Tag: Vikram Chandra

  • Surbhi Nagpal heads to Wion and Zee Business as national head sales

    Surbhi Nagpal heads to Wion and Zee Business as national head sales

    MUMBAI: She’s moving out of Outbrain and into Zee Media. Sales hotshot Surbhi Nagpal will be leading national sales for Wion and Zee Business.. Based in Noida, Nagpal will spearhead efforts to drive revenue generation, optimise sales operations, and enhance the profitability of both the channels.

    Surbhi has more than 20 years of work experience in both and linear and digital sales, having worked at companies such as  NDTV India, Outbrain, Discovery Communications India, and Disney+ Hotstar.

    The post graduate diploma holder in international business had the right start to her career when she joined Taj Hotels in Delhi in 2001 and rose to become deputy manager sales within four years. She then worked at American Express for a brief period before tasting blood in television sales  when she joined NDTV India  as a senior sales manager looking after NDTV Good Times and NDTV Lifestyle.

    She moved to Aidem Ventures for a while after which she rejoined NDTV Lifestyle as vice-president sales –  a post she held for more than three years. Her impressive profile got her next assignment as national head international business at Star India. She was shifted to Disney+Hotstar as national vertical head for FMCG (F&B). Challenging though her job was, she parted ways after nearly three years to join Discovery Communications as director sales. Three and a half years later she moved on to join Vikram Chandra’s editorji when Outbrain came calling.

    Her comprehensive knowledge and wide exposure to the media sector, combined with her ability to adapt to shifting market conditions, positions her as a key driver of growth at Zee Media, going forward.

  • WION & Zee Business’ InSight 2024 conclave sets the stage for a transformative year ahead

    WION & Zee Business’ InSight 2024 conclave sets the stage for a transformative year ahead

    Mumbai: InSight, the flagship conclave presented by WION & Zee Business, recently convened an esteemed gathering of industry leaders, esteemed journalists, and visionary moderators to illuminate the path forward for India’s future. This landmark event served as a platform for insightful discussions, thought-provoking fireside chats, and engaging sessions, all aimed at deciphering the complexities of the past year and charting a visionary course for the year ahead. The conclave showcased the unwavering commitment of both media giants to deliver insightful and engaging content that resonates with viewers globally. It was streamed live on WION & Zee Business’ respective YouTube channels.

    The on-ground conclave comprised of a fireside chat with the guest of honour, minister of state for road transport & gighways and civil aviation General V. K. Singh (Retd). Subsequent sessions delved into diverse topics including ‘Changing Investment Trends and the Future Ahead’, featuring SBI Mutual Fund deputy MD and joint CEO D.P. Singh, engaging in thought-provoking dialogue with Anil Singhvi, Zee Business, and Vikram Chandra, WION. The conversation explored the evolving dynamics of investment and the burgeoning participation of retail investors in shaping market trends. A strategic conversation on ‘Accelerating Progress – Mapping the Evolution of India’s Automotive Landscape’ featured Maruti Suzuki India Sr executive officer, marketing & sales, Shashank Srivastava and BMW Group India president & CEO Vikram Pawah.

    WION & Zee Business chief business officer Madhu Soman lauded the success of InSight, stating, “As we reflect on the success of this conclave, we are reminded of our core mission—to inform, to inspire, and to empower. The overwhelming response affirms that our efforts to create a platform for meaningful discourse have struck a chord with our audience, driving us to continue pushing the boundaries of content delivery.”

    Zee Media Corp Ltd (ZMCL) chief revenue officer Mona Jain echoed this sentiment, highlighting, “InSight exemplifies our dedication to fostering informed dialogue and facilitating knowledge-sharing among industry leaders and experts. As we navigate the complexities of an ever-changing world, events like these play a crucial role in shaping our collective understanding and driving positive change.”

    In addition to the enriching discussions, attendees were treated to a special performance by Anirban Dasgupta, Stand-up Comedian and writer, adding a touch of humour and entertainment to the proceedings.

    As InSight drew to a close, attendees left with renewed optimism and determination. Armed with their insights, participants are ready to tackle the challenges and embrace the opportunities that lie ahead in 2024 and beyond. Watch the full stream on WION & Zee Business’ YouTube channels.

  • RP Sanjiv Goenka Group picks 51% stake in Vikram Chandra’s Editorji

    RP Sanjiv Goenka Group picks 51% stake in Vikram Chandra’s Editorji

    NEW DELHI: Editorji founder Vikram Chandra announced on Twitter this morning that RP Sanjiv Goenka Group has acquired the majority stake of 51 per cent in his online personalised news platform. 

    Chandra will continue to hold his MD position, while Airtel and HT will remain investors in the platform, which he had started in September 2018, after spending 24 years as a television journalist. 

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    RP Sanjiv Goenka had recently signed a deal with Fortune Media group as well, to publish the magazine in India. 

  • Freedom of expression, personalised reach attracting mainstream journos to digital platforms

    Freedom of expression, personalised reach attracting mainstream journos to digital platforms

    NEW DELHI: The competition between traditional v/s digital is only deepening with each passing day, in every field imaginable. From education to shopping, to marketing, the digital options have been gaining far more traction and popularity than traditional modes and news has not been an exception. Internet, as a medium of self-expression, has been lauded for its democratic opportunities and creative freedom, and over the past few years, we have not just seen a fine breed of digital-first natives growing in the news space, but have also witnessed a number of executives from traditional mediums shifting their bases there. 

    According to former Network18 executive editor Bhupendra Chaubey, who is now hosting his own YouTube show Talk To Bhupen, digital is a far more personal medium which offers great freedom, both logistical and content-wise and hence preferred. “Television broadcasting is getting irrelevant despite the viewership going up because TV news is not discharging its responsibility properly. Also, the basics like data crunching, information gathering, etc, are primarily being done by the digital medium.”

    Editorji Technologies founder Vikram Chandra, who had been with NDTV for decades, adds that digital news was already getting a lot of traction and Covid2019 has acted as an inflexion point. “The whole (news) industry is changing and in the post-Covid2019 world, digital is the future. I will say digital has already become the preferred source of news watching for a big chunk of the population.”

    Former Mirror Now executive director-turned- independent journalist Faye D’Souza had shared with Indiantelevision.com in an earlier interview that the erosion of credibility of mainstream media has led people to look outside for news that’s “not adulterated by any sort of compulsion.” She had added,  “if mainstream media was able to hold its audience, it wouldn’t be looking for information in independent digital sources.”

    Barkha Dutt, who is currently on-ground to cover the Covid2019 crisis with her digital platform MoJo had tweeted sometime back that technology has set journalists of today free. 

    Founder and editor-in-chief of GoNews, India’s first app-based TV News Channel, Pankaj Pachauri shares that even investors are more interested in digital entities today. He tells us, “There has been no significant investment increase for mainstream media in the last decade while digital aggregating platforms for news have attracted a high level of interest from investors. The future belongs to the digital genre as smartphone penetration increases and the digital news footprint becomes larger than satellite TV news.”

    He, however, believes that there is “no apparent competition” between TV and digital as a news medium but digital is getting better at sharing news. “Satellite TV news has taken a different character over the years and is now mostly talk shows and live studio-based broadcasts. Digital, on the other hand, is still sticking to storytelling by video. Most satellite channels also have their sizable digital presence, but they are force-fitting TV content on digital formats which is a difficult task. Only a few have been able to do it successfully. They use digital or social media platforms as promotional arms while digital companies are producing content which is digital specific. So, the two are quite different in approach and execution.” 

    Pachauri further states, “A big difference between mainstream TV and digital is that we are able to adhere to our own editorial judgement instead of being led by ratings or populist market sentiment. We can also take our own time in cross-checking facts of a story and guard against fake news as we do not have unnecessary deadline pressures. That’s what differentiates our content from mainstream media and is appreciated by our viewers and readers. This also helps in branding the final product.”

    While all of them are working on a different content strategy, there is one similarity that is quite evident — they want unbiased, fact-checked and difficult news to reach their viewers. 

    Pachauri shares, “As a general news genre broadcaster and publisher our endeavour is to provide news and information for our viewers and readers speedily and factually. But our effort is to give them more news about education, health, employment, agriculture and connectivity which are vastly ignored by mainstream media.” 

    Chandra tells us, “We primarily view ourselves as a tech company that develops technology, which can help in delivering news in a differentiated manner.” 

    Chaubey, who is now planning to develop his talk show into a marketable content property and generate more such products, says going ahead, he wants the identity of his platform to be that of a tech-based news company that does earnest scrutiny of data and brings out issues, which mainstream media would not. 

    Both Chandra and Chaubey feel that more than viewership, what matters is the accessibility of the news to those who need to see it. 

    Chaubey quips enthusiastically, “Currently, I get around four million views on my videos and I want it to reach 10 million in the future. But, keeping that aside, my aim is that if there are even 20 thousand or 30 thousand people in this country who are not aligned with any political party and need unbiased information, they matter to me. My news should reach them. ” 

    Chandra’s mode of working is heavily reliant on AI-based execution, where he delivers personalised bulletins to his viewers. He, along with his team of 50-60 people, is creating more than 150 videos a day and pushing it via their app based on intricate data-based planning.

    Another stark similarity between their modes of working is their association with technology partners and third-party apps. 

    Chaubey tells us that he is in advanced-level talks with several OTT platforms and TV news channels to push his content. “I also have strategic partners with the biggest digital distributors including Business World, Daily Hunt and Twitter who host my programmes. Twitter, in fact, has white-labelled my content, which means my videos do not appear as links but are hosted directly on its platform.” 

    Pachauri highlights, “GoNews has had inquiries from top media conglomerates for collaborations, partnerships and investments but we have been waiting for the right time and scale to find a partner. Even now, we are in talks with investors who see potential in digital media news.” 

    Chandra is also working in close collaboration with Hindustan Times and Airtel to push his content. He is also providing news via Alexa. 

    When it comes to technology, all of them have invested in high-end shooting and editing suites and swear by their MacBooks for facilitating ease of working. While Chandra has curated technologies to create personalised AI-based newscasts, he has put money in professional editing suites for ease and accuracy of work. 

    Pachauri shares, “GoNews has been successfully able to converge satellite TV technology with digital technology as our product can be uplinked on any satellite channel digitally for broadcast. We have tried and tested this technology during the last general elections with APN news for its prime time broadcast. The entire GoNews office uses Apple’s Mac as we found it to be very good for video production. We use Final Cut Pro and Adobe professional series for fast video turnarounds and use Wirecast for live-streaming every day to our app and website.” 

  • Obit: In memory of KVL Narayan Rao

    Obit: In memory of KVL Narayan Rao

    NDTV group CEO and executive vice chairperson KVL Narayan Rao had been battling cancer grittily for at least a couple of years. And, at times, it looked like he was on the verge of conquering it, of getting the life-threatening ailment out of his system. But on the morning of 20 November 2017, his body, which had been ravaged and weakened by various treatments and the cancer itself, gave up.

    A message was sent out to the staff of NDTV by promoters Prannoy and Radhika Roy stating that the 63-year-old Narayan Rao was no more.

    Said the husband-wife duo in the message: “Narayan was the most wonderful human being—kindness was in his DNA, consideration for others was in his DNA, leadership was in his DNA, warmth and generosity were in his DNA, humour and fun were in his DNA and most of all, integrity and love was in his DNA.”

    “Narayan was our friend for over 30 years and we loved him like a brother. We learnt so much from Narayan and admired how he created a compassionate environment at NDTV and, in fact, everywhere he went, with everyone he met. Just as we loved him, there are hundreds of others like us for whom Narayan was very, very special. Seldom has a person been loved by so many and will be deeply missed by so many.”

    “Narayan was one of a kind. A towering personality in every way.”

    Indeed, for us at indiantelevision.com, dealing with the six-foot-plus Narayan was always a pleasure. He came across as a gentleman every time one spoke to him or met him. Not once in the many years of knowing him did we see him lose his cool. Whether it was a rookie journalist reaching out to him for his insights or his quotes on an issue or story. Or whether it was an experienced journo who called him, Narayan was always there. And, if not available, he was gracious enough to call back. He would always be open to provide a different perspective on any issue. He had the old English demeanor, the unflappable kind, the kind that saw him break into a smile no matter what the challenge or demand. Probably, his early days as a journalist gave him that empathy for scribes.

    He was also there when we invited the NDTV group to participate at our News Television Awards. In the early days of the awards, he would find resources to support our initiative financially as a partner. In the past few years, thanks to NDTV’s financial woes, he had asked to be excused. But he would be there to present awards to the winners who were decided by a jury of almost 100. Like he was there last year at our function in New Delhi when it looked like he had won against the dreaded C and he came back to run NDTV, following the stepping down of the then CEO Vikram Chandra.

    He was seen as this statesman-like professional who could lead. And be the voice of the industry despite the long standoff that NDTV was having with the income tax authorities, the enforcement directorate, and, some say, even the government. Hence, he served at least four terms as the News Broadcasters’ Association president and was executive vice-chairperson of the association at the time of his passing away. He was also associated with the IBF, the CII, and several other bodies.

    Narayan was always there for the Roys and the team at NDTV, for whom he stood up for with consistency. Appan Menon, Barkha Dutt, Rajdeep Sardesai, Arnab Goswami, Pankaj Pachauri, and Vikram Chandra–they all flowered as Narayan laid the environment, the culture at NDTV that allowed them to. The Roys were busy running the editorial while Narayan ran the company administratively and also helped build the organisation into a rather robust one. Until the empire struck back.

    Narayan was also at the forefront of bringing in change in TV viewership monitoring in the country. He took TAM and its parents to court in New York, claiming that their research was not representative of what was really happening in Indian TV homes. That and other actions from other broadcasters led to the shutting down of TAM, the creation of new regulations for TV viewership monitoring, and the setting up of BARC.

    Said the Roys in their note on the NDTV website: “We will miss you, Narayan. More than you can imagine. Everyone at NDTV will miss you. More than you can imagine. God bless you, Narayan.”

    Indeed, you will be missed Narayan. RIP!

  • NDTV’s KVL Narayan Rao passes away

    NDTV’s KVL Narayan Rao passes away

    MUMBAI: NDTV group CEO and executive vice chairperson KVL Narayan Rao passed away at 8am today. Suffering from cancer, he was 63 years old.

    His funeral is scheduled at 9.30 pm at Lodhi auditorium

    In October 2016, Narayan Rao was reappointed for a second tenure as NDTV’s group CEO replacing Vikram Chandra, in addition to his responsibilities as executive vice chairperson. 

    Narayan Rao started his career as a journalist with the Indian Express before joining the Indian Revenue Service (IRS), wherein he held several important appointments during his tenure from 1979-1994.

    Narayan Rao had joined NDTV in January 1995 looking after human resources, administration and operations of IRS.

    He was invited to join the board of NDTV in 1998 and had been its executive director since then. He was appointed group CEO in 2007 and executive vice chairperson in August 2011. A former president of the News Broadcasters Association (NBA), Rao was also on the board of the Indian Broadcasting Foundation (IBF). He has been VP of the Commonwealth Broadcasting Association (CBA). He also served as a member of the FICCI Entertainment Committee as well as a member of the CII National Committee on Media and Entertainment. 

  • NDTV & DHFL launch ‘Behtar India’, Rajput encourages children

    MUMBAI: NDTV and DHFL Pramerica have launched a ‘Behtar India’ campaign to work towards a better future for India earlier this year. The core thought of the campaign is to mobilise students, ordinary citizens and corporates to join a nationwide movement that focuses on three main pillars of the campaign – Health, Hygiene and Environment.

    As part of the campaign, the Behtar India Students’ Conclave was held at Modern School, Vasant Vihar, New Delhi with Campaign Ambassador Sushant Singh Rajput today. The Conclave highlighted issues that needed urgent attention and discussed how students can help bring the right difference in the mindset of people regarding Swasthya, Swachhta and Vataavaran.

    The Conclave also saw active participation from Bittu Sehgal, Environmental Activist; Neha Kirpal, Founder at India Art Fair; Dipa Karmakar, Gymnast; Malavath Poorna, the youngest girl to climb Mount Everest; Abhiraj Bhal, CEO Urban Clap; Priya Dutt MP, Congress member; Shazia Ilmi, BJP member; Atishree Marlena, AAP member; Kalikesh Singh Deo MP, Biju Janata Dal member; Nitesh Kadyan, Co-Founder Graviky Labs; Kristen Kagestu, Founder Saathi Pads; Akshat Mittal, Founder – Odd-Even.com and Ritwika Bhattacharya, Founder/CEO – Swaniti Initiative.

    Campaign ambassador Sushant Singh Rajput said, “I urge all our young citizens to actively partake and join us in this nationwide movement to ensure everyone has a right to proper health, hygiene and environment through this campaign.”

    NDTV consulting editor Vikram Chandra said, “Behtar India campaign is aimed at encouraging young citizens to empower and motivate others to actively build healthier, more hygienic and environment friendly world.”

    DHFL Pramerica MD and CEO Anoop Pabby said: “This Conclave is a celebration of what we have achieved so far but we can’t afford to be complacent because there is still a lot that needs to be done on our journey towards a Behtar India”.

  • Barkha Dutt bids adieu to NDTV; hints at new venture

    Barkha Dutt bids adieu to NDTV; hints at new venture

    NEW DELHI: It’s the season for saying good-byes and starting afresh. It’s now Barkha Dutt’s turn to do so.

    “It’s been a super ride at NDTV but new beginning in 2017. I shall be moving on from NDTV to explore new opportunities & my own ventures!” on a cold and partially grey Sunday tweeted Dutt, one of the few public faces of NDTV media house and one of the most trolled journalists of recent times.

    In a series of tweets, evoking reactions ranging from puerile to dismissive to congratulatory to scepticism, Dutt said, “As I move on after 21 Great NDTV yrs; a team I’m SO proud of, an Emmy Nomination & many other awards to cap it all, I count on your wishes… Did my last `We The People’. At 16 yrs its longest running TV show which I built from scratch, won scores of awards for & am hugely proud of.”

    In a co-ordinated move, NDTV put out an official statement, which too surfaced on Dutt’s Twitter TL. The two paragraph statement read: “In 1995, Barkha Dutt joined NDTV straight out of college, and now, after 21 wonderful years together, Barkha has requested that she would like to explore some new opportunities, pursue other interests and work on her own ventures.

    “In all her years with NDTV, she has been hugely productive and has grown with the organisation, becoming an acclaimed, award-winning journalist of repute across India and many parts of the world. We are certain that Barkha will go from strength to strength and NDTV wishes her all the very best.”

    Though criticised within her fraternity too for many of her actions, Dutt is said to have inspired a couple of Hindi film characters, including that of Rani Mukherjee in `Nobody Killed Jessica’ and that of Preity Zinta in Farhan Akhtar-directed ‘Lakshya’ based on the reclaiming of Tiger Hill by the Indian Army during Kargil War.

    In recent times, NDTV, built by a team lead by Prannoy Roy, one of Indian news television’s original poster boys, has been under pressure from several quarters, including financial. Considered by the followers of the present BJP-led government in New Delhi a product of Congress-era, NDTV has been a nursery for several television journalists and anchors, many of whom went on to become as big a celebrity as a movie actor or a cricketer in India and household names, while quite a few moved on to start their own successful ventures in the media. And this list includes the likes of Arnab Goswami, Rajdeep Sardesai, Vikram Chandra, Arup Ghosh and Sonia Singh.

    If the gossip in Capital’s favourite watering hole for journalists is to be believed, then the top management of a financially-beleaguered NDTV, including Dr. Prannoy Roy and Executive VC and CEO Narayan Rao, recently took a decision to shed sizable manpower weight. The target list for pruning staff was said to include many of those drawing a monthly salary of over Rs. 100,000.

    However, it must be admitted that Indiantelevision.com could not independently confirm these rumours from NDTV, always considered to be a leading flag-bearer for impartial journalism in a world when old school professional values are being shed and being OTT (over-the-top) is considered to be the new normal.

    She wrote on her FB page:

    A new year means that new beginnings beckon. After a great two decades at NDTV I will be moving on to explore new opportunities, diversify my interests and build my own multi media content and events company as well as special projects. It’s been an eventful and super ride at NDTV with an Emmy Nomination among the multiple awards capping a wonderful journey. I am especially proud of We The People the last episode of which I hosted today – at sixteen years it’s the longest running show on Indian TV. But am hugely excited about the many adventures that await me. And I now count on everyone’s best wishes for my next new and wonderful innings. Excited wish me luck !!

  • Barkha Dutt bids adieu to NDTV; hints at new venture

    Barkha Dutt bids adieu to NDTV; hints at new venture

    NEW DELHI: It’s the season for saying good-byes and starting afresh. It’s now Barkha Dutt’s turn to do so.

    “It’s been a super ride at NDTV but new beginning in 2017. I shall be moving on from NDTV to explore new opportunities & my own ventures!” on a cold and partially grey Sunday tweeted Dutt, one of the few public faces of NDTV media house and one of the most trolled journalists of recent times.

    In a series of tweets, evoking reactions ranging from puerile to dismissive to congratulatory to scepticism, Dutt said, “As I move on after 21 Great NDTV yrs; a team I’m SO proud of, an Emmy Nomination & many other awards to cap it all, I count on your wishes… Did my last `We The People’. At 16 yrs its longest running TV show which I built from scratch, won scores of awards for & am hugely proud of.”

    In a co-ordinated move, NDTV put out an official statement, which too surfaced on Dutt’s Twitter TL. The two paragraph statement read: “In 1995, Barkha Dutt joined NDTV straight out of college, and now, after 21 wonderful years together, Barkha has requested that she would like to explore some new opportunities, pursue other interests and work on her own ventures.

    “In all her years with NDTV, she has been hugely productive and has grown with the organisation, becoming an acclaimed, award-winning journalist of repute across India and many parts of the world. We are certain that Barkha will go from strength to strength and NDTV wishes her all the very best.”

    Though criticised within her fraternity too for many of her actions, Dutt is said to have inspired a couple of Hindi film characters, including that of Rani Mukherjee in `Nobody Killed Jessica’ and that of Preity Zinta in Farhan Akhtar-directed ‘Lakshya’ based on the reclaiming of Tiger Hill by the Indian Army during Kargil War.

    In recent times, NDTV, built by a team lead by Prannoy Roy, one of Indian news television’s original poster boys, has been under pressure from several quarters, including financial. Considered by the followers of the present BJP-led government in New Delhi a product of Congress-era, NDTV has been a nursery for several television journalists and anchors, many of whom went on to become as big a celebrity as a movie actor or a cricketer in India and household names, while quite a few moved on to start their own successful ventures in the media. And this list includes the likes of Arnab Goswami, Rajdeep Sardesai, Vikram Chandra, Arup Ghosh and Sonia Singh.

    If the gossip in Capital’s favourite watering hole for journalists is to be believed, then the top management of a financially-beleaguered NDTV, including Dr. Prannoy Roy and Executive VC and CEO Narayan Rao, recently took a decision to shed sizable manpower weight. The target list for pruning staff was said to include many of those drawing a monthly salary of over Rs. 100,000.

    However, it must be admitted that Indiantelevision.com could not independently confirm these rumours from NDTV, always considered to be a leading flag-bearer for impartial journalism in a world when old school professional values are being shed and being OTT (over-the-top) is considered to be the new normal.

    She wrote on her FB page:

    A new year means that new beginnings beckon. After a great two decades at NDTV I will be moving on to explore new opportunities, diversify my interests and build my own multi media content and events company as well as special projects. It’s been an eventful and super ride at NDTV with an Emmy Nomination among the multiple awards capping a wonderful journey. I am especially proud of We The People the last episode of which I hosted today – at sixteen years it’s the longest running show on Indian TV. But am hugely excited about the many adventures that await me. And I now count on everyone’s best wishes for my next new and wonderful innings. Excited wish me luck !!

  • Nikhil Wagle exits ‘Maharashtra One’

    Nikhil Wagle exits ‘Maharashtra One’

    MUMBAI: The game of musical chairs in the Indian TV news channel business continues. Over the last couple of months there have been many a high-profile exits and reshuffles such as Arnab Goswami, Vikram Chandra, and now Rahul Shivshankar, etc.

    It has come to our knowledge that the renowned journalist Nikhil Wagle has exited from Marathi news channel, Maharahtra One. After serving the channel as its editor-in-chief for almost a year, Wagle is out of the channel.

    The channel is a part of Sadhna Group subsidiary Sharp Eye Advertising, which owns and operates Sadhna News, Sadhna Bihar/Jharkhand, and Sadhna Madhya Pradesh/Chhattisgarh.

    Replacing Wagle as the executive editor is Ashish Jadhav who was the channel’s political editor. According to a source from the channel, Jadhav’s name was recommended by Wagle.

    It is rumoured that Wagle was asked to leave after he asked Hindu Sanatan Sanstha’s office-bearer Abhay Vartak to get out of his show, Aajcha Sawaal. Wagle had received several threats from the Sanathan Sanstha last year.

    Another source from the channel however rubbished sacking information, “There were differences between Nikhil and the management owing to which he decided to resign. The decision of parting ways was taken with mutual understanding.”

    Wagle’s next move is not yet clear but people close to him said he will concentrate on writing a book which has been pending from sometime.