Tag: Cannes

  • Bite-sized dramas are about to swallow the streaming world whole

    Bite-sized dramas are about to swallow the streaming world whole

    CANNES: Forget your boxsets. Forget your hour-long dramas. Audiences are ditching long-form television for something far more intoxicating: episodes that fit in your pocket and demand your full attention in under ten minutes.

    Microdramas—those addictive mini-narratives designed for mobile consumption—are redefining entertainment. And the numbers are staggering. According to Omdia, the consultancy that presented its findings at Mipcom, Cannes, this genre will nearly double the revenue of Fast channels, which are projected to pull in just $5.8bn next year.

    “Viewers are willing to pay for content that captures them emotionally in seconds,” said María Rua Aguete, head of media and entertainment at Omdia. “Microdramas demonstrate that attention spans may be shorter, but engagement is deeper and more valuable.”

    The monetisation model is brutally simple: hook viewers with free episodes, then charge them through subscription or pay-per-episode channels. This approach accounts for more than 60 per cent of total revenue. The payoff is formidable. Average revenue per user can reach $20 per week—or up to $80 per month—making microdramas extraordinarily profitable.

    China dominates the space, generating 83 per cent of global revenue, fuelled by a colossal audience and a mobile-first culture. Beyond China, the US claims half of international revenue, with Japan, South Korea, the UK and Thailand emerging as hungry new markets.

    “Microdramas are redefining what it means to tell premium stories in the digital age,” Aguete said. “They combine the immediacy of social media with the emotional depth of dramatic television. They are short, addictive, and irresistible.”

    This isn’t a fad. As consumer habits shift inexorably towards mobile and short-form content, microdramas are poised to become the centrepiece of digital entertainment—a seismic fusion of social video and traditional storytelling that will reshape how the world consumes drama. The wave is here. And it’s only just begun to crest.

  • Zee One shines bright during Mipcom Cannes

    Zee One shines bright during Mipcom Cannes

    CANNES: As the global television industry gathered for Mipcom 2025, Zee made history as the first Indian broadcaster to take over one of the largest LED screens along the legendary Croisette. From sunrise to sunset and long after the massive display of Zee One lit up the promenade, stopping people in their tracks and sparking real excitement.

    With over 10,600 visitors and delegates expected during Mipcom, it was the perfect moment to put Zee One, the company’s French-language Fast channel in the spotlight. The channel, available on Samsung TV Plus, LG Channels, and Rakuten TV, has quickly built a following in France for its vibrant mix of Bollywood films, heartfelt dramas, and colourful family entertainment.

    For many passersbys, it was a surprise and a delight to see an Indian media brand taking over one of Cannes most visible spaces.

    Zee has built its global presence by constantly trying what others haven’t and this Cannes moment is a reflection of that same spirit.

    Standing tall among the biggest names in international entertainment, Zee One’s luminous display on the Croisette was more than just advertising, it was a statement of confidence, creativity, and cultural pride.

    And as the lights shimmer over the French Riviera, one thing is clear: Zee knows how to make the world stop and look up.

  • India congregates at Mipcom as TV industry grapples with streaming wars

    India congregates at Mipcom as TV industry grapples with streaming wars

    CANNES: Mipcom 2025 opens its doors on 13 October in Cannes, and India is making serious noise. Whilst the global television and streaming industries thrash about in existential angst—wondering what they are, where they’re going, and whether anyone still watches television—over 10,500 participants and 330-plus exhibitors from more than 100 countries are cramming into the Palais des Festivals. Identity crisis? Not on India’s watch.

    RX management, which runs this annual gathering, expects the gloom to lift the moment delegates start talking deals. And nowhere is the optimism more palpable than in the Indian contingent, which has arrived in force with more than 70 companies ready to do business.

    Centre stage sits the Indian Pavilion—a sprawling 100 sq m affair rebranded as the Bharat Pavilion/Waves Bazaar. It’s a joint initiative between the Indian consulate in Marseilles, the ministry of information and broadcasting, and the Services Export Promotion Council. More than 40 Indian companies have piled in under its banner: animation studios, video service outfits, content distributors, post-production houses—the full ecosystem.

    But the real heavyweights are flying solo. Eschewing the shared space, a formidable lineup of Indian firms have planted their own flags with independent exhibition stands: Animation Xpress, Amagi Media, Enterr10 Television (which runs the Dangal channel), GoQuest Media, JioStar India, One Life Studios, One Take Media, PowerKids Entertainment, Rajshri Entertainment, Rusk Media, Shemaroo Entertainment, and Zee Entertainment Enterprises. It’s a show of strength that reflects India’s growing clout in the global content economy.

    Indian delegates hunting for content—whether licensing hit formats or acquiring finished programming—number more than 120 this year, a figure that underscores the country’s voracious appetite for fresh material and its ambitions as both buyer and seller.

    Hiren Gada, chief executive of Shemaroo Entertainment, said he was returning to Mipcom after many years away and was “looking forward to some exciting meetings with international clients.” The veteran executive’s presence signals that even established players see renewed opportunity in the current market turbulence.

    Siddharth Kumar Tewary, founder of One Life Studios, called the atmosphere “electric,” adding that his company was now positioning itself as a global multiplatform content and production services partner—not merely an Indian supplier, but a genuine international player capable of creating content for any screen, anywhere.

    The Indian surge comes at a curious moment. Traditional broadcasters are bleeding viewers to streaming platforms – which are themselves struggling against the vertical and micro drama platforms and Fast services -trying to figure out sustainable business models. Studios are consolidating, mergers are multiplying, and nobody quite knows whether “peak TV” was last year or five years ago. Yet Cannes remains Cannes—a place where hope springs eternal and every conversation might be the one that spawns the next global hit.

    As deals snap shut and pitches fly across the sun-drenched Riviera, sleepy Cannes has morphed once more into the pulsing nerve centre of the global content trade. Champagne corks pop, business cards change hands at dizzying speed, and somewhere in the Palais a Hindi-language crime thriller is being sold to a Scandinavian broadcaster who’s convinced it’s the next Squid Game.

    Streaming uncertainty be damned. The curtain rises, the cameras roll, and India’s moment in the spotlight has arrived—louder, brighter and more confident than ever.

  • Ad green: IAS and Good-Loop take carbon out of the digital equation

    Ad green: IAS and Good-Loop take carbon out of the digital equation

    MUMBAI: Less hot air, more clean air. That’s the promise as Integral Ad Science (IAS) teams up with Good-Loop to help advertisers track and shrink their digital carbon footprint, without the added cost.

    Fresh from the launch of the ‘Global media sustainability framework’ at Cannes, IAS has now rolled out advanced emissions measurement across every ad impression on the open internet. The move means advertisers can monitor, manage, and meaningfully reduce the environmental impact of their digital campaigns, all while still ticking the usual boxes for viewability, fraud prevention, and brand safety.

    Good-Loop, a B corp on a mission to make advertising climate-friendly, has already been powering IAS’s emissions measurement for three years. The collaboration now goes mainstream, offering advertisers across the globe a chance to see exactly how green, or not, their media buying really is.

    Good-Loop’s Founder & CEO, Amy Williams put it plainly “We now know, in no uncertain terms, the environmental impact that media buying has, and it’s time to take this information into the mainstream, to change our industry for the better.”

    IAS, CEO, Lisa Utzschneider added: “Sustainability in advertising requires more than promises, it needs accountability. Every impression we measure will now come with data on its carbon impact.”

    With new carbon legislation around the corner and sustainability pledges stacking up, the move sets a precedent: carbon counts as much as clicks. And as the industry warms to greener metrics, IAS and Good-Loop’s initiative could help cool things down for the planet.

  • Mipim names Nicolas Boffi as new director

    Mipim names Nicolas Boffi as new director

    PARIS: Rx France has appointed Nicolas Boffi as director of Mipim, the global urban festival that each March draws more than 20,000 delegates to Cannes. An engineer and urban planner by training, Boffi has over two decades of experience in real estate and urban development, spanning project management, business development and public affairs.

    He joins from Arcadis, where he led strategy for the global cities programme as Paris city executive, working with both the private sector and city leaders on sustainable projects in the French capital and beyond.

    Boffi succeeds Nicolas Kozubek, who steered Mipim through a turbulent period of industry change. Under his watch, Mipim became a forum where real-estate players and policymakers confronted geopolitical risk, technological disruption and the shift towards sustainability.

    Filippo Rean, managing director at Rx France, said Boffi’s “strategic mindset and track record in aligning public and private priorities” would help sharpen Mipim’s position as the place where cities’ biggest challenges—sustainability, resilience and competitiveness—are tackled head-on.

    Boffi said his priority was to deepen dialogue between the public and private sectors. “The next few years will bring economic, political and fiscal challenges that demand collaboration and bold decision-making,” he said. “Mipim must be where uncertainty turns into opportunity.”

    Expect new content under his leadership, from a sharper focus on AI disruption to the race to net zero.
    Mipim returns to the Palais des Festivals in Cannes from 9-13 March 2026. The Mipim Asia Summit runs on 3-4 December 2025 in Hong Kong.

  • Bharat Pavilion makes debut at Hong Kong Filmart

    Bharat Pavilion makes debut at Hong Kong Filmart

    MUMBAI: India’s film industry has gone global, with the Bharat Pavilion at Hong Kong’s International Film & TV Market (Filmart, 17-20 March) being unveiled a couple of days ago. The pavilion, inaugurated by Hong Kong & Macau’s consul general of India, Satwant Khanalia, marked a milestone moment in India’s cinematic outreach. Filmart concludes today in Hongkong.

    Spearheaded by the Services Export Promotion Council (SEPC) and the National Film Development Corporation (NFDC) under the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, the initiative was a power play to boost Indian cinema’s global footprint. Backed by the consulate general of India, Hong Kong & Macau, the pavilion was positioned as a launchpad for cross-border partnerships, international co-productions and market expansion.

    “India’s film industry is one of the world’s largest, telling stories that transcend borders. The Bharat Pavilion is a new chapter in global collaborations, unlocking fresh opportunities for Indian cinema,” said Khanalia.

    NFDC also spotlighted Waves – The World Audio Visual and Entertainment Summit, set to hit Mumbai from 1-4 May 2025. Billed as a premier content hub, the event will pull in industry titans, innovators and investors, pushing India as the epicentre of global content creation and trade.

    NFDC, a veteran in promoting Indian cinema at Cannes, Berlinale and Filmart, continues to drive co-productions, market expansion and distribution deals. The Bharat Pavilion was the latest jewel in its crown, offering Indian filmmakers a fast-track to international markets.

    The opening day saw a whirlwind of activity—networking frenzies, industry huddles, and high-stakes talks on co-productions and content sales. Indian producers, distributors and filmmakers seized the moment, pitching projects, shaking hands, and scouting fresh markets.

  • Japanese watchmaker Seiko partners with RCB for T20 cricket season 2025

    Japanese watchmaker Seiko partners with RCB for T20 cricket season 2025

    MUMBAI: Cricket matches and watches—both share an obsession with perfect timing. Seiko, the Japanese maestro with 140 years of ticking expertise, knows this game all too well. Partnering with Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) for the 2025 T20 cricket season, Seiko proves once again that it doesn’t just watch the clock—it masters it. This isn’t merely a brand deal; it’s cricketing elegance meeting horological precision, a classic pairing like a Virat Kohli cover drive—beautiful, timeless, and precise.

    Announced on 20 March in Bengaluru, Seiko’s alliance with RCB brings together over 200 years of combined heritage in sports and craftsmanship. With RCB’s fiery gameplay and Seiko’s meticulous craftsmanship, this collaboration promises to redefine ‘match timing’—literally.

    Speaking about the partnership, Seiko India president & COO Niladri Mazumder stated, “Seiko has a longstanding legacy in sports, built on precision, innovation, and performance—qualities that mirror the ethos of Royal Challengers Bengaluru. Our partnership with them is a natural extension of our commitment to excellence, and we are proud to be associated with a team that exemplifies resilience and performance. This collaboration allows us to engage with cricket enthusiasts in a meaningful way, reinforcing Seiko’s presence in the world of sports.”

    Echoing the sentiment, Royal Challengers Bengaluru COO Rajesh V Menon said, “RCB is renowned for pushing boundaries and delivering unforgettable experiences for our fans. We are thrilled to partner with Seiko to mark the celebration of cricket, forever etched in time.”

    With co-branded campaigns and exclusive fan experiences planned, Seiko aims to capture every nail-biting, cheer-inducing second of the T20 season 2025. Fans can look forward to a season where precision isn’t just expected—it’s guaranteed. Miss a moment? Not with Seiko around. After all, every second counts when you’re chasing victory on the pitch or checking if it’s finally lunch break yet.

  • MIP London debuts with strong attendance, sets sights on 2026 return

    MIP London debuts with strong attendance, sets sights on 2026 return

    MUMBAI:  The inaugural MIP London market  concluded its five-day run on 27 February  with metrics that suggest a respectable, if not quite revolutionary, entry into the crowded conference calendar. Some 2,800 delegates from over 80 countries descended upon the capital for what organisers hope will become a fixture in the global television industry’s peripatetic schedule.

    The event, which ran from 23-27 February, appears to have established itself as a new fixture in the global television industry calendar, with the IET London and The Savoy already confirmed as venues for 2026.

    “MIP London’s debut exceeded expectations. This is year one of a long-term commitment and we will be back in London next year,” said MIP London and MIPCOM Cannes director Lucy Smith. “This was new, a new format, bringing in new people, and it really feels that MIP London has found its place in this busy week.”

    European delegates comprised the largest contingent, followed by North Americans, with significant representation from Asia, Latin America, the Middle East and Türkiye. More than 70 companies established meeting spaces, including country pavilions from Belgium, China, France, Korea and Spain.

    The event featured an extensive programme of international screenings, insight presentations, and industry matchmaking sessions. Notable highlights included presentations from YouTube and a headline conversation between Netflix’s chief content officer Bela Bajaria and David Beckham.

    Attendees reflected the evolving media landscape, with traditional buyers and sales executives joined by producers, content creators, and representatives from digital-first companies and streaming platforms, including Fast,  AVOD and CTV players.

    Smith emphasised that the new event was designed to complement existing industry gatherings. “Our plan has always been to complement existing events, and I thank everyone who came and engaged with the market. We will listen intently to every bit of feedback to evolve MIP London for 2026 and beyond, and to deliver what the international industry says it needs.”

    The 41st edition of MIPCOM  Cannes, MIP London’s established sister event, will take place from 13-16 October 2025, preceded by MIPJunior on 11-12 October.

  • MIP Junior 2024 draws large Indian presence

    MIP Junior 2024 draws large Indian presence

    CANNES:  It’s been a more compact MIP Junior which was flagged off on 18 October 2025 at the JW Marriot hotel in sunny Cannes, France. But most attendees appreciated the opportunities it offers for co-production, outsourcing, networking and keeping oneself updated about the developments in the kids and animation sector. MIP Junior had close to 1,000 registrants, despite the kids’ segment the world over going through its toughest and most trying times with viewer consumption moving towards streaming platforms.

    The Indian animation industry was well represented with attendees from all over the country coming in decent numbers. In fact, the Indian MIP Junior contingent is the largest in the post pandemic era.

    Among the Indian studios which were represented included: Hornbill Studios, Graphiti Multlmedia, Prayan Studios, Mesmor Studio, Studio56, Yoboho, USP Studios, Softoons Entertainment, Powerkids Entertainment, Purple Turtle and Guppy Theatre/Crossover Media & Design.

    20 Indian  representatives from various Indian studios were seen looking busy. Each one of them had their calendars packed with meetings and interactions with fellow professionals from different countries. And most of them were seen hobnobbing with others during the pre-opening party on the JW Marriot beach on 18 October and the opening one at the Majestic Hotel on 19 October. 
     

  • Yoodlee Films’ ‘Agra’ wins Best Film at Prestigious NYIFF Awards

    Yoodlee Films’ ‘Agra’ wins Best Film at Prestigious NYIFF Awards

    Mumbai: Globally acclaimed and celebrated film, ‘Agra’ has won two major awards at the New York Indian Film Festival Awards. The film won the award for Best Film, and actor Mohit Agarwal was awarded Best Actor Male for the film amidst eminent nominations. After receiving high praise across film festivals such as Cannes, Jio MAMI, Busan, and IFF Melbourne, Agra continues to put India on the global map by winning at the most celebrated NYIFF Awards. ‘Agra’ was one of the most awarded Indian films at NYIFF, with director Kanu Behl and actors Mohit Agarwal and Priyanka Bose nominated in principal categories.

    Alongwith the nominees, the film features a stellar cast led by Rahul Roy in a remarkable comeback, Ruhani Sharma, Vibha Chibber, Sonal Jha, and Aanchal Goswami. Directed by the renowned filmmaker Kanu Behl, the narrative delves into the complexities of love, desire, and familial bonds against the backdrop of a dysfunctional household in small-town India.

    Kanu Behl shared his excitement, “Cinema is truly a universal language, and it is overwhelming that something so personal to me is being recognized on a global stage. It is an honour to win such a prestigious award and a proud moment to represent India at this festival. The love and appreciation from audiences and critics globally have been exhilarating.”

    Saregama India Ltd. senior VP Siddharth Anand Kumar said, “Agra is a daring journey into the human psyche. For audiences across the globe to not just relate, but to celebrate the film, is a great honour for us. Representation at NYIFF is a proud moment, but winning Best Film and Best Actor is phenomenal. We are proud to continue this global journey for ‘Agra’.”

    Mohit Agarwal expressed his joy in winning the prestigious award, “I am ecstatic to receive the Best Actor award at the NYIFF film festival. It’s a recognition for our hard work and toil and to represent India on such a prestigious platform feels surreal!”

    The film is written by Kanu Behl and Atika Chohan.