Tag: Aarya

  • Vamsi Murthy wraps up his Disney+ Hotstar journey

    Vamsi Murthy wraps up his Disney+ Hotstar journey

    MUMBAI: Call it a season finale worth bingeing. After an unforgettable four-season run, Vamsi Murthy has announced his exit from Disney+ Hotstar, wrapping up a chapter that reads like a streaming hit, complete with plot twists, high stakes and creative cliffhangers.

    As executive director and marketing head, Murthy helped script some of Hotstar’s most successful campaigns, cementing its reputation as India’s home of entertainment and sport. From building massive originals like Aarya, Criminal Justice, Special Ops and Taaza Khabar, to steering cricket fever through World Cups, his marketing playbook turned content into cultural conversations.

    Under his leadership, the platform revamped its entertainment marketing model, driving growth across brand love, viewership and subscriptions. The results showed improved ROI, award wins at Promax Asia, Kyoorius and Indian Telly Streaming Awards, and a brand that consistently set the tone for pop culture moments.

    Before Hotstar, Murthy’s career reel rolled through BookMyShow, ZEE5, Myntra, MakeMyTrip and Reliance Communications, marking a two-decade journey across India’s biggest consumer brands.

    Signing off, Murthy called his time at Hotstar “nothing short of a blockbuster,” thanking colleagues and mentors who made the ride special. As for what’s next, he’s keeping the suspense alive, promising a new chapter soon. Because in true entertainment style, every great show deserves a thrilling sequel.

  • Disney+ Hotstar, Endemol Shine India and Ram Madhvani Films to bring ‘Aarya’ season 3

    Disney+ Hotstar, Endemol Shine India and Ram Madhvani Films to bring ‘Aarya’ season 3

    MUMBAI: The Sherni is all set to sharpen her claws as OTT platform Disney+ Hotstar greenlights a new season of International Emmy-nominated Hotstar Specials’ Aarya. The series from filmmaker Ram Madhvani has officially entered its scripting stage. This show  follows the journey of a fierce mother to keep her family safe from the world of crime after entering the vicious network following her husband’s demise.

    The show’s lead actor Sushmita Sen said, “It is a new dawn for Aarya Sareen, and she is fierce. In Season 3, she is going places and starting her own story free from the obstacles of her past. Reprising the role of Aarya is like slipping into old jeans but for a brand-new journey. It feels great to be back with Ram Madhvani and the Disney+ Hotstar team, can’t wait to return the love and appreciation viewers have showered on Aarya.”

    Madhvani said, “Disney+ Hotstar has been an amazing partner in building Aarya through two seasons and we are delighted to associate with them once again for yet another season. The journey of developing a gripping storyline, thrill and family love has started and we are sure this will once again leave audiences wanting more! The stakes are only getting higher from here…! It’s great to be back with Sushmita Sen and co-producer Amita Madhvani and the full Ram Madhvani films team.”

    Disney Star HSM Entertainment Network head Gaurav Banerjee said, “Being nominated in the International Emmy Awards last year, Aarya is a crown jewel of Disney+ Hotstar. Since its first season, the show has truly been a game-changer, redefining Indian storytelling with women breaking stereotypes. We have received immense love and appreciation from viewers for the first two seasons, coupled with high anticipation on knowing what follows. We look forward to unfolding what happens next through the narrative of season 3! ”

  • ‘We’re a company of technologists and storytellers’: Disney+ Hotstar’s Content Head Gaurav Banerjee

    ‘We’re a company of technologists and storytellers’: Disney+ Hotstar’s Content Head Gaurav Banerjee

    Mumbai: Gaurav Banerjee has successfully straddled the realms of television and digital to deliver the most popular content in India. He runs Star India’s content studio that has delivered nine out of the top 15 web series and six out of the top 10 Hindi TV shows in the country. On the TV side, he’s responsible for popular shows such as Diya Aur Baati Hum, Sasural Genda Phool and on the digital side he’s responsible for hits such as Aarya and Special Ops amongst others.

    He began his career at Star TV Network as a primetime anchor and senior producer at Star News. He launched the Bengali news channel of the group Star Ananda in 2005 and later moved to lead the content strategy of the network’s regional entertainment channels in 2008. Banerjee was responsible for expanding the network’s reach in two key markets West Bengal and Maharashtra with the channels Star Jalsha and Star Pravah, respectively. In 2009, he led the content strategy for the Hindi entertainment channel Star Plus as general manager. He propelled Star Plus into a leading brand with hit shows like Yeh Hai Mohabattein and Mahabharata. In 2015-16, he took charge of Star India’s content studio and refreshed the storytelling approach for Star Plus and Star Bharat.

    Transforming India’s Content Landscape

    Banerjee is a man on a mission to transform India’s content landscape. He is leading Disney+ Hotstar’s foray into original content and has produced several Hotstar Specials that appeal to the unique tastes of digital audiences. While media executives are accustomed to treating television and digital as disparate creative ecosystems, Banerjee’s view is that good content can find its audience on any medium.

    Disney Star head content for HSM entertainment network and Disney+ Hotstar Gaurav Banerjee joined The Adaptation Company creative entrepreneur specialist and producer Sunil Doshi for a candid fireside chat at an event held recently in Mumbai. He spoke about driving the storytelling agenda at Star India, the advantage of being a legacy media company, producing innovative content for Disney+ Hotstar and helming Star India’s writers’ program.

    Edited Excerpts…

    Sunil Doshi: The traditional wisdom says that creating stories for television medium and creating stories for OTT medium are two different things. How have you successfully straddled both these words making Disney+ Hotstar a leader with enviable subscriptions?

    Gaurav Banerjee: We’ve always thought of ourselves as a storytelling and content company. When we’re looking at a script, we want to understand three simple things. First, how is the story going to be fresh to us and our viewers as well? Second, whether it might be relevant to our audience. Third, who is the storyteller and why is he/she excited to tell this story.

    We’ve always approached our scripts essentially using this process. We don’t think too much about distribution in the beginning phase because linear television and streaming are just different ways of distributing content. We’re comfortable with the idea that consumers can choose what technology or distribution platform works for them best. There may be format related choices depending on the media (some formats sit better on TV while others sit better on digital) but those are second order questions.

    Fundamentally, Star has a rich tradition of storytelling that goes back two decades. When we entered digital, we wanted to be native to the digital world and so, we expanded the brief of what we were as a company. Today, we’re a company of technologists and storytellers. The journey we have traversed has taken us from being a company with a consumer and storyteller mindset to a company that understood the product, technology, engineering and storytelling.

    Sunil Doshi: The economic models of streaming are changing. There is global inflation and war in Ukraine. There are streaming platforms that are gaining subscribers and others that are losing subscribers. Amidst all of this do you see Disney+ Hotstar as a technology company or a creative company?

    Gaurav Banerjee: I think Disney+ Hotstar is both. We see ourselves as a content platform that is always thinking about how to create technology that is intuitive for our viewers in India today. As we were building this platform eight years ago, we realised to achieve the scale we needed to reside on mobile phones. This was different from what was happening in the West where streaming was happening on connected TVs in people’s homes. The fact that we were mobile-first meant that our technology needed to be different.

    We were a legacy media company thinking about streaming. There were two advantages to this. First, we knew India’s consumers because we were the biggest broadcaster in the country and second, we understood storytelling having done it for two decades. The fundamentals we arrived at to be a platform that had scale were three things. First, we needed to have a big presence in live sports. Second, we needed to have a big presence in the movie business. Third, we needed to have a really big presence in drama.

    From day one, our content portfolio has tried to traverse and build on these three pillars. I’ve been in TV for 22 years now and these are the big pillars of Indian television. These three pillars take care of most of the entertainment needs of consumers.

    Sunil Doshi: You’ve dealt with technology. Now, you’ve done some exciting content innovations at Disney+ Hotstar where traditional TV content is feeding streaming content. What is your creative team doing to spot such opportunities?

    Gaurav Banerjee: Star is an interesting company with a great culture. While in some ways we’ve been leaders of entertainment in this country, we’ve always thought of ourselves as challenges.

    When we entered the digital space, we felt that there was a bias working against us. We were this legacy media company that has entered the streaming space and was not accustomed to the industry jargon or ways of working. We didn’t create this ecosystem or arrive here first. But we asked some fundamental questions and reimagined this world.

    The first decision we took was that streaming is something that can and should happen at scale. Therefore, the kind of content that is made for streaming should be high quality but cater to all audiences and not some niche.

    We took two strategic decisions, first, we decided to put our best content on streaming platforms. So, our linear TV content is first available on Disney+ Hotstar for paying subscribers. We observed that a lot of fans of the show will catch up on the latest episode during the day without waiting for it to be telecast at 10 pm on Star Plus.

    In a traditional setup, if we had taken such a decision, I would be worried because I’m doing something that’s threatening the ratings and viewership of the TV show. However, we changed the way we incentivized creative teams to focus on building a great show and not where consumers are supposed to watch it.

    There was a real feeling that TV shows, TV producers, and TV actors are in some way not good enough for digital. As someone who’s coming from a television background, we were clear that we were not going to participate and fuel this bias against TV content in any way.

    That’s why I’m incredibly proud of our Anupama prequel that’s streaming on Disney+ Hotstar called Namaste America. The show reveals when the first cracks appeared in Anupama’s marriage before the events in the TV series transpired. Another popular franchise Bigg Boss was doing well for our regional channels in Telugu and Tamil. Here, we felt a digital-only version with Stars like Kamal Haasan and Nagarjuna would work and both those seasons have done well. There are franchises such as “Special Ops” where we did a spin-off series that was just four episodes which worked on digital. We’re open to more experiments on OTT like Namaste India, Bigg Boss and Dance+.

    Sunil Doshi: I consider Star television as a thought leader as they have created so many iconic IPs. In the near absence of TV schools and film schools in our country, where is the new talent that is going to fuel creativity on digital and television going to come from?

    Gaurav Banerjee: We look at ourselves as an IP creation company. If we keep creating high-quality IP and continue to capture the imagination of audiences then monetisation will follow. That also means that we’re in the business of finding the best creative people, the best creative ideas and jostling with them in a healthy environment. The writing and creative community deserve our empathy because as an executive I’m looking at several scripts every day but they’re working on 1-3 stories and putting pen and ink to paper. We need to be conscious that we’re doing a good job of finding the best creative talent and treating them with empathy.

    When I was a student, I wanted to get into the creative business and understand how to make a TV show or film. This was in the year 1998 and after coming out of college I discovered there were only two places in India of any repute where you could learn to become a filmmaker or TV producer. One of them admitted 15 people and the other admitted 18 people. There were just 33 seats and I hoped to get one of those 33 seats. The luck of the draw.

    I got lucky but I realised this is a small number for an industry that is so big. For several years, I struggled to find new writers to bring to television. The belief we had as broadcasters is that there is a market need and so someone will come and build these institutions to feed this market. But nobody came. I urged both the institutions known for TV and filmmaking to start a course that teaches students how to write TV series. But that did not happen. How is the industry going to get better if no one is going to share knowledge, best practices and learn from each other?

    Star India put together a budget, teachers and a syllabus and a website to launch the program. We hired people and essentially, I asked all my writer friends in the industry to come to take classes and get the program going. We hired someone to put together a syllabus as this was a specialised program. I don’t know how many other companies are there where you can go to the CFO and say we’re spending a few X crores and there’s going to be no monetary return at the end of it. With a new show, you can get some revenue but with the writer’s program, no money is immediately going to come. It was just something to set up these budding writers and hopefully, if they become good writers, they might write something for us in three to four years but not necessarily.

    The great thing about our company and my pitch was that as long as the industry improves and there’s great writing then it is understood that we will also improve. That’s how we created the Star writers’ program and we had about 35-40 writers on our payroll over the last three to four years. While it undoubtedly has had its share of problems, it is also something that we’re very proud of.

  • Disney+ Hotstar’s ‘Aarya’ nominated for 2021 Emmy Awards

    Disney+ Hotstar’s ‘Aarya’ nominated for 2021 Emmy Awards

    Mumbai: Streaming service platform Disney+ Hotstar’s web series “Aarya” has been nominated at the 49th International Emmy Awards.

    Directed by Ram Madhvani and starring Sushmita Sen, the show bagged a nomination in the ‘Drama Series’ category, becoming the first show from the OTT platform to be nominated at the Emmys.

    “We are extremely proud and honoured to be nominated at one of the most esteemed global award platforms that recognise creativity, talent and storytelling at its best,” said Star and Disney India president and head of content Gaurav Banerjee. “I congratulate the entire crew of Aarya and our team at Disney+ Hotstar for underlining India’s creative talent to the world.”

    “It is surreal to know that Aarya has been recognised globally amongst the best drama series in the world and to be nominated at a platform as prestigious as the International Emmy Awards is phenomenal,” said actor Sushmita Sen. “I am overwhelmed with the love and faith viewers across the world have put into our labour of love and want to thank each one from the bottom of my heart for the encouragement.”

    The show’s ensemble cast included the actors Namit Das, Sikander Kher, Jayant Kriplani, Sohaila Kapoor, Sugandha Garg, Maya Sareen, Vishwajeet Pradhan, and Manish Chaudhary in pivotal roles.

    “It’s a feeling of pride and humility and true happiness to have been nominated for the International Emmy Awards,” said director Ram Madhvani. “Congratulations to the entire team and cast of Aarya for their immense support, belief, and love. And to the full team at Disney+ Hotstar and Endemol Shine. This nomination truly validates the full team’s hard and dedicated work.”

    Meanwhile, “Aarya” is set to return for a second season on the video-on-demand platform.

  • We are a young old production house: Ram Madhvani

    We are a young old production house: Ram Madhvani

    MUMBAI: Ram Madhvani is a devoted Ad-man, but he is also known for creating fiction that gets into the nitty-gritties of a character. Ad-man turned filmmaker Madhvani is all set to make his mark as a producer and director of feature films, web series, short films with his recently launched production house, Ram Madhvani Films.

    Madhvani directed his first feature film Let’s Talk in 2002. The National Award winning movie Neerja came 14 years later. However, Madhvani didn’t lose hope, he kept trying. Sometimes projects would be announced, like fantasy Talisman with Amitabh Bachchan but did not make it to the silver screen. For the uninitiated, his web series Aarya, was initially meant to be a movie, but due to unknown reasons the movie was shelved one month before the shooting. That was seven years ago. Now, Aarya starring Sushmita Sen and Chandrachur Singh will be out on Disney+ Hotstar on 19 June. The show is based on the Dutch drama series Penoza by Pieter Bart Korthuis.

    In a special interaction with indiantelevision.com Madhvani spoke at length about his newly launched production house, setting up the entire structure, challenges faced due to Covid2019 and much more.

    Madhvani says, “It’s a natural extension of Equinox Films. Equinox will do ads in which we have six directors and four producers. Ram Madhvani Films will produce and create longer content. Both are owned by my wife Amita Madhvani and me. I will very much continue to make ads. I’m passionate about it.”

    According to Madhvani the biggest drive for becoming a producer is that it gives you control over your work.

    Speaking about how long it took to set up the entire structure he adds, “We actually already had it with Equinox. We are a production house. Producing runs in our blood. This was just a new company.”

    When the entire film and television fraternity is grappling with the current situation, Madvani mentions that he managed to finish shooting Aarya before lockdown. However editing, sound, VFX etc were added during lockdown.

    Madhvani also thanked his entire team who worked hard from home with full safety while embracing technology.

    As the Maharashtra government has given permission to resume production work with certain guidelines, Madhvani feels that safety and protocols are of utmost importance.

    Madhvani is in no hurry to release shows, erring on the side of precaution. However, he is working on a couple of scripts, but it will take time.

    “Creative people live in hope. And so my hope is that soon, this will pass and we can go back to our ‘normal’ lives,” he says.

    Equinox currently consists of Ram Madhvani, Amita Madhvani, Manoj Shroff, Rhea Prabhu and Annum Waris  as producers, Nitin Parmar, Deb Medhekar, Sandeep Modi, Priyanka Ghose, Tanvi Gandhi and Madvani as directors while Raja Ved is the CFO. The company has an in-house production designer Anna Ipe.

    Apart from this Madhvani has just started Equinox VR, a new virtual reality company where the team wants to make content for the VR world. The producer on Equinox VR is Khvafar Vakharia. These people  will also be part of the Ram Madhvani Films team when needed. He adds, “These are our in-house producers and directors that we have known and been together for years. It’s a strong dedicated hard-working team. We also work with a regular team of people who make up the rest of our extended team.”

    Madhvani highlights that the most important aspect while setting up a new production company is to continue the reputation that they have built so far.

    A pandemic is a difficult time and one must adapt fast to the post Covid2019 budgets. He said, “We are hungry for work and we partner with clients and agencies to understand everyone’s marketing and financial problems. Everyone is there to help and understand each other. We call ourselves the youngest oldest production house.”

    He concludes, “There’s only one challenge you always face when shooting and that is … time. My epitaph will read 'I wish I had more time.'”