Tag: Radhika Subramaniam

  • AI strikes a divine chord with Rupam Dehi release

    AI strikes a divine chord with Rupam Dehi release

    MUMBAI: Call it byte-sized bhakti, India’s first AI band, Trilok, has dropped its latest track ‘Rupam Dehi’, a devotional tribute to Goddess Durga. Drawing its name from the Argalastotra, the chant blends prayer with poetry while reimagining tradition for the digital age.

    The music video stars Radhika Subramaniam, AI travel influencer from Collective Artists Network, and has been created entirely using AI. Set against the vibrant backdrop of Kolkata’s Durga Puja, the video captures the city’s dazzling pandals, rituals, and festive pulse, a heady mix of devotion and community spirit.

    By weaving ancient verse into a contemporary soundscape, Trilok brings India’s biggest festival alive in a way that feels both timeless and cutting-edge.

    ‘Rupam Dehi’ is now streaming across major audio and social platforms, just in time to soundtrack the season of celebrations.

  • Collective Artists Network hits the road with India’s first bilingual AI travel influencer

    Collective Artists Network hits the road with India’s first bilingual AI travel influencer

    MUMBAI: Collective Artists Network has unveiled Radhika Subramaniam, India’s first AI-powered travel influencer fluent in both English and Tamil, and the latest entrant in the firm’s expanding world of virtual creators.

    Unlike her glossier predecessor Kavya — who leans into luxe aesthetics — Radhika is your girl-next-door meets globetrotter. A Gen Z solo traveller with a backstory that reads like a millennial quit-notice, Radhika ditched her corporate job to chase culture, conversations and chai at roadside stalls across India.

    “Radhika feels like someone we all know — that one friend who took the leap and actually went on the trip. She’s thoughtful, independent, and interested in the world around her. With her, we wanted to build more than just a new kind of influencer — we wanted to create someone who could tell stories with heart, and make people feel seen,” said Collective Artists Network founder & group CEO Vijay Subramaniam.

    What sets Radhika apart isn’t just her synthetic pixels — it’s her human nuance. From local folklore to hidden cafés, she dives into places and perspectives often left behind by mainstream tourism content. And her bilingual voice allows her to bridge geographies, resonating deeply with both urban metros and regional markets.

    “There’s a warmth to Radhika that’s hard to fake. She’s not just spitting out trends or trying to be viral — she actually gets the context,” said Collective Artists Network chief revenue officer and CEO of Big Bang Social CEO Sudeep Subhash. “For brands, that’s gold. You get someone who’s always on, always in sync with your voice — but also genuinely engaging for the audience. That kind of storytelling at scale is really exciting.”

    As AI-powered influence evolves from novelty to nuance, Radhika signals a bold step forward — where connection trumps curation, and virtual creators feel less like code and more like companions.

  • Collective minds as Collective Artists Network sets stage for media power play

    Collective minds as Collective Artists Network sets stage for media power play

    MUMBAI: When content meets culture and creators meet code, you get a media revolution in the making. Collective Artists Network, long known for its fingerprints across India’s pop-cultural pulse, has officially put a name to what it’s already been quietly building: a full-blown media network that spans platforms, talent, tech, and taste.

    But don’t call it a pivot. This is less a launch than a loud confirmation of Collective’s growing dominance across original storytelling, social influence, and digital-first innovation.

    From viral storytelling brands like Terribly Tiny Tales and campus connector Under 25, to creator engine Big Bang Social and AI-optimised visual platform Galleri5, the Collective universe is already humming. Add to that new launches like Rashmika & Ru (with TTT), Marathi Minded (with Neel Salekar), and Not Funny (a creator-led comedy brand with Funcho), and you’ve got a content slate that’s part Netflix, part Reddit, part desi dopamine machine.

    And speaking of machines, meet Kavya Mehra and Radhika Subramaniam, Collective’s two AI-powered creators. They don’t blink, but they do reflect. Kavya’s all about modern parenting and daily life dilemmas, while Radhika decodes digital youth culture. Far from novelty avatars, they’re a peek into the company’s ambitions in synthetic storytelling and culturally responsive AI.

    Adding another layer to its expanding digital dharma is the launch of Sanatani Dharma, a bold new channel that dives deep into Indic tradition, mythology, rituals, and spiritual modernity. It’s Collective’s play to own a space where very few digital-first brands have dared to venture where the Ramayana meets reels, and Vedic wisdom meets algorithmic discovery.

    As Collective scales, it has brought in seasoned content veteran Sudeep Lahiri as head of channels and distribution to steer the ship across creator and platform ecosystems. With Collective’s stronghold on distribution spanning owned platforms, newsletters, and creator networks the move marks a serious upgrade in operational firepower.

    Meanwhile, Galleri5, the group’s creative tech arm, is busy building tools that can sniff out trends, benchmark creative performance, and test drive synthetic content helping creators and marketers stay two scrolls ahead of the curve.

    “In today’s world, new media is about owning eyeballs and through our content, distribution, and influence, we intend to become the media network that defines attention. We have always understood the pulse of pop culture, reflecting it when needed, and influencing it when it matters most,” said Collective Artists Network founder and group CEO Vijay Subramaniam.

    With thousands of creators, millions of impressions a month, and a content strategy that swirls together storytelling, software, and spirituality, Collective Artists Network is sketching out a new blueprint for Indian media, one where every like, loop, and live session is just another piece of a much bigger cultural puzzle.