Tag: MTV

  • MTV’s latest brand film has an epic response. Watch out!

    MTV’s latest brand film has an epic response. Watch out!

    MUMBAI: In a fiercely competitive world where each individual is part of a rat race, career choices for students become talk of the town, with parents planning the lives of their little ones according to their wishes. While there are a plethora of career opportunities currently, the perception associated with only a selective profession continues to dominate the mindset. MTV’s recently launched film, “Bachchon ka Future, Bachchon Pe Chhod Do” unconventionally mirrors the reality that prevails within this competitive world.

    With one’s arrival in this world comes a series of career plans, decided by your baaju wali aunties, nagging fufajis, mamas and chachas. The film creatively shows the persona of a new-born via an ‘egg’, in a hospital set-up where the family members are discussing the ‘egg’s future’, seconds after it has stepped into this world- “yeh bada ho kar omelet banega”, followed by the other concerned folks who think, scrambled egg, egg bhurji or even an ‘MBA, Mast Boiled Anda’ are perfect options for the new-born.

    This funny yet relevant film brings to light a serious concern. The pressure of board exams in schools, semester exams in college and several competitive exams that continue to control your life, lead to disturbing consequences- depression and suicide. MTV’s film drives home a significant message that encourages the future of the nation to choose what suits them the best, without anybody’s uncalled for advice, interference, and subjugation. Understanding the importance of this issue, MTV has associated with Childline India to extend support. So, if you see any child in distress dial 1098 or log on https://www.childlineindia.org.in/ to save the future.

  • MTV ka #TVKahaanGaya campaign puts spotlight on platform agnostic youth content

    MTV ka #TVKahaanGaya campaign puts spotlight on platform agnostic youth content

    MUMBAI: MTV, India’s no. 1 youth brand, today revealed its ‘MTV Ka #TVKahaanGaya’ campaign, showcasing the channel’s strength on Viacom18’s digital platform VOOT. With an aim to entertain, lead, break stereotypes and collaborate with young people through its evocative communication, MTV has always stood out of the crowd with youth relevant shows. Proving once again that good content is platform agnostic, the MTV ka #TVKahaanGaya campaign is a pragmatic showcase of how the youth is attracted to consuming relevant content at their own pace and time. MTV’s leading shows such as Roadies, Splitsvilla, Love School, MTV Unplugged and The Anti-Social Network are being watched for 2.5 Billion2 minutes on VOOT.

    Commenting on the campaign, Ferzad Palia, Head – Youth, Music & English Entertainment, Viacom18 said, ““The perception today is that the Indian youth spends lesser time-consuming content on TV, which couldn’t be farther from the truth. Time spent on TV content AND online video has gone up amongst youth. As the country’s leading youth brand, we understand that to keep our audience engaged, content that is platform agnostic, speaks their language and is available to them any time is what will win their heart. The MTV ka #TVKahaanGaya campaign is conceptualised from that thought and lands this creative rendition in the quirky MTV style.  Over the last year, our TV ratings have doubled and consumption on VOOT has grown 3-fold, a testament to our belief that content is the king. Comparing to the previous season, shows such as Roadies Real Heroes have accounted for 42% viewership3 growth on VOOT and MTV Unplugged has seen an increase of 52%, respectively.”

    The ‘MTV Ka #TVKahaanGaya’ campaign exhibits an equilibrium between the linear television and its digital platform, VOOT. With a mix of content available on the channel, the monthly watch time for MTV shows on VOOT has been consistently growing.  With youth driven shows being aired on VOOT, Splitsvilla S11 has seen a growth of 77% in its hours of content as compared to the previous season. With major share of consumption happening in the non-metro cities, the digital platform, VOOT is in sync with linear television.

    Speaking about youth content on VOOT, Akash Banerji, Head- Advertising Video On Demand Business, Viacom18 Digital Ventures said, “Fandom is a phenomenon that transcends platforms and can help brands grow in both linear and OTT. MTV content works very well on VOOT and has engaged 30% of VOOT Viewers4 till date. As a network we have successfully explored content synergy between MTV and VOOT with popular MTV series – Kaisi Yeh Yaariyan season 3 being launched as a VOOT original garnering 32 mn views5.

  • MTV captivates Roadies’ fans with a thrilling stunt on a billboard

    MTV captivates Roadies’ fans with a thrilling stunt on a billboard

    MUMBAI: India’s No.1 Youth Brand, MTV continues to be the frontrunner in the category and has upped the ante with India’s first ever stunt on a   billboard which was created on Saturday, 9th February. Setting a perfect parallel, the live billboard, conceptualized by MTV and executed by Zenith was placed at a thrilling height of 35 ft. in Chitrakoot in Andheri, Mumbai.

    Continuing its leadership in ground-breaking consumer-engagement initiatives, MTV provided a unique, one-of-its-kind experiential activity to the Roadies fanatics with a popular task, inspired from the fifth season of the iconic franchise. The billboard gathered a humongous crowd of fans who were pumped to be given a chance to accomplish the task live and compete head on. The very first to be elevated on the staggering height and compete were actors and reality show stars, Divya Agarwal and ex- Roadie, Varun Sood, who will also be seen in the journey of Roadies Real Heroes on MTV’s digital platform.

    Commenting on the successful execution of the live billboard task, Navin Shenoy, Marketing Head –Youth, Music & English Entertainment, Viacom18 said, “Roadies epitomizes fierce competition and audacious challenges for thrill seekers. So, we owe it to the fans to add to the thrill factor on Roadies year on year. The team cracked a really audacious idea- an iconic Roadies task performed live on a billboard. It’s definitely a first in India. We are committed to maintaining our innovative, disruptive streak as brand MTV.”

    The breathtaking live billboard stunt was a complete breakthrough in re-defining the passion and boldness that Roadies espouses for. The 16th season of Droom.in MTV Roadies Real Heroes powered by Oppo and co-powered by Frankfinn Institute of Air Hostess Training and Woodland is up for a lot more action and quirky stunts with the auditions episode on every Sunday, 7PM only on MTV.

  • MTV associates with Brave Combat Federation for ‘Brave 20’

    MTV associates with Brave Combat Federation for ‘Brave 20’

    MUMBAI: MTV, India’s youth brand, is all set to bring the fight series MTV Brave 20 in association with the Brave Combat Federation presented by Mercury Sports Entertainment on 17 February at 9 pm.

    The two-hour episode will showcase the epic fight that took place in Hyderabad on 22 December 2018. In addition to the special episode, the channel will also air the fight episodes from all the 23 seasons, MTV Brave Series, starting 25 February, Monday to Friday at 10 pm on MTV, also available on VOOT.

    One of the largest Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) organisations in the world, Brave Combat Federation is the truly global and fastest growing MMA promotion in history, it is also the strongest sports media property in the Middle East. As a sport that is rapidly gaining mileage in India, Brave Combat is the only federation offering a true global platform in the country.

    With an increasing growth in the content consumption for Mixed Martial Arts especially among the youth, MTV Brave provides a perfect platform to explore the hidden gems and drive positive perception towards Mixed Martial Arts as a budding sport in India.

    MTV Brave will provide a perfect blend of entertainment and intense fights with some of the most influential MMA fighters like Abdul Muneer, the star of the first-ever Indian super fight who has several boxing championships to his credit. Other fighters such as Mohammad Farhad and Kantharaj Shankar Agasa are pioneers in the field of kickboxing and Judo, respectively, and successfully made their transition to the MMA cage.

  • MTV to up its game in 2019 with new format shows

    MTV to up its game in 2019 with new format shows

    MUMBAI: After claiming to have doubled its viewership in 2018, MTV is all set to up its game by launching the eighth season of MTV Unplugged, a singing show, on 26 January, 8 pm onwards. Royal Stag Barrel Select and MTV have collaborated to present the program.

    Viacom18 youth music and English entertainment head Ferzad Palia said that 2018 was a landmark year for them. “Ace of Space, Elevator Pitch, Dating In The Dark worked really well for us. Ace Of Space did so well that we had to extend it to 30 days because of consumer demand. It was a big gamble with the daily reality format. It gave us rich dividends both on TV and on Voot. 2018 has made us more bullish about 2019,” he said.

    Palia added that the plan is to introduce new shows and formats that haven’t been seen ever. Also, hundreds of hours of content, bringing seasons of the old shows and seven to eight new format shows are on the cards.

    According to him, the year 2019 will observe key trends like content will be consumed by viewers whenever and wherever they want to. He said, “The other trend that I see is organic growth of television will continue because you have a large base of audiences just coming in to consume entertainment on TV and there will also be significant growth on digital consumption.”

    Looking at the consumption of TV over the past three years, It has grown at a faster rate than it was growing earlier, he added. Palia feels that that the rate of digital consumption has also grown significantly because in the smaller base, the percentages are high so more content is getting consumed across devices. “So the honest truth is that the content will win if the stories are breaking through the clutter because consumers are spoilt for choices as they have options as to what content to consume and on which screen,” he concluded. 

  • Bob Bakish on turning around Viacom, tie up with CBS, company’s culture and future

    Bob Bakish on turning around Viacom, tie up with CBS, company’s culture and future

    MUMBAI: Viacom CEO Bob Bakish describes his tenure at the giant company using two words – turnaround and evolution. At the end of 2016, Paramount Pictures was coming off a year where it had lost half a billion dollars and consumed another billion in cash. There was friction with distributors with the company’s cable networks not performing as they should have. It highlighted a trend line that was moving in the wrong direction. Cut to 2019, Paramount has delivered an earnings improvement in seven straight quarters with earnings improvement. The studio produced films that matter and made money on them. The television business delivered 400 million dollars in revenue, putting out nine series. Bakish has scripted one of the most fascinating times in the media and entertainment world with his work as CEO of Viacom. At CES 2019, he sat down for a fireside chat to reveal how we made it happen. Here are the excerpts of that insightful conversation with Variety.

    You’ve been on record recently saying Viacom doesn’t require a transformational deal. In this environment there were companies even bigger than yours are consolidating. How is that position tenable?

    Look, we and I, continue to believe there’s a lot of value in the assets we already own. In 2016 people thought that MTV was dead and buried but today it is the fastest growing network in television. Its audience is up again, in the current quarter, in double digits and we are already beginning to benefit from that resurgence from a monetisation standpoint… there’s a lot of value to the assets we already own. We, unlike most media companies, are truly a global operating media company, we don’t just have sales forces outside the US, you know we own the number one broadcast network in Argentina, we are major broadcaster on Channel 5, we are making content all over the world. We own half of the leading Indian media company called Viacom18 which owns the Colors brand. There’s a lot of value there and if you think about the transition we are in from an industry standpoint. Back in February of ’17 we started talking about something we call a flagship brand which was partially about prioritisation but it was also about unlocking opportunities through multi-platform expression. If you look at MTV, it’s only not only a linear cable network with substantial programming slate, but it also has a piece of the Paramount film slate. We started a digital native division called the Viacom digital Studios which produces original content in short form for distribution both in front of the wall social and other places… that has dramatically taken us from number 22 in space into top 10. There’s a lot of opportunity and when we got to our fourth fiscal quarter of ’18 we saw our company to return to growth, something that hasn’t been the case since ’14. So, we think there’s a lot of growth ahead.

    And relative to some of our peers, we are further along in making this transition. Look at the ad business, it’s not all 30 seconds up. We got an advanced ad business with significant branded content assets, significant data-driven assets. We can insert dynamically in 90 per cent of the VoD homes in the US. Something nobody else we can do. We have been doing M&A, we have been doing what I call accelerant deals. We bought a company called Whosay, a branded content company, which clearly increased our capabilities in the lower-end of the branded content space from a price perspective which is important. We also bought a company called Vidcon which is ground zero for social influencers… it has really strengthened our legacy with young-adult audiences and associated talented and it is also an extension of our experiential business, we most recently bought a company called Awesomeness which people think of as a web company and it’s true that they are an expert in marketing content on web but it’s also true it’s a studio in its own right. And increasing our participation in creation of content including for third parties is a big push we are making as a company and that Awesomeness has produced among other things “To All the Boys I have Loved Before”, which was amongst the most watched shows on Netflix.

    But these are very small deals. Are you going to look at making bigger deals or are you looking at more of the same smaller deals?

    Scale is very much in vogue, vertical integration is very much in vogue. If you look at the history of the industry in certain media vertical integration doesn’t tend to work, bigger is not always better. I don’t think that is the necessary path. What is really important is that you have a plan and you know where you are going and you’re executing against and you are achieving growth and that’s exactly what we are doing.

    Let’s address the elephant in the room. There’s a plenty of speculation that Viacom and CBS can be combined this year. How do you manage for you know an uncertain future? Do you have a distinct vision that you are planning for Viacom with smaller acquisitions or are you trying to build for a bunch of different possible futures?

    I’m a huge believer in having a plan. Our plan is fundamentally based on the assets we have because that is the only thing I can bet on for sure. We got to focus, we got to play through, we got to execute, we got to grow because there’s only one thing I know for sure that at the end of the year you are going to be talking to me or you are going to be talking to somebody else. What you don’t want to have to say is that ‘well yeah we had this opportunity but we got distracted and we didn’t get it done’. So our mission continues to be focussed on the assets that we have, focus on execution, look broadly to capture value and opportunistically see what else happens, and that’s what we do day in and day out and that’s what we’ll keep doing.

    However, in this climate where the pay-TV business is challenged, you guys are dealing with your tensions with some of major distributors. That could end up dropping key channels. How do you manage the future?

    You have to make sure you’re adding values. Point one and two is that you have to recognise how the world is changing. To the first point, talking about what we are doing in distribution, we broadened our ability to add value for our mutual benefit, both our partner’s benefit and Viacom’s benefit and certainly our whole extension to advanced advertising, what we call AMS, is fundamental to that.

    The second thing I would say in terms of how the world is changing is the fundamental thing is going on is fragmentation in terms of how people access content. In the television space 85 per cent people had the same product and that was big basic and that was very nice structure. Today, that’s no longer true and it continues to fragment. So you have a vast majority of the people in the highest priced segment, but you got people at 45 dollars, that price is starting to creep up as people are trying to make economic businesses there. We have people in teens, people around 10 bucks in terms of the SVoD space, then you have some single digit numbers and then you have free, the AVoD mode. So, that world is not going to change, that’s the world we are going to live in, and what’s important is that we take these called flagship brands and we make sure that we participate in all those levels. The big basic levels, that’s fairly obvious… you know we are active in VMVPD in the OTT space, we are also active in the SVoD space through our third party production business.

    Are those deals in the future big enough?

    We are in the state of transformation of our industry. You can either view that as glass half full or half empty. I view it as half full. Global distribution really is the catalyst that will turn this whole decline of television argument on its head because you have 3G, soon 4G, never mind 5G as 5G is more about fixed broadband. It will eventually be handset. If you have 500 million pay TV homes outside the US at the high side, probably 300 million quality ones, if you take out India and China. These kinds of deals where you bring in product either products that look like exactly what you get on television so that’s Telefonica and aggregated product that combines a lot of different things under one brand.

    We are in Indonesia with a mobile carrier that has 160 million subscribers. We have Nick Play and Nick Junior Play apps which provide access to that product on an on-demand basis. Some of these are through a third party intermediary, you could think Amazon channel store, and some of these are called B2B2C deals with carriers. You could think about Telefonica or Telenor or Telecom Cell. Now in this kind of hybrid economy of distribution, unfortunately, everybody doesn’t get the same thing, people are getting different products bigger bundles or smaller bundles.

    So you look at the difference between Sling and Dish in the US. For us we are carried on both, but all the Sling ads are dynamic, we can insert a specific ad to a specific person based on specific data. On the Dish platform we can’t do that, for obvious reasons, it’s a DTH going down, we can’t do it because of some technical work but that is another big move forward in terms of our ability to create values and we are in the super early days of that.

    So your focus will be more and more on production now, and what’s interesting about that is if there is a double edged sword to the success there. Doesn’t it make it harder for you to get eyeballs because people are watching your content on Netflix or Facebook? Doesn’t it hurt your core business?

    No, it doesn’t. For two reasons, one is whether we make a show for Facebook or not it’s not going to influence whether they have shows on their platforms. Point two is the most important thing from a consumer perspective and that is to continue to have our flagship brand on top for consumers that think about entertainment. And that entertainment might be going to see a movie in a theatre, on your flat screen watching pay video bundle or access to product on an app. Out of the extended ecosystem of entertainment experience associated with these brands that cross this fragmented environment is what it’s all about. It provides great solutions for advertisers. It’s all about being able to get reach to say men 18-34, which is not easy to reach these days, it is harder than ever. Use a cross-section of platforms, leveraging our linear distribution, adding our app distribution, adding our over the top distribution, adding our Viacom Digital Studios product, in branded content, in a programme that synchronised to reach that 18-34 group.

    How did you energise thousands of employees especially at Viacom, because looking at their world, there is pessimism, there is negativity. How did you get people going?

    You have a plan and you have to make sure people understand what it is and how they fit in and both you and they can understand if you are making progress and if so it is the path you want to take. Or if you are not making progress in one year you can see if you want to take some different direction. If you talk to people at Viacom they fundamentally believe in our plan. That we are actively participating in places that we haven’t before including providing original content on a day-in-day-out basis to the AVOD digital stratosphere and that we are acting in advance. In total, we actually grew the earnings of the company and all of that is the culture of content. Whether you make short-form, long-form, feature-length or event, whether you are on the creative side, monetisation side, or sports side, they all are working in this culture of content and they see the progress we’re making. I know because I talk to them, at least quarterly, I talk to them on Facebook live and take questions and ask them do you see the progress. Because at the end of the day people are pretty simple, it comes down to what’s in it for them and that is the future.

    Here at Las Vegas with CES you are spending a lot of time. What are the kind of technologies that are catching your eye?

    If you think about the fundamentals of our business there are kind of two things we are working on. One is we get the consumers to spend more time, that’s important, and two is that you are getting paid for it. If you have those two things, everything else can sort itself out. And if you look at the arc of consumption, I remember because I’ve been in this business 30 odd years when second TV sets starting showing up in scale in kids’ bedrooms and other places and that drove more minutes. That was a good thing and then more reasons like computers with infrastructures started to show up in places like offices and that wasn’t really in the heavy video space but there were more impressions and of course much more recently you get into over the top and you get into mobile and that’s much more ton of a product. There are two things that are coming like a freight train. One is the continuing acceleration of broadband infrastructure both in the name of 5G which is definitely coming as you all know, maybe its fixed broadband first but that’s going to flood in and all the wireless carriers when you talk to them all they say we need use cases and certainly entertainment is a use case and the other thing that’s got less press at CES is 10G and that’s the cable industry talking about their next length. They are delivering 1G now and their next push is to deliver 10x that which will be five years or something. 5G autonomous cars that people don’t have to drive is also coming. So just like adding a TV set to a bedroom or adding mobile on the go, the last vestige of video free consumption is automobile.

  • IndiaCast issues disconnection notice to Independent TV

    IndiaCast issues disconnection notice to Independent TV

    MUMBAI: Viacom18 and TV18’s distribution arm IndiaCast has issued a disconnection notice to direct-to-home operator (DTH) Independent TV (Reliance Big TV) over non-payment of subscription fees.

    IndiaCast, which also distributes Eenadu Television channels in India barring the states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, intends to yank off all its channels from the operator within three weeks of the notice, which has been published in a Hindi daily.

    “This is to inform all the subscribers of Reliance Big TV/Independent TV that some or all channels of Viacom18 and ETV Network will be shut down after 3 weeks starting from the issue date of public notice because of unpaid dues,” the notice says.

    In case the two parties fail to resolve the dispute, Independent TV consumers could miss out on channels like ETV, ETV Plus, ETV, Life, ETV Cinema, ETV Abhiruchi, ETV Telangana and ETV Andhra Pradesh, CNBC TV18, CNBC Awaaz, CNN News18, News18 India, News18 Tamil Nadu, News18 Lokmat, History channel, FYI TV18, News18 Kerala, MTV, Colors, Rishtey, Nick, Vh1, Sonic, Comedy Central, Colors Infinity, MTV Beats, Rishtey Cineplex, Colors Super, Colors HD, MTV Beats HD, Colors Gujarati, Colors Marathi, Colors Bangla, Colors Kannada, Colors Odia, News18 Uttar Pradesh Uttaranchal, News18 MP Chhattisgarh, News18 Rajasthan, News18 Urdu, News18 Bihar Jharkhand, News18 Kannada and Colors Tamil.

    In accordance with the TRAI’s tariff order, IndiaCast recently bundled the networks’ 57 channels (42 SD and 15 HD) in three packs – budget, value and family. The networks have also introduced 10 channel bundles, in SD and HD versions, mapped to its markets (Hindi, North East, Kerala, Karnataka, Gujarat, Bengal, Maharashtra, Orissa, Telugu and Tamil) to allow the consumer to choose from.

  • Viacom18 to have 360-degree play for e-sports: Sidharth Kedia

    Viacom18 to have 360-degree play for e-sports: Sidharth Kedia

    MUMBAI: Esports is at an early stage of development in the country. It is expected to be the future of entertainment and holds an upcoming opportunity for brands and media to promote, reach digital natives and develop new content concepts.

    Viacom18 EVP & head corp strategy, M&A, data science and deputy chief commercial officer Sidharth Kedia said, “While e-sports is a youth phenomenon today, its growth pattern will reflect the trajectory it has followed in other parts of the world and we will see people starting to play e-sports at a much younger age group. Other OTT players just have e-sports content but we are doing a whole 360-degree play including live, TV and digital.”

    Nodwin Gaming MD Akshat Rathee said, “In about a five-year time, we will be close to the music industry and definitely bigger than all the other industries including comedy.”

    Kedia thinks that e-sports on television doesn’t exist. Though all OTT players including Hotstar, SonyLiv and Voot have delved into some kind of e-sports on digital, the industry cannot be defined because the numbers are too small. “We know the number of people that engage in e-sports. About 90 million people play PUBG in India and 30 million people play cricket game every month. These numbers will start translating into this phenomenon which will be on digital, TV and live,” he added.

    All youth focus brands and technology brands show interest in e-sports. Voot currently has some 100 hours of e-sports content out of which ESL has 40 hours of content.

    “We don’t have an end date to DreamHack since we just started. We believe no one in this country understands both kids and youth better than Viacom does and while television and digital are passive engagement platforms, e-sports is an active immersive engagement platform,” said Kedia.

    The state of sports industry over the next three to five years is estimated to grow by 5.3 per cent in Asia and 9.4 per cent in Middle East and Africa (ME&A) according to PwC Sports Survey 2018. Despite the growth in Asia and ME&A, globally the industry will witness a drop by 10.2 per cent. This is because the market conditions across the industry are stabilising as it transitions from traditional to digital media consumption, with sports leaders continuing to predict healthy growth in absolute terms.

    Viacom18 on television is experimenting and conceptualising with some interesting formats and that will not be just U Cypher that we saw on MTV. “We believe there are 150 million potential viewers of e-sports on digital and that number is only here to grow,” Kedia concluded.

  • MTV partners with Brave Combat Federation as exclusive broadcaster for India

    MTV partners with Brave Combat Federation as exclusive broadcaster for India

    MUMBAI: Brave Combat Federation, the largest mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion in Bahrain, forges a strong partnership with MTV in a bid to develop the sport in India and make it a household name. The alliance comes close on the heels of Brave’s India foray with the much talked about fight night ‘Brave 20’ slated on 22nd December, 2018 in Hyderabad. To cement the partnership among fans, advertisers and the media & entertainment ecosystem, Brave will henceforth be addressed as MTV Brave 20 in India. 

    The robust deal entails 24 hours of Brave Indian and International’s content play out. MTV will have access to Brave’s archive of fight nights, public weigh-ins and ancillary footage right from Brave 1- 19. The exclusive partnership covers content from Brave 21, 22, 23 and MTV Brave 20. 

    Elaborating on the collaboration, Ferzad Palia, Head – Youth, Music & English entertainment at Viacom18 said, “MTV has been at the core of content that is ‘Unscripted’ and ‘Disruptive’ and our partnership with Brave Combat Federation for Brave 20, takes this proposition to the next level. Given the gamut of young population in India, there is a huge potential for MMA to secure a captive audience here and inspire them for International sporting events. This is their first inroad to India and together we intend to tap into the extensive fan base this sport already enjoys in the country. He further added, “we are positive, MTV Brave will serve as our stepping stone to put India on the global map for mixed martial arts and develop a new league of talented individuals to take the legacy of Indian combat sports forward.”

    Creating a holistic reach for the property across the youth-targeted portfolio of Viacom18, the promotional spots for MTV Brave will run on- MTV, MTV Beats, VH1, Comedy Central and Colors Infinity. MTV Brave will also be promoted and telecasted on digital platforms including Jio TV and VOOT.  MTV will further promote the content across their social media platforms widening its reach to 70 million followers.

    Talking about the partnership, Akbar Rasheed, promoter MTV Brave and partner, Mercury Sports Entertainment LLP stated, “The association with MTV is a landmark one for Brave in India. We will be able to build the property much better and make it a household name. MTV is India’s most trusted youth brand and MMA is followed by youngsters.  It is a seamless brand fitment.  When we set out to scout for our broadcast partners, we were very clear about not tampering with the ethos of Brave which is nurturing and developing talent hence we wanted partners who would be equally committed. With MTV, I feel we are in safe hands and this should culminate into a long-term relationship”.

    MTV Brave 20 aims to reach MTV’s vast audience base as MTV currently has 300 million viewers and VOOT’s 45 million monthly active users, totaling 6 billion watch minutes. This is the biggest ever reach for combat sports. 

  • MTV shows you it’s bigger than you think

    MTV shows you it’s bigger than you think

    MUMBAI: It isn’t India’s number one youth brand for nothing. One look at MTV’s latest trade campaign and you know why it leads the brat pack in both marketing and programming.

    One message reads: “Cooking three billion Maggi packets and watching MTV takes the same time”. A video film goes on to explain how you can feed the whole of Pakistan plus Bangladesh by cooking for 1 billion minutes, but MTV is way bigger because it was consumed online for 6 billion minutes last year, which is also the time it takes to cook three billion packets of Maggi.

    Another one states: “Fuel prices have grown but not as fast as MTV’s viewership”. Even here, MTV has trumped the ever-growing fuel prices by actually doubling its viewership over the past one year.

    The third message goes: “The football World Cup was big – almost as big as the Roadies”. The film conveys how MTV Roadies was watched by 133 million Indians as compared to the 2018 Football World Cup which was viewed only by 111 million Indians.

    A fourth one says: “MTV’s footprint is bigger than the population of the USA”. The video drives home the point that USA stands for everything big, including its population of 330 million, outdone only by MTV whose footprint is over 454 million.

    All the messages have one goal – to make you believe that “It’s way bigger than you imagined.”

    Having kicked-off on 12 November, the ad campaign, ran for three straight weeks across multiple trade agencies in Mumbai, Delhi and Bangalore. It involved the use of high-impact inventory such as cafeteria facade, LED wall branding, LED screens, lift branding, DIGIPODS and tent cards on every desk.

    Held at the Group M Cafeteria in Mumbai and Delhi on 29 November and 30 November respectively, the campaign saw engagement through games, using a life-size JENGA and JALEBI that lasted for about an hour and a half. 

    Not only media buying agencies across India but also work spaces of major spend brands such asBMW, Ford, GSK, Google and Pepsi got a taste of MTV’s bigness.

    While rival channels in the youth genre have struggled to keep the youngsters hooked, this dynamic channel from the Viacom18 stable has found the secret sauce. The fact that season after season of its top shows like Roadies and Splitsvilla keep returning goes on to show the channel’s proved it knows how to take the pulse of the youth.