Tag: Gemini

  • Jiostar fields big brands for Women’s World Cup 2025

    Jiostar fields big brands for Women’s World Cup 2025

    MUMBAI: Cricket isn’t the only thing hitting boundaries this season, brands are too. As the ICC Women’s World Cup 2025 kicks off on 30th September, broadcaster and streaming partner Jiostar has unveiled a sponsorship squad as glittering as the trophy itself.

    From Google’s tech powerhouses: Gemini, Pay, Android and Pixel, to household giant HUL’s Rexona, banking behemoth SBI, and luxury authority IGI, the line-up underscores how women’s cricket has become the big-ticket stage for global and Indian brands alike. More names are set to join the roster in the weeks ahead.

    “We are thrilled to welcome this incredible mix of sponsors,” said JioStar chief revenue officer-sports Anup Govindan. “Each brings unique strengths and a shared vision to elevate women’s cricket worldwide. With these marquee partners, the tournament will inspire millions and open up high-impact engagement opportunities.”

    For IGI, the tie-up is more than branding. “Just as every diamond is shaped under pressure to shine, so too are these exceptional athletes,” said IGI’s global CEO Tehmasp Printer. “This partnership celebrates brilliance, authenticity, and women embracing their true shine on and off the field.”

    Running till 2 November, the World Cup brings together the best of women’s cricket, with India opening its campaign against Sri Lanka. Fans can watch every ball live on Star Sports or stream exclusively on Jiohotstar.

    This festive season, expect not just fours and sixes, but brand fireworks too.

  • Motorola dials up ‘Big billion moto rush’ with record-low festive smartphone deals

    Motorola dials up ‘Big billion moto rush’ with record-low festive smartphone deals

    MUMBAI: The big billion buzz is here, and Motorola is leading the charge. Motorola has announced its ‘Big billion moto rush,’ unveiling its lowest-ever prices on bestselling smartphones during Flipkart’s big billion days sale 2025, which kicks off at midnight on 23rd September (early access from 22nd September).

    Leading the charge is the motorola edge 60 pro, a flagship powerhouse featuring a Pantone-validated triple 50MP camera system, the world’s most durable 6.7” 1.5K true colour quad-curved display, and a 6000mah battery with blazing 90W turbo-power charging. With motoAI and deep integration with Google Gemini, Microsoft Copilot, and Perplexity, it packs cutting-edge AI tools at festive special prices starting Rs 24,999.

    The motorola edge 60 fusion, dubbed the “all-rounder under Rs 20,000,” lands with a Pantone-validated 1.5K display, Sony LYTIA 700C camera, and military-grade durability, available from Rs 19,999.

    In the mid-range, the moto g96 5G brings a 144Hz curved Poled display, Snapdragon 7s Gen 2 processor, and 50MP OIS Sony camera for just Rs 14,999, while the moto g86 power shines with the segment’s brightest 1.5K display and a 6720mAh battery, priced at Rs 15,999.

    Style meets smarts in the motorola razr 60, India’s most stylish flip under Rs 40,000. With a gesture-controlled video camera, titanium-reinforced hinge and the largest 3.6” Poled external display in its class, it’s available at a festive steal of Rs 39,999.

    But the savings don’t stop at phones. Motorola is also offering festive-first discounts on its moto buds ‘Loop’ and ‘Bass’ earbuds, moto pad 60 pro, and even laptops, TVs and washing machines.

    With flagship specs trickling down to mid-range prices, Motorola is clearly setting the tone for a blockbuster festive season.

  • Google India marketing chief calls it quits after 14 years

    Google India marketing chief calls it quits after 14 years

    MUMBAI: After nearly 14 years climbing Google’s ranks, Neha Barjatya has bid farewell to the tech behemoth. The marketing director announced her departure from Google India on LinkedIn, marking the end of a tenure that spanned the country’s digital transformation from the early mobile internet days to the current artificial intelligence boom.

    Barjatya’s stint at Google reads like a greatest hits album of Indian digital marketing. She masterminded campaigns that brought back Hindi cinema’s Mr India with Pixel phones, gamified search with Google Googlies, and launched the country’s Pixel manufacturing operations. Most recently, she shepherded the launch of Gemini, Google’s AI assistant.

    But perhaps her most significant legacy lies in Internet Saathi, one of the world’s largest digital literacy programmes. The initiative, a collaboration between Google and Tata Trusts, has reached over 290,000 villages and benefited more than 30 million rural women. Barjatya even took a secondment to establish Frend (Foundation for Rural Entrepreneurship Development), aimed at creating livelihood opportunities for digitally skilled women.

    Her career at Google began in November 2011 as head of business marketing and digitising India initiatives. She climbed to marketing director in March 2020, overseeing consumer apps including Search, Gemini, and Maps, alongside platforms and devices such as Pixel, Android, and the Play Store.

    Before joining Google, Barjatya cut her teeth at Viacom 18 Media for over five years, following earlier stints at Zee Turner and advertising agency Lintas.

    In her farewell post, she credited leaders including Sapna Chadha, Sandeep Menon, and former country head Rajan Anandan for their support. “This company has taught me to push past hurdles, stay grounded in purpose and never lose sight of what’s possible,” she wrote.

    Barjatya’s next move remains under wraps, though she hinted at “the next chapter” without revealing details.

  • Google’s AI arm gets new marketing muscle in Anuj Gulati

    Google’s AI arm gets new marketing muscle in Anuj Gulati

    MUMBAI: Google has appointed a new ringmaster to its artificial intelligence circus. Anuj Gulati, a 12-year veteran of the search giant’s marketing ranks, has been tapped as head of global growth marketing for Gemini, the company’s conversational AI platform that aims to give ChatGPT a run for its money.

    Gulati announced his promotion on LinkedIn with the customary corporate humility: “I’m happy to share that I’m starting a new position as head of global growth marketing, Gemini at Google!” The exclamation mark suggests genuine enthusiasm—a commodity as rare in Silicon Valley these days as profitable startups.

    The appointment comes at a crucial moment for Google’s AI ambitions. As the chatbot wars heat up faster than a neural processor under load, Gemini represents Google’s best hope of maintaining relevance in a world where users might soon bypass traditional search entirely.

    Gulati brings a developer-focused pedigree to the role. He previously served as group marketing manager for developer growth and performance, where he led global growth, lifecycle and paid media marketing for Google’s developer products across mobile, web and the increasingly crowded AI landscape.

    His career trajectory reads like a textbook case of corporate ladder-climbing done right. Prior to his developer marketing stint, Gulati spent nearly six years as senior product marketing manager for developer platforms based in Singapore, where he helped developers in India and southeast Asia “build great products and successful businesses” on Google’s ubiquitous platforms.

    Before joining the Google mothership, Gulati cut his teeth at The Times of India, where as head of mobile products he claims to have increased mobile traffic sixfold in just 12 months—a performance that likely caught Mountain View’s acquisitive eye.

    His CV also features a brief philanthropic interlude as head of marketing at Save the Children, sandwiched between stints at The Times of India, where he began his career as a brand manager after a short consultancy role at Tata Technologies.

    As Google continues its desperate sprint to catch up with OpenAI’s head start, Gulati will need to draw on every marketing trick in his considerable playbook. For while Google may have invented much of the technology underpinning today’s AI boom, it finds itself in the unfamiliar position of underdog in the race to commercialise it.

    Whether Gulati can help Gemini outshine its competitors remains to be seen. But one thing is certain: in the increasingly cutthroat world of AI, Google is gemini-ly serious about winning.

  • Kalanithi Maran, Sun TV: the evolution

    Kalanithi Maran, Sun TV: the evolution

    MUMBAI: In the late eighties, a scrawny young man returned to India from the US having completed his MBA from the University of Scranton. He had lights in his eyes, fascinated as he had become by television in the US during his management freshman and graduation days.

    But television in India was a domain restricted to only state-owned Doordarshan. For a while, he dabbled in the print media that his family owned but the lure of the moving image proved too strong. So, he did the next best thing: he started producing a video magazine in Tamil.

    Kalanithi Maran had bigger ambitions; he wanted to start a TV channel in Tamil; not just a TV channel; TV channels in the various south Indian languages. With that goal in mind, he approached the then-emerging TV baron Subhash Chandra whose Zee TV had caught the imagination of the nation with edgy fast-paced general entertainment programming.

    The young man wanted a slot (one in the afternoon) on Zee TV’s service to start his own TV channel; but a Zee TV executive saw no merit in the plan and turned it down. He never got a chance to meet the goateed Chandra.  It was to prove to be a colossal mistake. However, another cable TV operator–Siddhartha Srivastava–who has the distinction of launching the first Indian private TV channel (not Subhash Chandra as many commonly believe) called ATN was more giving and provided him with a slot.

    Kalanithi cobbled together his savings and also got his father the late Murosali Maran to guarantee a bank loan for him. The same 25 friends who were working on the video magazine–Poomalai (which was by then plagued by piracy) and the cable TV programme Tamizh Maalai–stood by him and drew up the programming for the to-be-launched channel.

    Thus, Sun TV was born on 14 April 1993 beaming off the wobbly Russian satellite called Gorizont. The programming was primarily film entertainment-based. Kalanithi and his team had to work hard to build cable TV distribution infrastructure in the state, coaxing shop owners to become cable TV operators and set up headends and distribute Sun TV  so that it could be seen by Tamilians who had little else to watch in the comfort of their homes.

    His efforts bore fruit: cable TV operators soon thereafter popped up all over Tamil Nadu, courtesy consumer demand for the channel. Both fuelled each other and, by 1996, Sun TV was notching up revenue of Rs 450 million with a penetration of 86 per cent in the state. Apart from Zee TV, it was the only other channel that was sporting a black bottom line at that time.

    Kalanithi went about fulfilling his dream to have a southern Indian language network, just as Chandra was expanding his Zee Network. The aggressive young entrepreneur launched Udaya TV in Karnataka in 1994, took over Gemini TV soon thereafter and Surya TV followed.  There has been no stopping him and, today, the group runs 33 channels and another nine are being added. His portfolio covers the genres of entertainment, news, comedy, music, movies, kids and classic.

    Along the way, Kalanithi appears to have shed his inhibitions of foraying outside his comfort zone of the south–Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam. For some time now, the Sun group has been gestating Bengali and Marathi language channels. Six to eight months from now, the two are slated to be launched and teams have been hired in Kolkata and in Mumbai. Hectic parleys are going on to decide the programming, the positioning, the distribution and marketing of the two channels.

    Kalanithi also owns 42 FM radio stations, the second-largest Tamil-circulated daily newspaper in India Dinakaran, and five other magazines, DTH platform Sun Direct and the Sunrisers Hyderabad IPL cricket team. Then, there is the cable TV network SCV, which has presence in Chennai. The Sun group made an ill-informed dash to acquire and run an airline SpiceJet, which Kalanithi found challenging to do and quickly did a volte face and sold it to Ajay Singh who has since been doing a better job. And then there is the network’s new OTT offering Sun Nxt.

    Recently, the group celebrated 25 years of its television existence with full front-page ads across select newspapers and a week of celebrations with its 1,500 employees nationwide. The ads crowed about Sun TV’s no 1 status in India and then went on to thank everyone saying it would not have been possible without “your support.” Silver coins, plates were given out to long-serving employees during the celebrations. Print ads aside, the Sun network did no press or public relations blitz–in the mainline nor the trade media.

    That’s in keeping with Kalanithi’s innate tendency to stay away from the limelight. He and the group have been publicity shy to the T. The company does not have any media relations to speak of or have a structured communications department like the other big four networks do. Star India, Zee, Viacom18, Sony Pictures Networks Television, do. Zee TV, Viacom18 and Sony Pictures all celebrated lavishly during their individual anniversaries inviting important partners, clients, and vendors.

    The shunning of the media probably stems from the fact that his roots are in one of the most important political families in the country. His grand uncle M Karunanidhi heads the DMK party, his uncles are politicians while his late father Murosali Maran held ministerial positions in various political regimes and his brother, Dayanidhi Maran, has been a minister, too.

    This apart, the group also owns powerful print media titles, which serve as a very strong platform to communicate the messaging Kalanithi wants to convey.

    All along, mutters have been doing the rounds that the Sun network got several benefits and favours courtesy Kalanithi’s political lineage. Allegations have also been hurled that Sun TV Network misused the clout and used strong-arm tactics with Tamil film producers demanding movie titles for broadcasting on his network to the exclusion of other television stations. And at surprising prices.

    Additionally, most media went to town alleging that the Sun TV network worked as a strong supporter of the DMK party. But which news channel in India does not have political backing, leaning or favourites? And Kalanithi’s DMK leaning was probably at a time when the AIADMK was going hammer and tongs against the DMK with its own party mouthpiece Jaya TV. Even then, Sun TV’s reportage at times caused heartburn to DMK supporters as Kalanithi worked on maintaining a balance.

    Moreover, over the years, most Indian TV news channels have become more blatant in their support of specific political agendas and parties–whether national or state wise or region wise. So, singling out Kalanithi as a political beneficiary is like the pot calling the kettle black.

    Finally, that myth must have been totally exploded following the distancing of grand-nephew from grand uncle and the launching of a competing television network by the DMK patriarch. Also, oodles of trouble followed with Kalanithi and Dayanidhi in relation to the 2G telecom scandal. Both have been since absolved and freed of the charges by the courts.

    The fact is that it is not political equations that have allowed Kalanithi to build his Sun group. It has been his savvy ability to see opportunity where others don’t, grab it and diligently make it successful. And he has done this fearlessly time and again–with the exception of SpiceJet. His radio stations are some of the more innovative ones and attract a wide demographic with a lot of it being youth. They are profitable. His newspapers give him wide reach and coverage and, in the process, media clout. And they make money.

    What’s above all this is the fact that Sun is highly profitable and its stock price has been holding strong when others have not. That itself speaks highly of the confidence the investor community has in him. As a businessman and as an innovator. No other media enterprise has come even close to breaking the stranglehold he has on viewers in the south; the programmers seem to understand the pulse of the Sun Network viewers. Several have tried including smaller players and the big four. But none has managed to race ahead of the Sun network.

    The Sun TV stock appears to be an investor’s darling, often times being talked of being undervalued. Both investors and shareholders have come to terms and have accepted the high pay cheques Kalanithi hands out to himself and his wife Kavery every year, ranking him among the top-paid CEOs in India.

    Many scions of political leaders have been given similar silver spoons but none have been able to scale up their ventures to the level that Kalanithi and the team Sun TV have. Clearly, credit should be given to his business acumen rather than just the political lineage.

    Clearly, it’s about time–during its silver jubilee year–Kala be given his due place in the media sun as an entrepreneur who has made it big. On his own steam.

  • Zee Anmol tops Hindi GECs across genres as Star Bharat climbs

    Zee Anmol tops Hindi GECs across genres as Star Bharat climbs

    BENGALURU: Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited or Zeel’s FTA Hindi GEC channel – Zee Anmol, at the second place in Broadcast Audience Research Council of India (BARC) weekly list for top 10 channels across genre, topped the Hindi GEC channels in that list.

    Zee Anmol garnered 821.210 million weekly impressions in week 36 of 2017 (Saturday, 2 September 2017 to Friday, 8 September 2017) in BARC’s list of top 10 Channels Across Genre: All India (U+R): 2+ Individuals. Zee Anmol had obtained 778.876 million impressions in BARC’s weekly list across genres for week 35 of 2017 (the previous week) and hence gained in viewership in week 36.

    Star India’s newly-renamed FTA GEC — Star Bharat — climbed up to third spot in the weekly list of top 10 channels across genres with 678.781 million weekly impressions. Star Bharat was relaunched on 28 August 2017 and in its very first week under the renamed avatar, (and BARC week 35 of 2017), Star Bharat attained rank eight in BARC’s top 10 channels across genre list with 531.083 million impressions.

    The pole position in BARC’s across genres top 10 channels list was yet again held by the Sun TV Network’s Tamil flagship GEC Sun TV, however with lower weekly impressions of 968.3564 million in week 36 as compared to the 1,009.285 million weekly impressions in week 35. Because of the fall in Sun TV’s weekly impressions in week 36, the gap between the top 2 channels in the across genres list –Sun TV and Zee Anmol has narrowed considerably.

    Three channels from Star India, two channels from The Sun TV Network, Zeel and Sony Pictures Network India (SPN) and one channel from Network 18 (or Viacom 18) made it to the top 10 channels across genre list in week 36 of 2017. From the market’s perspective, seven Hindi GECs’, two Telugu GECs’ and one Tamil GEC made it to the weekly top 10 channels across genre list for week 36 of 2017.

    Zeel’s flagship Hindi GEC Zee TV was placed fourth 667.948 million impressions in week 36 – the channel had been ranked fourth in week 35 with lower weekly impressions of 642.612 million. Star India’s flagship Hindi GEC Star Plus was ranked fifth in week 36 and 35 with 628.518 million weekly impressions and 626.212 million weekly impressions respectively.

    Viacom 18’s flagship Hindi GEC Colors was ranked sixth in week 36 of 2017 with 588.154 million weekly impressions, followed by the Sun Network’s flagship Telugu GEC Gemini TV with 532.878 million weekly impressions at seventh place.

    SPN’s flagship Hindi GEC Sony Entertainment Television was eighth in week 36 of 2017 with 522.701 million weekly impressions followed by the same network’s women focused Hindi GEC Sony Pal with 500.173 million weekly impressions at ninth place.

    Star India’s flagship Telugu GEC was tenth the top 10 channels across genre in week 36 of 2017 with 492.482 million weekly impressions.

  • KBC returns SET to top 10 channels across genre list

    KBC returns SET to top 10 channels across genre list

    BENGALURU: The ninth season of the Indian spin-off of the very popular Who Will Become a Millionaire under the Indian moniker Kaun Banega Crorepati or KBC commenced on Monday, 28 August 2017.

    According to sources, this season has broken registration records of all previous seasons by registering 19.8 million citizens on the show. And,the viewership of the game show’s episodes over five days until Friday, 1 September 2017 was good enough to bring Sony Pictures Network’s flagship Hindi GEC Sony Entertainment Television (SET) into the top 10 channels across genre list for week 35 of 2017.

    SET garnered ninth rank with 504.095 million weekly impressions Broadcast Audience Research Council of India (BARC) list for week 35 of 2017 (Saturday, 26 August 2017 to Friday, 1 September 2017) – Top 10 Channels Across Genre : All India (Urban+Rural or U+R) : 2+ Individuals. The channel had last appeared in the top 10 channels list across genres in week 11 of 2017 (Saturday, 11 May 2017 to Friday, 17 May 2017) at eighth place with 472.118 million weekly impressions.

    KBC was the second most watched primetime programme in the Hindi GEC (U) markets in week 35 of 2017 with 6.253 million impressions according to BARC data for the top 5 Hindi GEC programmes in the Hindi Speaking Market (HSM) Urban NCCS All : Primetime (1800 – 2330 hrs) : 2+ Individuals.

    Six Hindi GEC and two GEC channels each from the Tamil and Telugu markets made up the list of the top 10 channels across genres list in week 35 of 2017. A remarkable feature for week 35 of 2017 was the presence of four Star India channels in the top10 across genres list. Further, two channels each from the Sun TV Network and Zee Entertainment Enterprises Limited (Zeel) and one channel each from Network 18 (Viacom 18) and Sony Pictures Network India (SPN) made up the top 10 channels across genre list for week 35 of 2017.

    The Sun TV Network’s flagship Tamil GEC Sun TV retained its pole position in the top 10 channels across genres list for week 35 of 2017 with 1,009.285 million weekly impressions. All five programmes in the top 5 Tamil programmes list for the TN/ Puducherry (Urban+Rural): NCCS All : Primetime (1800 – 2330 hrs) : 2+ Individuals in week 35 of 2017 were from Sun TV.

    Sun TV was followed by Zeel’s FTA Hindi GEC Zee Anmol that also retained its week 34 position of second place in week 35 with 778.876 weekly impressions. The channel’s programmes Jamai Raja and Kaala Teeka were the ranked first and second respectively in the top 5 Hindi GEC programmes in the HSM (R) : NCCS All : Prime Time (1800 – 2330 hrs) : 2+ Individuals. Further Jamai Raja on Zee Anmol was also ranked third in week 35 during primetime in the HSM GEC (U+R) markets in week 35 of 2017.

    Network 18’s flagship Hindi GEC Colors moved up one place to third rank in week 35 with 645.973 million impressions on the back of strong support from the HSM (U+R) and the HSM (U) markets during primetime for the eighth season of its reality and stunt television show Fear Factor Khatron Ke Khiladi. Zeel’s flagship Hindi GEC moved down one place to fourth place with 642.612 million impressions. Three of its shows – Kumkum Bhagya and its spinoff Kumkum Kundali and reality singing show Sa re ga ma pa Little Champs were present in the top 5 programmes list during primetime for HSM (U+R) and Kumkum Bhagya was present in the top 5 programmes list during primetime for HSM (U) for week 35 of 2017.

    Star India’s flagship Hindi GEC Star Plus was placed fifth with 626.212 million weekly impressions followed by the Sun TV Networks flagship Telugu GEC Gemini with 538.077 million impressions. Star India’s flagship Telugu GEC Star Maa was ranked seventh with 531.41 million weekly impressions followed by Star India’s FTA Hindi GEC and newly christened Star Bharat with 531.083 million weekly impressions at eighth place.

    As mentioned above SET was ranked ninth followed by Star India’s flagship Tamil GEC Star Vijay at tenth place with 486.959 million impressions.

  • BARC week 36: Sun TV continues to rule the roost by far across genres

    BARC week 36: Sun TV continues to rule the roost by far across genres

    BENGALURU: Except for a blip during the IPL weeks, the Tamil regional GEC Sun TV has held firm to its apex position in the top ten channels list based on ratings as per BARC data. While Hindi GECs’ dominated the top ten channels, taking seven of the spots, two other regional channels (besides Sun TV) have edged into the list over the past few months. Regional channels grabbed the numero uno, fifth and eighth spots in the list.

    Among the top ten channels in BARC week 36 of 2016 were three Star India Channels; two channels each from or associated with the Sun Network, the Essel Groups ZEEL, Network 18; and one from Sony Pictures Networks India Pvt Ltd.

    And so Sun TV continued to rule the roost in BARC in week 36 with 1069531 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum, followed by Star Plus, Zee TV and Colors from the Hindi GEC space at second, third and fourth positions respectively. Star Plus had 787960 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum, while Zee TV had 612813 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum, and Colors had 603413 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum

    On fifth position was another regional channel from the Sun Network – the Telugu GEC Gemini with 574960 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum. Zee Anmol and Sony Max followed at sixth and seventh spots with 488422 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum and 463425 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum. Another regional channel associated with the Network 18 stable – ETV Telugu come in at eighth place with 453836 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum. The last two spots were taken by Star India’s Star Utsav with 437286 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum and Life OK with 423635 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum at ninth and tenth place in that order.

  • BARC week 36: Sun TV continues to rule the roost by far across genres

    BARC week 36: Sun TV continues to rule the roost by far across genres

    BENGALURU: Except for a blip during the IPL weeks, the Tamil regional GEC Sun TV has held firm to its apex position in the top ten channels list based on ratings as per BARC data. While Hindi GECs’ dominated the top ten channels, taking seven of the spots, two other regional channels (besides Sun TV) have edged into the list over the past few months. Regional channels grabbed the numero uno, fifth and eighth spots in the list.

    Among the top ten channels in BARC week 36 of 2016 were three Star India Channels; two channels each from or associated with the Sun Network, the Essel Groups ZEEL, Network 18; and one from Sony Pictures Networks India Pvt Ltd.

    And so Sun TV continued to rule the roost in BARC in week 36 with 1069531 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum, followed by Star Plus, Zee TV and Colors from the Hindi GEC space at second, third and fourth positions respectively. Star Plus had 787960 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum, while Zee TV had 612813 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum, and Colors had 603413 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum

    On fifth position was another regional channel from the Sun Network – the Telugu GEC Gemini with 574960 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum. Zee Anmol and Sony Max followed at sixth and seventh spots with 488422 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum and 463425 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum. Another regional channel associated with the Network 18 stable – ETV Telugu come in at eighth place with 453836 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum. The last two spots were taken by Star India’s Star Utsav with 437286 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum and Life OK with 423635 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum at ninth and tenth place in that order.

  • BARC week 31: Sun TV continues dominance across genres

    BARC week 31: Sun TV continues dominance across genres

    BENGALURU: The list of top 10 channels by ratings across channels by Broadcast Audience Research of India (BARC) had three channels from Star India – Star Plus, Star Utsav and Life OK, two each from the Essel group (Zee TV and Zee Anmol), the Sun Network (Sun TV and Gemini), Network 18’s (Colors and ETV Telugu). Sony Max marked its presence as the lone entrant from the Sony Pictures Networks India Private Limited (SPNIL) stable.

    Sun TV continued to dominate the ratings across all genres as per data for week 31 –Saturday 30 July to Friday 5 August 2016. Two other channels from the southern regional space, actually the Telugu space –Gemini TV and ETV Telugu joined the Tamil channel among the top 10 channels by ratings across genres during the period. The other channels within the list of top channels across channels were from the Hindi general entertainment channels (Hindi GEC) space

    Sun TV topped the list with 1030933 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum during week 31, far ahead of the next contender – Star Plus with 695115 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum which stood at second place. Zee TV with 640749 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum at third place was followed by Colors with 572518 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum at fourth place.

    Star Utsav followed at fifth place with 529638 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum with Sony MAX at the sixth spot with 515269 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum. Another Essel group channel – the free to air Zee Anmol came in at number 7 with 506715 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum.

    Gemini TV with 458000 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum was eighth followed by another Star India channel – Life OK with 433411 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum at ninth place. ETV Telugu followed Life OK at tenth place with 433019 Weekly Impressions (000s) sum.