Category: TV Channels

  • India’s news industry is eating itself, warns veteran publisher

    India’s news industry is eating itself, warns veteran publisher

    MUMBAI: Fifty years in the media business buys you the right to speak bluntly. Aroon Purie exercised that right at Ficci Frames 2025 in Mumbai, delivering a blistering critique of India’s news industry—an ecosystem he says is simultaneously massive, unprofitable and increasingly compromised.

    The numbers are staggering. India has over 140,000 registered publications, 375 twenty-four-hour news channels (with more in the pipeline), and a broadcasting industry employing 1.7 million people. Delhi alone wakes up to dozens of English and regional newspapers daily. No other country comes close to this scale. Yet 99 per cent of news channels lose money.

    The problem, Purie argues, is structural. India’s news industry runs on what he calls “raddi economics”—newspapers priced so low that readers profit from selling them as scrap. Broadcasters pay cable operators carriage fees just to reach viewers, a practice that persisted even after digitisation. The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India’s price controls strangle market forces, treating cable television like wheat or rice. “The government has made a mess of the broadcasting industry due to lack of foresight and regressive policies,” Purie said.

    Worse still is the funding model. With consumers paying next to nothing, advertisers bankroll nearly the entire industry. “When journalism’s survival depends almost entirely on advertising from corporations and governments, its independence is under a constant threat of compromise,” Purie warned. The hand that gives can also take away.

    Enter what Purie calls “billionaire news channels”—industrial houses launching news operations not as businesses but as tools for influence and access. They have deep pockets and no profit motive, destroying economic models for legitimate players. “Their entrance makes the public believe that every channel is a mouthpiece for a vested interest,” he said. It’s the only business, Purie noted drily, where the industry loses money yet people queue to enter it.

    Digital promised salvation but delivered more of the same. Publishers chased scale and eyeballs, giving content away for free. Google, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter became the world’s “new editors-in-chief”, controlling distribution and monetisation whilst producing no journalism. They hoover up over 70 per cent of total media revenue—digital advertising now claims 55 per cent of all ad spending—leaving crumbs for actual newsrooms. The algorithm rewards outrage and virality, not depth or accuracy. “Newsrooms that once invested in reporters now have to invest in SEO specialists,” Purie said.

    Artificial intelligence poses the next existential threat. AI can scrape, synthesise and regurgitate news without credit or revenue, summarising five articles into one paragraph. “What happens to the original news organisations—the ones who pay reporters and fight court cases—when our content is scraped?” Purie asked. It’s a question the industry is only beginning to grapple with.

    Purie, whose India Today Group reaches 750 million viewers, readers and subscribers, doesn’t claim to have all the answers. But he’s clear about the solution’s shape: stop apologising for journalism’s value, innovate business models, and persuade audiences that credible news is a public good with a price. “A subscription is not just a transaction; it’s a vote for the kind of media you want to exist,” he said.

    After five decades navigating disruption—from print to television to digital to AI—Purie’s diagnosis is stark. The old models are broken, the new gatekeepers ruthless, and professionally generated content under siege. Yet he remains defiant. “Disruption is not the enemy, it’s the new normal,” he said. “The real question is, do we have the courage, imagination, innovation, resilience and integrity to seize it?”

    Whether India’s news industry can answer that question may determine the health of its democracy. No pressure, then.

  • AI meets news: India Today leads the way

    AI meets news: India Today leads the way

    MUMBAI: When it comes to news, India Today is taking a deeper dive. The media giant has become the first in the APAC region to launch Taboola’s Deeperdive, a Gen AI answer engine designed to bring instant, trustworthy answers straight to readers on its own sites.

    Deeperdive taps into decades of India Today’s rich editorial content, allowing readers to ask questions on anything from election analysis to trending stories, and get AI-powered answers sourced from trusted journalists. The engine even suggests related queries, keeping users engaged longer and exploring more of the site.

    “Pioneering journalism means being future-ready,” said India Today Group vice chairperson and executive editor-in-chief Kalli Purie. “With Deeperdive, we’re offering richer experiences, staying connected to our readers, and unlocking new AI-powered frontiers of engagement and monetisation.”

    Taboola CEO and founder Adam Singolda added, “India Today is a must-visit destination for news and analysis. Deeperdive lets them join the Gen AI revolution on their own terms, delivering trusted answers while opening search-like advertising opportunities.”

    Built to understand the “pulse of the internet,” Deeperdive analyses trends from over 600 million daily users across 9,000 publishers. Unlike traditional AI engines, it uses real-time data to deliver timely, contextual insights, ensuring readers get answers that matter, right when they need them.

    For publishers, this means longer reader engagement, more site exploration, and high-intent ad revenue within their own environments, all while maintaining a seamless, intuitive experience.

    With 50 years of journalistic excellence and a digital presence spanning Aaj Tak, Business Today, and The Lallantop, India Today is leveraging AI not just to keep pace with change, but to lead it, showing that when it comes to content, the future is very much now.

  • Polls apart: NDA leads as Bihar warms up to vote

    Polls apart: NDA leads as Bihar warms up to vote

    MUMBAI: It’s polling season in Bihar, and the numbers are already making noise. As the state gears up for its high-stakes election, India News and Newsx have joined hands to take the electorate’s temperature, and the results are sparking plenty of chatter.

    Their two-phase Bihar opinion poll, conducted in partnership with Ians–Matriz, offers an early snapshot of the political battlefield. The survey gives the NDA a clear lead with 49 per cent of the vote share, while the Mahagathbandhan trails at 36 per cent, and others stand at 15 per cent. Development has emerged as the top voter priority, leaving caste and religion in the rear-view mirror.

    The poll dug deep across Bihar’s heartland, from Patna and Muzaffarpur to Gaya, Purnia, and Bhagalpur, capturing both urban buzz and rural voices. Beyond numbers, it decoded what’s driving Bihar’s electorate: leadership credibility, alliance chemistry, and Narendra Modi’s continuing influence.

    “The Bihar Opinion Poll reflects the authentic voice of the people,” said India News managing editor Rakesh Singh, adding that the channel aimed to deliver an unbiased, data-backed pulse of the state. Newsx & Newsx World editor-in-chief Rishabh Gulati, noted that the project went “beyond speculation” to analyse why voters are thinking the way they are.

    Aired on 6 October at 7 pm, the broadcast generated strong engagement and debate across social media, as analysts and party watchers dissected what the trends could mean for the final verdict.

    Meticulously researched and sharply presented, the India News–Newsx Bihar opinion poll has set a new benchmark for pre-election coverage, turning raw sentiment into smart insight, and giving voters a mirror to their own political mood.

  • Times Network shines light on India’s healthcare revolution at 2025 summit

    Times Network shines light on India’s healthcare revolution at 2025 summit

    MUMBAI: It was a healthy dose of optimism and innovation at the Times Network India Health Summit & Awards 2025, where policymakers, doctors, and industry leaders came together to chart the future of Indian healthcare. With 103 winners felicitated, the event celebrated excellence across hospitals, pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and health-tech.

    Chief guest minister of state for health & family welfare and chemicals & fertilisers government of India Anupriya Patel, set the tone with an inspiring address highlighting how far India’s healthcare system has come and how much further it aims to go.

    “India’s healthcare system has undergone a profound transformation,” she said, noting that spending has nearly doubled from 1.1 per cent to 2 per cent of GDP, with the government targeting 2.5 per cent under the National Health Policy 2017. She lauded flagship programmes like Ayushman Bharat PM-Jay, which offers Rs 5 lakh free health coverage to over 62 crore citizens, and Ayushman Bharat Health Account (ABHA) IDs, which have already crossed 81 crore registrations.

    From doubling the number of medical colleges and Aiims institutions to slashing out-of-pocket healthcare costs, Patel underscored that “these numbers aren’t just statistics, they represent hope, access, and dignity for millions.”

    The summit also marked the launch of Times Network’s Hospital Rankings: a data-backed initiative to empower patients with greater transparency and informed choice. The first phase unveiled the All-India top five group of multi specialty hospitals.

    With a focus on innovation, accessibility, and preventive care, discussions at the summit spotlighted how AI diagnostics, telemedicine, and collaborative public-private models are redefining India’s healthcare landscape.

    Powered by Intas, co-powered by Novartis and All Out, and supported by MGR University, FIT India, Onextel, Nuvama, and Heights, the event reaffirmed one message loud and clear: India’s healthcare revolution isn’t just underway, it’s accelerating.
     

  • Zee Live turns up the volume on Marathi pride

    Zee Live turns up the volume on Marathi pride

    MUMBAI: Move over quiet weekends, Pune’s about to feel the beat of Marathi pride. Zee Entertainment Enterprises has cranked up the decibels on culture with the launch of “Marathi Vajlach Pahije” (MVP), the first flagship event under its new experiential vertical, Zee Live, in partnership with World of Vibes.

    Set to take place on 12 October 2025 at Phoenix Market City, Pune, MVP is no ordinary concert, it’s a full-blown celebration of Marathi youth, rhythm, and rebellion, bringing together over 40 artists from the state’s thriving hip-hop and indie scenes. Expect names like Kratex, Sanju Rathod, Shreyas & Vedang, MC Gawthi, and Patya the Doc to turn the stage into a creative battleground where beats meet identity.

    The festival promises to be a collision of tradition and modern swagger, as today’s Marathi creators remix their heritage with street art, spoken word, and music that speaks straight from the mohalla.

    To amplify its reach beyond the mosh pit, Zee Live has teamed up with Marathi Zee5, taking the festival digital with exclusive content, artist stories, and behind-the-scenes footage, ensuring the cultural pulse of MVP reverberates far beyond Pune.

    “This is not just an event; it’s an expression of a generation,” said Zee Live business head Gareth Eswin Thomas. “Marathi Vajlach Pahije captures the rhythm of youth, energy that can’t be contained, only celebrated.”

    Marathi Zee5 and Zee Marathi business head V.R. Hema added, “By giving these young artists both a local and global stage, we’re not just showcasing music, we’re spotlighting their stories and dreams. MVP marks the next era of regional storytelling: bold, proud and rooted.”

    Presented by Zee Live, Marathi Zee5 and World of Vibes, the Festival of MVP is ready to tune Maharashtra into its most vibrant frequency yet. Tickets are live on Bookmyshow, with extra content dropping on Marathi Zee5 for fans who like their beats served with a side of pride.

  • Rudy fires poll shot on Live Times’ Point Blank

    Rudy fires poll shot on Live Times’ Point Blank

    MUMBAI: It was no political tea break on Point Blank, it was all straight talk. Senior BJP leader and former union minister Rajiv Pratap Rudy declared that the people of Bihar have already made up their minds in favour of the NDA, as he joined journalist Deepak Chaurasia for an exclusive interview on Live Times’ flagship prime-time show Point Blank.

    Confident and composed, Rudy claimed the alliance was poised for a comfortable victory in the upcoming state polls, adding that “the mood on the ground is clear and consistent.”

    Live Times founder Dilip Singh, said the episode aims to bring a “fresh and factual perspective” to the political narrative ahead of the Bihar elections. “Point Blank isn’t about sensationalism; it’s about hearing the truth directly from the source,” he noted.

    Viewers can catch the full interview on 5 October at 8 PM exclusively on Live Times, India’s first global multicast news hub, available on DD Free Dish (100), Tata Play (539), Airtel Digital TV (385), Dish TV (665), Sikka Cable (519), and Jio TV (359).

    The show can also be streamed live on the Live Times website and social platforms including Youtube, Facebook, Instagram, and X.

    Because when it comes to Bihar’s ballot buzz, Live Times promises exactly what it stands for: complete truth, whatever it takes.

  • Cricket’s ruling body wants women to hack the future of sports technology

    Cricket’s ruling body wants women to hack the future of sports technology

    DUBAI: Cricket’s mandarins have never been mistaken for tech visionaries. But the International Cricket Council is taking a punt on innovation with Beyond Boundaries, a worldwide hackathon that demands every competing team include at least one woman—and promises cold, hard cash to the best all-female squad.

    The challenge, powered by Ignyte, a Dubai-based start-up accelerator, runs through 2025–2026 and invites students, start-ups and scale-ups to reimagine sport in the age of artificial intelligence. Though anchored in cricket, the hackathon welcomes ideas spanning any sport. The grand finale arrives in January 2026, when the most promising teams will pitch their wares on an international stage.

    Winners will pocket prize money, gain access to mentors and industry heavyweights, and—crucially—get pilot opportunities with the ICC and its partners to test their solutions in real sporting arenas. That is no small carrot for ambitious founders looking to crack a multi-billion-dollar industry.

    The competition zeroes in on three areas. First, boosting visibility and engagement for women’s sports through digital platforms and AI-driven fan models. Second, crafting next-generation experiences for younger audiences with interactive, personalised tech. Third, improving athlete health, performance and inclusivity using wearables, machine learning and smart analytics.

    Applications close on 19 December 2025. The ICC’s bet is simple: get more women into sports tech, and everyone wins. In a sector long dominated by blokes, that would count as boundary-breaking indeed.

  • Sony sets the Adedge to put small brands on India’s biggest TV stage

    Sony sets the Adedge to put small brands on India’s biggest TV stage

    MUMBAI: Who says prime-time dreams are only for big spenders? Sony Pictures Networks India (SPNI) is handing small and mid-sized businesses the remote control to the country’s most-watched shows. In partnership with Accenture, the network has launched Sony Adedge Centre of Excellence (CoE), a new-age advertising platform designed to lower the barriers of price and scale for growth-hungry Indian brands.

    From Kaun Banega Crorepati and Indian Idol to CID and Taarak Mehta Ka Ooltah Chashmah, Adedge lets SMBs step into TV’s most coveted slots, but with the agility, measurability, and flexibility of digital campaigns. The idea? To democratise advertising so India’s smaller players can rub shoulders with the big guns.

    AdEdge combines SPNI’s storytelling heft with Accenture’s AI-driven targeting, analytics, and media strategy expertise, helping brands design campaigns that are both mass-reaching and outcome-driven. Think of it as giving emerging advertisers the muscle of TV and the brains of data, all without breaking the bank.

    “We’re not just opening the doors of TV to SMBs, we’re reimagining how growing brands can leverage India’s most powerful media assets at the right scale, with the right tools, and at the right price,” said SPNI MD & CEO Gaurav Banerjee calling SMBs the next big frontier for Indian advertising.

    Accenture’s Berjesh Chawla echoed the sentiment: “By placing the power of data-driven advertising into the hands of SMBs, we are unlocking full-funnel, cross-platform opportunities that are accessible, flexible, and profitable for emerging businesses.”

    With a consultative model, flexible buying options, and post-campaign measurement baked in, Adedge is setting the stage for smaller advertisers to shine big. After all, in a country where cricket scores, reality show drama, and family sitcoms rule living rooms, it’s only fair that SMBs now get a piece of the spotlight.

  • Teen Taal strikes a live note in Lucknow with its 125th episode

    Teen Taal strikes a live note in Lucknow with its 125th episode

    MUMBAI: When Teen Taal talks, India listens and this time, Lucknow gets the front-row seat. Aaj Tak Radio and the chart-topping Hindi podcast is taking its wit and banter offline for a landmark live recording of its 125th episode of Season 2 on Saturday, 4th October 2025. After a roaring success with its 100th episode celebration in Pune which pulled in crowds including fans from abroad, the trio is ready to turn the City of Nawabs into a city of laughs. The stage at Indira Gandhi Pratishthan will come alive at 8:00 pm, as satire, storytelling and sharp observations take centre stage.

    The dynamic trio Kamlesh Kishore Singh (Tau), Kuldeep Mishra (Sardaar) and Asif Khan (Khan Cha) have built a cult following with their clever mix of everyday humour, cultural commentary and unfiltered conversations. Their live shows promise more than just punchlines: fans can expect candid chats, inside jokes, and that unique chemistry that makes Teen Taal India’s No.1 Hindi podcast.

    What makes the event special is the intimacy. Registrations are now open for fans eager to be part of the laughter, stories and surprises woven into this landmark recording. Seats, however, are limited and if the Pune frenzy is anything to go by, the Lucknow evening will be packed to the rafters.

    With over two seasons of chart-topping success on Apple Podcasts and beyond, Teen Taal has turned everyday life into a cultural phenomenon. Episode 125 isn’t just a milestone; it’s a celebration of conversations that resonate far beyond the airwaves.

    So, as the countdown begins, one thing’s certain: in Lucknow, the mic will drop, but the laughs will keep echoing.

  • ET Now Swadesh marks 4 years of trust with ‘Swadesh ke 4 Saal’ special

    ET Now Swadesh marks 4 years of trust with ‘Swadesh ke 4 Saal’ special

    MUMBAI: ET Now Swadesh, India’s fastest-growing Hindi business news channel, is turning four this October, marking the milestone with a day-long programming special themed ‘Swadesh Ke 4 Saal, Bharosa Beshumaar.’

    Since its launch in 2021, ET Now Swadesh has carved out a reputation as the country’s trusted guide for investors, empowering viewers with clear, credible, and actionable insights on markets, mutual funds, and wealth creation. Its mission: linking individual prosperity with India’s financial growth story.

    The anniversary special on 3 October packs in marquee segments featuring India’s sharpest financial minds, from Nilesh Shah (Kotak MF), Radhika Gupta (Edelweiss MF) and Devina Mehra (First Global) to market leaders like Ashish Kumar Chauhan (NSE) and Sundararaman Ramamurthy (BSE). The lineup spans investment strategies, SIP fundamentals, and exclusive conversations with CEOs and fund managers.

    Congratulating the channel, The Times Group MD Vineet Jain said, “In just four years, ET Now Swadesh has helped shape India’s culture of investment, with demat accounts surging from 7 crore to 25 crore since 2020. The channel continues to be a trusted partner in every Indian household’s financial journey.”

    From demystifying the stock market to fostering financial literacy, ET Now Swadesh has consistently positioned itself as more than just a news channel but a driver of financial empowerment.

    As it steps into its fifth year, the channel aims to deepen financial inclusion and deliver sharper insights for India’s growing pool of retail investors. After all, as ET Now Swadesh itself says, “सटीक और निष्पक्ष निवेश सलाह.”