Tag: ARYAN KHAN

  • Hindi cinema royalty’s and fintech mogul’s bid to shake up India’s spirits trade

    Hindi cinema royalty’s and fintech mogul’s bid to shake up India’s spirits trade

    MUMBAI: India’s premium spirits market has attracted an unlikely trio: Hindi cinema superstar Shah Rukh Khan, Zerodha co-founder Nikhil Kamath, and established liquor manufacturer Radico Khaitan. Their joint venture, D’yavol Spirits, promises to blur the lines between celebrity endorsement and serious entrepreneurship in India’s rapidly premiumising alcohol sector.

    The partnership announced on  12 August brings together  SRK’s  global star power,  Kamath’s disruptive business instincts, and Radico Khaitan’s manufacturing prowess. The venture will launch with a luxury tequila, targeting both domestic consumers and international markets with what the partners describe as “bottled-in-origin” products carrying “rich regional provenance.”

    The collaboration reflects India’s evolving relationship with premium alcohol. Domestic consumption has shifted dramatically upmarket as disposable incomes rise and social attitudes liberalise. Premium spirits now command growing shelf space in urban markets, whilst younger consumers increasingly view expensive liquor as lifestyle statements rather than mere intoxicants.

    For Radico Khaitan, the partnership represents a calculated bet on celebrity-backed brands. The Uttar Pradesh-based company has built a portfolio around traditional Indian spirits like whisky and rum, but faces intensifying competition from international brands and craft distilleries. Abhishek Khaitan, the company’s managing director, frames the venture as combining “proven expertise in blending, marketing and distribution” with celebrity charisma.

    SRK’s involvement extends beyond typical endorsement deals. His son Aryan Khan co-founded D’yavol  Luxury Collective, which already produces award-winning spirits in smaller quantities. The family’s deeper engagement suggests genuine entrepreneurial ambition rather than mere brand licensing.

    More intriguing is Kamath’s participation. The Zerodha co-founder has emerged as one of India’s most prominent fintech entrepreneurs, building a discount brokerage that democratised stock trading for millions of Indians. His pivot into premium alcohol signals confidence in India’s luxury consumption trends.

    “Tomorrow’s best brands will be built on history, culture, and craftsmanship,”  Kamath said, positioning D’yavol as an “Indian brand with the intent and ability to compete anywhere in the world.”

    Such ambitions face considerable hurdles. India’s alcohol market remains heavily regulated, with individual states controlling distribution and taxation. Export opportunities exist but require navigating complex international regulations and established brand loyalties.

    Moreover, celebrity-backed spirit brands have mixed track records globally. Whilst some achieve genuine commercial success, others struggle once initial publicity fades. The key lies in building authentic brand narratives beyond celebrity association.

    D’yavol’s emphasis on “cultural resonance” and “globally-sourced bottled-in-origin products” suggests awareness of these challenges. The brand promises to combine international production standards with Indian creative vision, potentially appealing to both domestic premium consumers and diaspora markets.

    The timing appears favourable. India’s premium spirits segment is growing rapidly, driven by urbanisation and generational change. Meanwhile, Indian brands are gaining international recognition across categories from fashion to technology.

    Whether D’yavol can translate celebrity star power and entrepreneurial expertise into sustained commercial success remains uncertain. The spirits industry demands patience, consistency, and deep market understanding—qualities that don’t always align with celebrity timelines or disruptive business models.

    For now, the partnership represents another data point in India’s premiumisation story. As domestic consumers develop more sophisticated tastes and global ambitions, expect more unlikely collaborations between entertainment, technology, and traditional industries.

    The proof, as always in the spirits trade, will be in the drinking.

  • Ted Sarandos spills the Netflix masala to Indian billionaire Nikhil Kamath

    Ted Sarandos spills the Netflix masala to Indian billionaire Nikhil Kamath

    MUMBAI: What happenswhen a video store clerk-turned-media mogul sits down with a new-gen Indian billionaire?

    Streaming gold. 

    In a riveting episode of People by WTF, Netflix co-ceo Ted Sarandos spilt the tea, dropped truth bombs, and dished out storytelling wisdom in an electric tête-à-tête with Zerodha co-founder Nikhil Kamath. 

    From his Phoenix roots to Hollywood power tables—and yes, dinners with Shah Rukh Khan—Ted held nothing back.

    Sarandos shared his origin story: a would-be journalist whose real education came behind the counter at a video rental store. That humble setting gave him a ringside view of consumer desire—something he scaled up spectacularly at Netflix. “People hated late fees, but they loved discovering something new,” he quipped, summing up the genesis of Netflix’s ‘everything, anytime’ model.

    Sarandos’ India story was peppered with glam. He reminisced about his first meal with SRK—“very different in Mumbai than in LA”—and lauded Aryan Khan’s directorial chops in The Ba**ds of Bollywood*. His creative crush? Sanjay Leela Bhansali. “Heeramandi felt like a dare… he pitched it in LA like, ‘I dare you to make this’,” said Ted, still in awe.

    “For 10 years, I heard India was two years away,” Sarandos laughed. “Now, it feels truer than ever.” With local stories making global noise—think RRR or Kapil Sharma—Netflix doubled down. Sarandos noted that Indian audiences aren’t just watching Bollywood. They are binging Korean anime, true crime, Tamil action, and Turkish dramas with equal zest. “This market’s appetite is unmatched,” he said.
     

    Nikhil Kamath Ted Sarandos

    On leadership, Sarandos kept it brutally real. “Work-life balance? That’s a fantasy,” he shrugged. His playbook: take big swings, fail fast, and hire smart. He credited Netflix’s risk-positive culture to Reed Hastings, who saw streaming coming when dial-up ruled the world. “In 1999, Reed said, ‘Everything will come through the internet.’ It sounded crazy. Turns out, he was right.”

    Sarandos bet big on local stories going global. “Squid Game was never supposed to be a global hit. But great stories travel.” He stays bullish on AI—so long as humans lead the charge. “The art of the prompt will be a human skill,” he remarked, calling AI a cost cutter, not a creator killer. “It’ll help make better films, but won’t replace human imagination or emotion.”

    From gaming titles like Grand Theft Auto to video-forward podcasts, Netflix’s empire keeps expanding. Sarandos sees serious returns in content creation. “The best ROI? Still content. Delivery and monetisation are evolving faster than ever,” he noted.

    His advice to young creators? Make the coffee. “Be a PA, join a writers’ room, see if this is what you really want. Passion often follows excellence,” he urged, advising rookies not to reverse-engineer Netflix’s tastes, but pitch what needs to be told.

    The full episode of People by WTF featuring Ted Sarandos streamed on YouTube—popcorn highly recommended.

  • SRK and Aryan Khan make us laugh in promo for The Ba***ds of Bollywood

    SRK and Aryan Khan make us laugh in promo for The Ba***ds of Bollywood

    MUMBAI: For some it might be cheesy. But for us at indiantelevision.com, it is the most bad ass promo we have seen in recent times. It stars, ,who else but the Badshah of Bollywood (yes, we hate usage of  that word Bollywood)  Shah Rukh Khan and the one man who can get away with blue murder with him – his son Aryan Khan.  We have all heard that Shah Rukh and his son are coming on OTT (read: Netflix) with the latter’s directorial debut with the  The Baa**ds of Bollywood. 
     

    SRK ARYAN KHAN

    And the promo teases us and wants us, forces to want to watch it when it debuts by not disclosing what it’s about, thanks to its creative.

    It begins with SRK  in front of a filming unit and facing the camera and like the LA-based real estate broker commercial makes a pitch for the show only to be told by the man behind the camera to give another take. Take after take SRK’s histrionics are rejected. Even his most famous arms-stretched pose is given a thumbs down.

    Until SRK gets fed up and threatens the director telling him is this his father’s reign or kingdom and he pops up from behind the camera saying yes, revealing himself to be Aryan Khan.  

    SRK now decides to not listen to his son and gives what appears to be a perfect scene and dialogue delivery. Gets a whole lot of applause from the unit. Only to be told by Aryan if Papa would give another take as he had forgotten to switch on the recording button. Wow! That enrages his father no end. The promo ends with Aryan saying: “Papa before you lift your hand on your son, please wait.”

    Clearly, it was very funny and punny and hilarious and had us rolling over in splits. Guess, we are SRK fans. Hence, we had to document it, in case someone has not seen it and we forget it in future.  

    A memorable promo if there ever was any!