Tag: MIPCOM 2025

  • LoglineAI Showcases the Future of AI-Powered Storytelling at MIPCOM 2025

    LoglineAI Showcases the Future of AI-Powered Storytelling at MIPCOM 2025

    Cannes, France: LoglineAI, founded by Vishnu Mohta, is set to make waves at MIPCOM 2025, unveiling how the studio is transforming global content development with its intelligent, human-guided AI workflows.

    At the intersection of creativity and technology, LoglineAI helps studios, streamers, and brands turn ideas, scripts, or audio concepts into cinematic-quality videos—faster, more efficiently, and without compromising emotional depth.

    The studio’s adaptive pipeline addresses real-world production challenges such as character and visual consistency, multi-lingual dubbing with accurate lip-sync, emotion-aware scene design, and rapid previsualization. Its integrated approach reduces cost and turnaround time while maintaining storytelling fidelity and creative control.

    Recent collaborations with SVF Entertainment and Sooper highlight these capabilities—producing AI-generated teasers, visual episodes, and concept-testing promos that have redefined content readiness for streaming and theatrical platforms alike.

    “At LoglineAI, we’re not replacing creativity—we’re amplifying it,” says Vishnu Mohta, Founder of LoglineAI. “Our goal is to help creators and studios move from concept to screen with greater speed, consistency, and imagination—powered by responsible AI.”

    Meet the LoglineAI team at MIP Innovation Lab – Pod P-1.C66, where they’ll be showcasing new AI-assisted production workflows, creative case studies, and global collaboration opportunities.

    ? Learn more at logline.ai 
     

  • 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.

  • Mipcom 2025: Glance to crack the code on what audiences actually want

    Mipcom 2025: Glance to crack the code on what audiences actually want

    PARIS: In a media landscape where Netflix and YouTube hoover up nearly half of all US streaming hours, knowing what audiences want isn’t just useful—it’s survival.

    Glance, the TV and video market intelligence outfit, will lay bare the winning formulas at Mipcom Cannes 2025 next month, drawing on audience data from more than 120 territories to answer the industry’s most vexing question: who’s watching what, how and why?

    Frédéric Vaulpré, senior vice-president, and Maryam Ramassamy, international research director, will lead the session on 13  October, tackling how content creators can stand out as linear TV withers and streaming platforms multiply like rabbits.

    The presentation will dissect BVoD strategies including TF1+’s digital ad revenue surge, and explore the curious phenomenon of “co-petition”—traditional broadcasters cosying up to the very streaming giants eating their lunch. With advertisers fixated on the golden 25-49 demographic and revenues under pressure, the old rules no longer apply.

    Glance will showcase how hyper distribution—flinging content across AVoD, Fast, SVoD and linear channels simultaneously—often trumps exclusivity. The session will also examine how content is tapping into geopolitical anxiety, evolving gender norms and early-2000s nostalgia, whilst high-concept formats embrace AI and other shiny new tech.

    “The media landscape is more fragmented than ever, yet the need for precise audience intelligence has never been greater,” said Vaulpré.

    Ramassamy added: “Our industry is trying to cope with a fundamental change in how audiences consume TV, in both substance and form. The storytelling needs to be closer to audiences’ current state of mind.”

    Glance, part of Médiamétrie, delivers official ratings for more than 7,000 channels and works with over 100 data providers and 230 major broadcasters, streaming services and production studios worldwide. The Paris-based firm employs over 700 people and notched  a turnover of €103.5m in 2024.

    The session takes place at 9 am on 13 October in the Grand Auditorium at the Palais des Festivals.

  • Nippon TV bets on female-driven crime and comedy for global conquest

    Nippon TV bets on female-driven crime and comedy for global conquest

    CANNES: Japan’s Nippon TV is rolling the dice on two female-fronted scripted formats as it muscles into the lucrative international content market ahead of Mipcom 2025.

    The broadcaster unveiled Murderous Encounter, a dark romantic thriller about journalists investigating serial killings, and The Reluctant Preacher, a sharp comedy following an unmotivated teacher’s transformation. Both feature strong female protagonists battling personal demons whilst tackling crime and injustice.

    “We are confident that these stories can be successfully localised, captivating audiences in any market,” said Nippon TV head of international sales, content business and distribution Sayako Aoki.

    The Japanese giant is riding high on format success. Its drama Mother holds the record for most adaptations of an Asian series globally, with local versions spanning 11 countries from Turkey to Saudi Arabia. Nearly 90 per cent of Nippon TV’s content intellectual property is owned in-house, giving it hefty margins on international sales.

    Murderous Encounter follows two journalists whose professional rivalry turns romantic whilst investigating the Horus Eye Murders. As their relationship deepens, suspicion mounts that one might be the serial killer they’re hunting. The producers behind hits My Lover’s Secret and Your Turn to Kill are banking on their signature twist-heavy storytelling to hook global audiences.

    The Reluctant Preacher centres on a demotivated teacher assigned to a problem class who unexpectedly becomes a passionate educator delivering bold sermons. The comedy-drama ranked number one in its Japanese time slot among children and second among teenagers. Netflix has already snapped up global streaming rights.

    Both series have clocked over 2 million views on advertising-supported video platforms, signalling strong domestic appetite. The move underscores Japanese broadcasters’ growing confidence in exporting homegrown content as global streaming wars intensify demand for fresh formats.

    Nippon TV’s aggressive international push includes launching Gyokuro Studio for unscripted formats and establishing a Los Angeles business office targeting US and Latin American markets. The company owns streaming giant Hulu in Japan, giving it additional leverage in content distribution deals.

  • MIPCOM Cannes 2025 puts creators centre stage

    MIPCOM Cannes 2025 puts creators centre stage

    PARIS: Mipcom Cannes is recasting itself as the global meeting ground for the creator economy, unveiling a 13–16 October programme that director Lucy Smith calls “the biggest generational shift the market has ever seen”. She declared the creator economy “no longer emerging—it’s arrived”, signalling a fresh era for storytelling, distribution and monetisation.

    The scale remains vast: organisers expect more than 10,500 delegates from over 100 countries to pack the Palais des Festivals and surrounding beachfront. Joining the traditional powerhouses—Disney, Warner Bros Discovery, Sony Pictures Entertainment, Paramount Global, Banijay, BBC Studios, ZDF Studios and ITV Studios—are creator-led platforms and digital natives such as YouTube, TikTok, Snapchat, Dhar Mann Studios, Tubi, Samsung TV Plus and Luma AI. Big advertisers and agencies including Mattel, Toys“R”Us, Ancestry, Dentsu and McCann are coming to broker brand-funded projects.

    YouTube mounts its most ambitious presence yet: a dedicated space on the Croisette, daily workshops and a headline keynote with EMEA vice-president Pedro Pina and BBC Studios digital chief Jasmine Dawson in conversation with industry analyst Evan Shapiro. The rebadged MIP Creative Hub—formerly the Producers Hub—will host four days of matchmaking between creators, studios and brands.

    Fresh summits aim to blur the lines between TV, tech and social platforms. The BrandStorytelling Summit, imported from Sundance, will showcase how advertisers and digital talent collaborate on narrative campaigns. The Innovation Lab expands with an AI summit and new demo areas for cloud production, virtual sets and immersive formats. Panels will dissect monetisation models from Fast and AVoD to direct-to-fan subscriptions.

    MIPJunior, the kids’ pre-market on 11–12 October, moves into the Palais for the first time, offering dedicated matchmaking and a premiere of Ki & Hi in the Panda Kingdom, based on Kevin Tran’s best-selling manga.
    High-wattage speakers include Mattel Studios president Robbie Brenner, Banijay chief Marco Bassetti, Mediawan Pictures CEO Elisabeth d’Arvieu and Toys“R”Us CMO Kim Miller Olko, alongside creators Callum “Callux” McGinley and Dhar Mann. World premieres on the main stage feature Paramount’s Boston Blue, ZDF’s Ku’damm 77 and a Sony preview of The Miniature Wife, with cast members Donnie Wahlberg, Sonequa Martin-Green and Matthew Macfadyen expected.

    By weaving creators into every strand—from keynotes to co-production hubs—MIPCOM is betting that the next wave of global television will be forged as much by YouTubers and TikTokers as by Hollywood studios. The 2025 edition aims to prove that the Croisette can be the crossroads where legacy broadcasters and digital disruptors strike their biggest deals yet.