Tag: Aroon Purie

  • 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.

  • Hindi cinema stars light up Ficci Frames’ silver jubilee

    Hindi cinema stars light up Ficci Frames’ silver jubilee

    MUMBAI: Lights, camera, silver jubilee! Ficci Frames, Asia’s leading media and entertainment conclave, is rolling out the red carpet for its 25th edition in Mumbai on 7–8 October 2025.

    The milestone gathering, themed “A silver jubilee of vision, voices & creativity”, will be inaugurated by minister of state for information & broadcasting L Murugan and Maharashtra chief minister Devendra Fadnavis.

    Hindi cinema icons Anil Kapoor, Akshay Kumar, Smriti Irani and Ayushmann Khurrana will headline the two-day event, joining an impressive line-up of industry leaders including Aroon Purie, Sam Balsara, Sameer Nair, Ekta Kapoor, Siddharth Roy Kapur, and filmmakers Hansal Mehta, Shoojit Sircar and Kiran Rao.

    The conclave will host fireside chats, policy sessions and showcases, with global heavyweights such as Netflix’s Monika Shergill, Amazon Prime Video’s Gaurav Gandhi and Warner Bros Discovery’s Arjun Nohwar adding international clout.

    Adding a global spark, a Russian delegation led by Moskino and the Moscow export center will participate, opening new doors for co-productions and cultural partnerships.

    With states like Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Delhi and Jharkhand pitching in through policy and showcase sessions, this silver jubilee promises not just glitz but game-changing ideas for the next chapter of India’s media and entertainment story.
     

  • TV Today’s FY 25 financials:  The quarter’s triumph and the year’s windfall!

    TV Today’s FY 25 financials: The quarter’s triumph and the year’s windfall!

    MUMBAI:  The bean counters at TV Today Network have been busy, and their meticulous work has unearthed some rather telling figures for both the quarter and the full financial year ending March 31, 2025. It seems the broadcast bigwigs are truly raking it in, with revenues and profits looking healthier than a freshly minted pundit on prime time.

    For the quarter ended March 31, 2025, the network saw its revenue from operations climb to Rs 249.17 crores, up from Rs 247.37 crores in the same quarter last year. Total income for the quarter stood at Rs 261.26 crores, a neat bump from Rs 256.47 crores in the prior year’s comparable period. Despite a slight uptick in total expenses to Rs 253.28 crores from Rs 233.31 crores, the company still managed a respectable profit before tax from continuing operations of Rs 7.98 crores, though it was a dip from Rs 23.16 crores reported in the same quarter of the previous year. The net profit for the quarter, however, took a bit of a tumble, landing at Rs 6.23 crores compared to Rs 11.20 crores last year. Basic and diluted earnings per share from continuing operations for the quarter were Rs 1.04, down from Rs 2.84 previously.

    Looking at the full financial year ended March 31, 2025, TV Today has certainly been on a roll. Revenue from operations soared to Rs 993.02 crores, a significant jump from Rs 935.91 crores in the previous financial year. The total income followed suit, hitting Rs 1,038.73 crores compared to Rs 973.56 crores in the year prior. While total expenses nudged up to Rs 927.61 crores from Rs 876.97 crores, the company still reported a strapping profit before tax from continuing operations of Rs 111.12 crores, a noticeable improvement from Rs 96.59 crores. The net profit for the year was Rs 74.83 crores, quite the spectacle when pitted against Rs 56.39 crores in the last financial year. This translates to basic and diluted earnings per share from continuing operations of Rs 13.86, a rise from Rs 11.90.

    It’s worth noting the discontinued radio broadcasting operations, which saw a pre-tax loss of Rs 0.03 crores for the quarter and a yearly loss of Rs 10.54 crores, though this is an improvement from the Rs 19.53 crores loss last year. The after-tax loss from these operations was Rs 0.02 crores for the quarter and Rs 7.89 crores for the year, a marked improvement from the previous year’s loss of Rs 14.61 crores. This means the radio business, which is being sold for Rs 20 crores, is no longer broadcasting negative vibes on the balance sheet.

    The chaps at the company are certainly dialling up the good vibes, as their board of directors — led by the ever-present chairman and whole time director Aroon Purie — has just given the nod to a rather fetching final dividend for the financial year ended March 31, 2025. Shareholders are set to pocket a handsome Rs 3 per equity share, a 60 per cent return on the Rs 5 face value. Talk about a cracking payout!

  • In partnership with AAAI, SGF has hosted the lecture series, featuring top speakers for years.

    In partnership with AAAI, SGF has hosted the lecture series, featuring top speakers for years.

    Mumbai: The Advertising Agencies Association of India (AAAI) and the Subhas Ghosal Foundation (SGF) have announced that award-winning independent digital journalist Faye D’Souza will deliver the AAAI Subhas Ghosal memorial lecture 2025 on 5 March at St. Regis, Mumbai.

    Established in memory of Subhas Ghosal, a towering figure in the advertising industry, the Subhas Ghosal Foundation promotes the professional values he upheld. In collaboration with AAAI, the Foundation has hosted the lecture series for several years, featuring distinguished speakers such as Rajan Anandan, Uday Shankar, Ronnie Screwvala, Aroon Purie, and Sudhir Sitapati.

    Speaking on behalf of SGF, Sam Balsara stated, “We live in an era where news and views shape our daily lives. Faye D’Souza, with her fearless journalism, will discuss the challenges and opportunities for independent journalists and the implications for democracy and public discourse. It promises to be an insightful session.”

    This year’s event also welcomes a new sponsor, Amazon MX Player.

  • IBDF board admits new members; gets Kevin Vaz as president

    IBDF board admits new members; gets Kevin Vaz as president

    MUMBAI: There’s quite a few new names sitting  atop the Indian Broadcasting & Digital Foundation following its 25th annual general meeting held in New Delhi earlier today.

    No surprises for guessing, Kevin Vaz who heads JioStar just below Uday Shankar was elected  as the president. He is also the chairman of Ficci’s media and entertainment committee. The AGM  also saw some newcomers make their way into the highest echelons of the advocacy body, the IBDF board: Prasar Bharati’s Gaurav Dwivedi, MMTV’s Jayant M. Mathew, TV Today’s Aroon Purie, JioStar’s Sumanto Bose,  and Kairali TV’s John Brittas. 
     

    theibdf office bearers

    Other senior folks  such as Culver Max Entertainment’s  recently appointed CEO Gaurav Banerjee, R. Mahesh Kumar, along with India TV boss Rajat Sharma  were  elected as vice-presidents.  I. Venkat was elected as the treasurer.

    The list of some of the board members includes: Rajat Sharma, India TV, I. Venkat, Eenadu TV, Kevin Vaz, JioStar, R. Mahesh Kumar, Sun Network, Gaurav Banerjee, Culver Max, Nachiket Pantvaidya, Bangla Entertainment, Punit Goenka, Zee Media, Ashish Sehgal, Zee Entertainment,  Sumanto Bose, JioStar and John Brittas, Kairali TV. 

    Rajat Sharma said that the IBDF will continue advocating for a regulatory framework that fosters innovation, supports creators, and ensures fair competition. “Together, we will drive the industry toward a sustainable and prosperous future,” he stated.

    Kevin Vaz  made his first address as the IBDF president highlighting that Indian content can gain international acclaim, further strengthening India’s soft power globally.

    “As we increasingly embrace technology to scale up, it is imperative that we democratize content creation so that it is not demographically or geographically limited. While India consumes content from anywhere, driven by the proliferation of 5G, smartphones, connected TVs and better pay TV infrastructure, we must ensure that opportunities to create professional content from locations beyond the current hotspots is a viable future for the industry,” he emphasised.  “The media and entertainment industry has a multiplier effect that extends to sectors like sports, creating significant opportunities for growth at scale. To ensure that this growth can be sustainable we need to look at business models rooted in equitable collaborations that foster value creation for all stakeholders across the ecosystem.”

  • Aaj Tak announced the winners of Sabse Tez Awards 2023

    Aaj Tak announced the winners of Sabse Tez Awards 2023

    Mumbai: The wait is finally over. Aaj Tak, (Source: BARC | HSM | 15+ | Wk 49-52’23 | 24 Hrs | Avrg Weekly Gross AMA 000s) has announced the winners of ‘Sabse Tez Awards’ in a special show which aired on 14 January 2024. In a multi-week campaign, viewers had voted for their favourite personalities in five different categories titled Sabse Tez Neta, Sabse Tez CM, Sabse Tez Actor, Sabse Tez Actress and Sabse Tez Cricketer.

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been voted ‘Sabse Tez Neta’ of 2023. India Today Group chairman and editor-in-chief Aroon Purie and vice chairperson & MD Kalli Purie presented PM Modi with this award during their meeting with him. Earlier, PM Modi was chosen as India Today’s ‘Newsmaker of the Year 2023’. On this occasion, the PM had described the farmers, artisans, athletes and citizens of the country as the newsmakers of this year. Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath has been adjudged as the ‘Sabse Tez Chief Minister’. After winning this award, UP Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath said that he was deeply grateful to all those who had voted for him.

    Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan has been chosen as the ‘Sabse Tez Hero’ for 2023. On this occasion, Shah Rukh Khan said, “Like always, I promise that because of this award, I will work even harder and with more dedication to provide you as much entertainment as possible.” The ‘Sabse Tez Actress’ award of 2023 has been given to nation’s heartthrob Deepika Padukone. After winning the award, Deepika expressed her gratitude to Aaj Tak and all the viewers. Indian cricketer Mohammed Shami has been selected as the ‘Sabse Tez Cricketer’ for 2023. After winning the award, Shami said, “I want to thank Aaj Tak and all the viewers of Aaj Tak for choosing me as Cricketer of the Year.”

    ‘Sabse Tez Awards’ has always managed to capture the nation’s pulse that resonates with millions of viewers. The unique democratic approach to the selection process involves various participation mediums like SMS, WhatsApp, and online voting, thus ensuring that the awards truly reflect the public’s sentiment. The ‘Sabse Tez Awards’ are a testament to Aaj Tak’s commitment to inclusivity and viewer engagement.

  • Kalli Purie is the new executive editor-in-chief of India Today Group

    Kalli Purie is the new executive editor-in-chief of India Today Group

    Mumbai: Existing vice president Kalli Purie of India Today Group was assigned additional charge as executive editor-in-chief of the group. She has been serving as vice president of the group since 2017. She is the daughter of Aroon Purie. In the internal communication in the company he wrote, ‘  I am designating her additional responsibility as executive editor in chief to being vice president chairperson of India Today Group.’

    In brief mail, Aroon Purie stated ‘ As you all know KP has been successfully heading the business and editing domains for a while. In line with her role, I would like to announce an additional designation for her as editor in chief of the India Today Group. This will not require any operational change for now.’

    She has been part of the group since 1996 heading from magazine, she also successfully served as Chief Operating Officer of the India Today Group Digital.

  • Aroon Purie, RC Bhargava, Rohini Nilekani, given Managing India Award

    Aroon Purie, RC Bhargava, Rohini Nilekani, given Managing India Award

    Mumbai: India’s G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant presented the Managing India Awards at the Golden Jubilee National Management Convention in New Delhi.

    The India Today Group founder, publisher and editor-in-chief Aroon Purie got the Lifetime Contribution to Media Award while Maruti Suzuki India Ltd chairman R C Bhargava received the Lifetime Contribution Award. Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies chairperson Rohini Nilekani took the Corporate Citizen Award. All awardees were joined by their spouses during the presentation of trophies.

    The citations for the awards were read by Hero Enterprise chairman Sunil Kant Munjal, television show host Rajiv Makhni, and renowned cinema actor and director Nandita Das.

    Presenting the awards, Kant said that it was a great honour for him to present awards to three great people who he had grown up admiring.

    Sharing his experience as India’s G20 Sherpa, Kant said that it was a job of taking one’s leader to the top of Mount Everest.

    Talking about India’s strategy and achievements during its presidency of G20, Kant said that the PM wanted the opportunity to be used to transform the districts and cities where the 220 G20 meetings were to take place, which was done.

    The negotiations proved tougher than anticipated, Kant said. However, he could be ambitious and courageous as G20 Sherpa because he had the full backing of the Prime Minister. “The PM’s directive was to be decisive and action oriented,” he said. It took nine days of non-stop negotiations in a room without phones, away from the media, to achieve consensus on the Russia-Ukraine statement. “We pushed the limits and took it to the level of brinkmanship to achieve success,” he said.

    India demonstrated its ability to drive multilateralism and bring everybody on board, Kant said, and attributed India’s ability to do so to India’s status as the 5th largest economy in the world.

    Talking about pushing the agenda of global south in G20, Kant said that the PM wanted India to put the global south first and India’s G20 presidency began with a virtual meeting of the region’s countries. This year, 80 per cent of the global growth came from the south, he pointed out.

    Kant said that India managed to achieve consensus on every issue, including redesigning the multilateral institutions, pushing digital public infrastructure, climate change, climate finance, green growth, women-led development, and inclusion of Africa. He pointed out that India achieved 112 outcomes during its presidency of G20 compared to 50 by the previous president, Indonesia.

    India’s digital public infrastructure was a key focus during the presidency, as 133 countries lack fast payment systems. “It became important to evangelize DPI model, which is open and interoperable unlike the big tech model of the US and China,” he said.

    Accepting the Managing India Award, Purie said that he was delighted to receive the award at this particular time because the media has become the whipping boy for everyone and everyone blames all ills of the society on the media. “We’re not perfect. Bad apples exist in every industry and profession. Aren’t there bad apples in business and bureaucracy?” he said.

    Stressing the importance of the media in today’s India, Purie said,”A free press is essential for our democracy, especially when democracy is not functioning so well…when more debates are held on television than in Parliament.” Purie expressed worry about the epidemic of fake news, and the potential of AI to make it worse. “Truth is in danger of becoming an endangered species…journalists have to step up and do their job honestly,” he said.

    Bhargava said that the award was somewhat an anomaly because when he joined Maruti, he knew nothing about management. He credited his colleagues for teaching him management. “Individuals can never achieve. All achievements are collective,” he said.

    In her acceptance speech, Nilekani said, “We live in complex and challenging times. We need to cultivate empathy, self-restraint and charity to create a successful samaaj, a safe harbour for our children and grandchildren.”

    Opening the awards ceremony, AIMA president Shrinivas Dempo brought attention to the focus of the 50th National Management Convention and emphasized that India needed to raise its thinking and action to the next level. “The new India needs a new dream – a dream of being a country with high standards of living for every Indian, a dream of being an evolved country that offers the world new models of economy, democracy, governance, technology, and culture,” he said.

    AIMA senior vice president Nikhil Sawhney thanked Kant for presenting the awards and congratulated the winners. “Each one of you is special and each one of you has made a transformative contribution in a critical sector of the Indian economy,” he told the awardees.

    Rieter India Pvt Ltd co-chairman Sudhir Jalan introduced the awards and complimented the jury for its excellent selection of awardees.

    The awards ceremony was live-streamed on AIMA’s social media channels. 

  • LMIL reverses salary cuts effective 1 September

    LMIL reverses salary cuts effective 1 September

    Mumbai: In a piece of good news for the employees at Living Media India Ltd (LMIL), founder and chairman Aroon Purie has announced the organisation’s decision to reverse the salary cuts imposed last year amid the pandemic.

    Apart from the over and above the Ex-Gratia Award given recently, the salary reductions for all the staff will be reversed, effective 1 September 2021, informed Purie in a letter written to the entire staff.

    Purie said the reduction of salaries in June 2020, was the “most painful decision” that he had to make in the 46 years he has worked in India Today, which is published by LMIL. “As you know, even before the pandemic, the magazine industry was under severe stress. With the economy contracting, advertising, our primary source of revenue, virtually collapsed, plus distribution was impacted due to corona lockdowns. The only way to survive was to reduce costs,” he wrote.

    Purie also thanked his employees for working through the crisis undeterred, and ensuring that the magazine did not miss a single issue, and maintain the quality at the same time.

    “You have shown courage, resourcefulness, forbearance and ingenuity. While we are nowhere near pre-COVID levels, or expect to be there in the foreseeable future, we must move on and adjust to a new reality. I have faith in our strong brands, content, our team’s belief in the magazine and our will to succeed,” he wrote.

    Purie highlighted that despite the churn in the media landscape, magazine stories have a profound and lasting impact. “Advertisers see that too. I hope more will. The good times will return. They have to. We will all then progress and prosper with our magazines,” he added. 

  • Aaj Tak HD hits airwaves, available on Tata Sky

    Aaj Tak HD hits airwaves, available on Tata Sky

    MUMBAI: India’s leading news broadcaster Aaj Tak has announced the launch of country’s first Hindi HD news channel – Aaj Tak HD. The HD avatar of the channel will be powered by rich exclusives, superior picture, and audio quality and lesser ad breaks.

    India Today Group chairman and editor in chief Aroon Purie speaking on the launch said, “Time and Information are the real currencies of this digital age. We have created Aaj Tak HD to give the viewer the best value on both these counts.  Aaj Tak HD has been designed in a way that there will be smaller ad breaks and much more news content than you will find anywhere else.  Let me assure you that Aaj Tak HD is not just about High Definition audio-video. This is about High Definition content and more of it.  As a market leader with Aaj Tak, we have always been Sabse Tez, and now with Aaj Tak HD we won’t be just Sabse Tez but also Sabse Zyada.”

    Aaj Tak has had many firsts to its name like experimenting with 3D augmented reality graphics during UP elections, using a drone camera and launching election express – the only live and on the move newsroom. The launch of the HD channel is expected to strengthen the company's competitive positioning and boost its leadership in the Hindi speaking belt.

    The media group plans to launch the new channel with special features on Business, Bollywood and International News.  On the occasion of the launch, the channel is also releasing the “Sabse Tez, Sabse Zyada” campaign across multiple platforms – outdoor, TV, digital and massive airport presence.

    Aaj Tak HD will be offered exclusively on Tata Sky (Channel Number 508) in India initially, and eventually will become available on other platforms.

    Welcoming the viewers to the next level of television news viewing India Today Group vice chairperson Kalli Purie said, “Your trust in Aaj Tak has grown year over year. It is our responsibility, therefore, to always be Sabse Tez… And also to always keep you ahead. Aaj Tak HD will keep you ahead on the technology curve and will serve the entire spectrum of your interests including special features on International Content, Business, and Bollywood. We hope you like our new offering, Sabse Tez Sabse Zyada.”

    Aaj Tak is the leading channel in both urban and rural Hindi Speaking Markets not only as per BARC but also as per IRS data.  With HD variant, Aaj Tak will also go on to attract the best and affluent Hindi viewer profile.