cricket built the blueprint, kabaddi proved the model works. “We Indians were sceptical at first,” said one broadcaster. “Could kabaddi, a sport we remembered from schoolyards, really become primetime entertainment?”

    The answer was a resounding yes. Smart packaging, slick graphics, and a 30-second raid format turned kabaddi into India’s second most-watched sport. “We created heroes, we gave it drama, and we respected its roots,” he said. “Now it airs on global networks like ESPN, Sky and Fox.”

    The takeaway: India’s homegrown sports can be global hits if nurtured right.

    As another panellist pointed out, India’s live entertainment story isn’t just about star power, it’s about audience power. “In 2008, we had barely 2,500 sports clubs. Today we have over 16,500,” he said. “And ticket sales, once a myth, now drive the bulk of the business. Indians pay premium prices for premium experiences.”

    From Coldplay to Lollapalooza, international acts are selling hundreds of thousands of tickets in India at global rates. “The audience is ready to spend,” said Kunal. “We just have to deliver the experience they expect.”

    Technology remains the ultimate gamechanger. AI, VR and personalised feeds are transforming how people watch and attend events. Fans can switch between camera angles, get player stats on their phone, or even experience concerts in virtual reality.

    And yet, the heart of it all remains human. “No government policy, no brand campaign, no festival happens without event managers,” Joseph reminded the audience. “Ours is an industry built by people from those who’ve never been to school to MBAs from the best universities.”

    From the sound of it, India’s entertainment future will be part stadium, part screen, and all heart.

    As one panellist summed up: “Events have become part of India’s economic and cultural DNA. We’re no longer just watching, we’re participating.”

  • NDTV World Summit 2025 to host four PMs together

    NDTV World Summit 2025 to host four PMs together

    MUMBAI: Four prime ministers, one stage, endless possibilities. The NDTV World Summit 2025, set for 17–18 October in New Delhi, will see an unprecedented convergence of global leadership: India’s PM Narendra Modi, Sri Lankan PM Harini Amarasuriya, former UK PM Rishi Sunak, and former Australian PM Tony Abbott. Two serving and two former heads of government sharing the stage underscores the Summit’s stature as a premier forum for ideas shaping the world.

    Under the theme ‘Edge of the unknown: Risk. Resolve. Renewal.’, the Summit aims to tackle uncertainty with imagination, view resolve as deliberate action, and embrace renewal as the creation of uncharted futures. Topics will range from geopolitics and technology to ecology, culture, and economic innovation, offering a rare space where inherited realities meet unwritten possibilities.

    NDTV CEO & editor-in-chief Rahul Kanwal said, “This is a crucible of influence where ideas, imagination, and intention converge. The participation of four prime ministers alongside innovators, business leaders, and cultural icons reflects India’s central role in global dialogue and its growing impact on shaping a collective future.”

    The Summit promises to be more than discussion, it will be a stage for vision, creativity, and global collaboration, positioning India at the heart of the world’s conversation and highlighting NDTV’s renewed commitment to curating conversations that matter.