Tag: India Today

  • India Today vrooms with Bosch Global

    By Our Staff

     

    The India Today Group (ITG) and Bosch Global Software Technologies Private Limited (BGSW) have partnered for in-vehicle connectivity. As a part of the offering, BGSW will facilitate access to the ITG News app through its in-car Connected Vehicle Platform.

     

    Commenting on the tie-up Salil Kumar, CEO – India Today Group Digital said: “We are excited to forge a ground-breaking alliance with BGSW in this transformative collaboration, uniting automotive innovation with cutting-edge media content delivery. This partnership underscores our dedication to delivering a seamless and enriching experience to our audience, fostering innovation not only within their homes but also on the move.”

     

    Commenting on the partnership R K Shenoy, CTO, Member Executive Leadership Team, Senior VP Mobility Engineering Solutions, BGSW said: “In line with BGSW‘s vision to offer world class Software Products and Solutions to enable OEMs in their journey of digital transformation, the collaboration with ITG enables us to go an extra mile to offer innovative features to enhance Connected end user experience complimented with Media content. We are excited to partner with ITG to show our committment in introducing new features  for our end users. Looking forward to innovate further with automotive and media domains fusion.”

     

  • IAMAI’s Digital Advertising Council gets new heads. Vivek Malhotra, Bharat Gupta & Arun Srinivas elected

    By Our Staff

     

    Bharat Gupta
    Bharat Gupta
    Vivek Malhotra
    Vivek Malhotra

    Vivek Malhotra, Group CMO, India Today Group, has been elected Chairperson of the Digital Advertising Council (DAC), which functions under the aegis of Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI). Bharat Gupta, CEO, Jagran New Media and Arun Srinivas, Director & Head – Ad Business, Meta, have been appointed Co-Chairs of the DAC.

     

    With over 110+ active members including agencies, publishers, affiliates, adtech and martech companies, DAC engages with more than 500 brands, 250 agencies and 100 publishers through various conferences, roundtables, and offsites.

     

    Notes a communique: “The new leadership team will play a pivotal role in guiding DAC and its digital advertising stakeholders to work towards the goal of the growth of the digital advertising sector. Along with this they will also be overseeing and supporting the three Task Force Groups viz. Unified Standard Measurement, Cookieless Future and Affiliate Best Practices. Additionally, they will continue to interact regularly with the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, ensuring that the interests and concerns of the digital advertising community are effectively represented in regulatory discussions and decision-making processes.”

     

  • India Today launches ‘ChunavAajTak’

    By Our Staff

     

    India Today Group has officially launched its exclusive election-centric digital channel ‘ChunavAajTak’ given five state elections coming up, followed by the 2024 Lok Sabha elections

     

    Said Kalli Purie, Vice-Chairperson, India Today Group, stated during the launch of ‘Chunav AajTak: “In India, politics is one of the most captivating subjects for people, and elections are at the heart of politics. I am delighted that the India Today Group will now comprehensively cover all aspects of elections digitally, delivering viewers all the necessary information, news, and analysis related to elections.”

     

  • India Today launches ‘Best Colleges’ website

    By Our Staff

     

    The India Today Group has launched an online portal for its Best Colleges Survey featuring six years of ranking data as well as a wealth of granular information on thousands of institutes of higher learning. The url is: https://bestcolleges.indiatoday.in

     

    Notes a communique: “The interactive portal offers easy access, analysis, and guidance to our Best Colleges of India survey results for 2,000 colleges across 14 major streams—Engineering, Architecture, BBA, Mass Communication, Hotel Management, Fashion Design, MSW, BCA, BCom, BSc, BA, Law, Medical and Dental,” adding: “Students and their guardians can now make informed choices at a click of the button. Aside from the college ranking—which can be filtered by state and city—our site also allows cross comparisons on five major indicators of quality: intake and quality of governance, academic excellence, infrastructure and living experience, personality and leadership development and placement and career.”

  • India Today Group to launch English news channel in the UK

    By Our Staff

     

    The India Today Group has announced the launch of India Today in the UK market from May 31. This is a follow-up to the launch of the Group’s Hindi news channel, Aaj Tak, in the UK market. Previously operating as a hybrid channel, Aaj Tak and India Today served UK audiences with unique content.

     

    With the launch of India Today, the English news channel will now be available as a free-to-air service, broadcasting in standard definition (SD) and accessible on Sky Channel No. 523.  This will position it alongside other prominent English news channels, including Sky News, BBC News, GB News and Talk TV.

     

    Meanwhile, Aaj Tak will continue to be available on Sky Channel number 710, providing uninterrupted access to Hindi content for viewers. The India Today Group, renowned for its comprehensive news coverage and commitment to delivering high-quality content, is thrilled to bring its linear presence to the UK audience.

     

  • The Karnataka results and after…

     

     

    By Ranjona Banerji

     

    Ranjona BanerjiThe defeat of the incumbent BJP government in the Karnataka assembly elections had the predictable effect on our captive TV channels. Some pretended to be happy that their expensive exit polls had got it more or less correct. Others switched to the UP local body elections, because mayors in UP are more important that chief ministers in some southern state, especially when the BJP wins. Others could not contain their sorrow that not only had the BJP lost but the dreaded Congress had won.

    I can hear the murmurs: oh, but many TV wallahs were equally upset when the Congress won in the past, all a “durbar-dynasty” clan, now smarting because the great King Emperor is triumphant and so on.

    Let’s accept that all political formulations have some support within the media.

    The question we now face is of degrees.

    Never before has the mass media been as captivated by one political regime.

    Never before has the mass media covered up transgressions and failures by a government as it does now.

    Never before has the mass media spread sectarian hatred to suit the political dispensation has it does now.

    The dangers are real. Citations from the past may make some commentators feel they’re being “objective” but in fact they are doing the opposite; they’re enabling fascism.

    And the extent of the entitlement that fascist forces feel was evident when India Today invited BJP IT Cell chief Amit Malviya to discuss the election results. The BJP was understandably upset at the way Karnataka voted. After all, the entire might of the BJP had descended on the state. Narendra Modi and Amit Shah had held several rallies and road shows. The media had promoted every marigold petal showered on Modi with as much enthusiasm had it had ignored Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra.

    Malviya’s meltdown on TV which included a massive personal attack on TV anchor Rajdeep Sardesai underlined why promoting sectarian, divisive political ideologies on the pretext of being “objective” can be counter-productive. But because TV has imposed on itself this A versus B format of entertainment and propaganda, it has not just lost journalism but lost itself.

    Many Indians continue to watch TV and take this sort of stuff seriously. They get indoctrinated and radicalised.

    TV knows this and continues with it.

    Recently two people were apprehended on suspicion of playing Hitler’s speeches on an Austrian train’s intercom system. The “freedom of speech” argument used by bigots and fascists is specious. There are limits on hate speech. Adolf Hitler is one limit, and with good reason.

    https://edition.cnn.com/2023/05/15/europe/austria-hitler-loudspeakers-train-intl/index.html#:~:text=Passengers%20on%20an%20Austrian%20train,several%20passengers% 20on%20the%20train.

    But India’s TV channels are unable to make such distinctions. I cannot imagine that Malviya will be avoided, let alone banned. He is likely to continue to be a treasured guest on most of these Leni Riefenstahl channels.

    Meanwhile, I will remind you that there are important reasons why the BJP lost Karnataka, from its Hindu majoritarianism to its Islamophobic policies and its lack of a proper economic growth model. Much like in the rest of India.

    I can guarantee you however that the majority of our mainstream media will now focus on lobbying within the Congress Party to become chief minister of Karnataka.

    The reasons are obvious.

    It will be interesting to see though how many channels get outraged with the United States and call for diplomatic action against them for this report about increasing attacks on religious minorities against India. Narendra Modi is due on a state visit to the US in June, the first in nine years.

    https://preview.state.gov/reports/2022-report-on-international-religious-freedom/india/

    O my.

     

    Ranjona Banerji is a senior journalist and commentator. She writes on MxMIndia on Tuesdays and Fridays. Her views here are personal.

     

  • India Today wins Society of Publication Designers awards

    By Our Staff

     

    India Today Group Creative Editor, Nilanjan Das has won two Best Infographics and one Best Spread Illustration award from the prestigious New York-based The Society of Publication Designers (SPD).

     

    A communique adds that the India Today entries beat others from the New Yorker, The New York Times, The Economist, Bloomberg, Businessweek, Forbes, Media Vox, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post Magazine and many other leading publications.

     

  • No real stories in the mainstream media!

     

    By Ranjona Banerji

     

    Ranjona BanerjiWhat makes a great headline story?

    There are so many swirling around that it’s had to choose.

    Like the Khalistan supporter Amritpal Singh who is on the loose?

    Or the conman from Gujarat who pretended to be from the PMO and got all sorts of official benefits including Z plus security and five-star luxury in Kashmir.

    Or the newly-made national highways which have consistently cracked under the pressure of grand inaugurations?

    Or how the wife of a former CM of Maharashtra and current deputy CM of Maharashtra claimed to have been cheated by a designer friend who she let into official homes for many years?

    Or the Invest India CEO who had to resign because of supposed financial hanky-panky?

    Don’t get me wrong. These have been in the news, or else how do we know about them. But they haven’t been THE news.

    Take the Invest India story. This is a government agency, set up to help those who want to invest in India. Its managing director and CEO Deepak Bagla is accused of, well, not doing any work. An audit was begun by the Commerce Ministry a year ago. Bagla has resigned for “personal reasons”, after he and his team apparently had a first class party at the recent World Economic Forum at Davos.

    But please note, the lack of outrage or even leaking of salacious details or even investigation of what went wrong, apart from in the business pages and websites.

    How about Kiran Patel? What courage and cool thinking! Used the PM’s name and officials all over our most sensitive areas opened their hearts and minds and our pockets to him. Patel made three trips to Kashmir, met officials and made them give him reports, until a local district magistrate flagged something as suspicious. Patel was arrested from a five-star hotel.

    This is a story but not THE story.

    Because, how can we?

    THE story could be that the Prime Minister inaugurated a road. THE story is not that the Bengaluru-Mysore expressway got flooded soon after because once Modi has come and gone, the story is over. Some locals just have to deal with it. THE story is now that the PM and the Japanese PM, Fumio Kishida ate “gol-gappe” together. Personally, I’d have given him real Gujarati khandvi and explained it as Indian veg sushi. Tastes much better than Delhi gol-gappe anyway, but that’s just me.

    Anyway. These are our stories. They have within them depths and layers and fun and excitement and shock and horror, all of which would have kept us journalists busy for days.

    We know that we are not going to do the real stories in the mainstream media, about poverty and social hatred and Central incompetence. Now it looks like we cannot even do the scandal-scam stories in case some muck falls on the Great One and subsidiaries around.

    And we know why. This is a tweet from Aroon Purie, once the person who set the gold standard of Indian journalism by his group’s own admission. I have worked with the group and in the old days, it did set a standard.

    But like most of the Indian media which was brave in the past as long as it could oppose a Congress-led government and wear all attacks with pride, we now have a set of groupies sucking up to the Supreme Leader.

    Like the owner of India Today makes clear, all you have to do is connect the dots…

     

    Ranjona Banerji is a senior journalist and commentator. She writes on MxMIndia on Tuesdays and Fridays. Her views here are personal.

     

  • India Today Group launches AI collaborative anchor

    By Our Staff

     

    India Today Group’s Vice Chairperson Kalli Purie launched Aaj Tak’s first AI collaborative anchor – Sana at the 20th edition of India Today Conclave2023.

    Aaj Tak AI’s first anchor Sana will bring daily news updates several times a day in multiple languages, next week onwards. In a new show, she will explain one topic of relevance everyday. Sana will also do a show in which the audience can ask questions and she will answer.

    Describing Sana, Purie said: “She is bright, gorgeous, ageless, tireless, speaks in multiple languages and totally under my control. Sana does not take away from the brilliance of real life anchors, who will be mentoring her. Sana will have a human surrogate editor and hopefully company soon.”

    Purie said that it is not a competition between humans and AI and that this collaboration is leading to creative magic. “The future is fascinating and frightening and it is here,” she said. Talking about how media is constantly attacked and referred to as ‘godi media’, Kalli Purie said that there is a lot of pressure on media from political parties, business houses, foreign governments and larger-than-life professionals. “It is not new and not singular,” she said. Giving examples of how India Today has never compromised on the story it tells, she said, “Our credibilty is important to us.”

    Link- https://www.indiatoday.in/india/video/conclave-2023-india-today-groups-vice-chairperson-kalli-purie-launches-aaj-taks-first-ai-anchor-sana-watch-2348518-2023-03-18

  • India Today Conclave is back with its 20th edition

    By Our Staff

     

    India Today Conclave 2023 is back with its 20th edition. The conclave is being held in Delhi on March 17 and 18. It will be attended by top heads of state from the political, judicial, and entertainment worlds. PM Modi, Chief Justice DY Chandrachud, and film superstar Ramcharan will address the conclave. Others from various fields will also be a part of this event.

     

  • India Today-Business Today Budget Roundtable

    By Our Staff

     

    India Today- Business Today is hosting a Budget roundtable today.

     

    It will feature Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman along with other senior Union Ministers like Nitin Gadkari Minister of Road Transport and highways, Piyush Goyal Minster of Commerce & Industry, Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution and Textiles, Ashwini Vaishnaw, Minister of Railways, Communications, and Electronics and Information Technology. They will present their views on the discussion The Effective Model for Growth in Times of Global Recession.

     

    BT Editors Sourav Majumdar, Siddharth Zarabi, Udayan Mukherjee, Aabha Bakaya and News Director of India Today and Aaj Tak and the Executive Director of Business Today, Rahul Kanwal will conduct the sessions.

     

  • Ranjona Banerji: Shhhhh!

    By Ranjona Banerji

     

    Ranjona BanerjiRenowned UK-based sculptor Anish Kapoor was interviewed by India Today about two new exhibitions of his work in Italy.

     

    In this interview, in answer to a question, Kapoor said the following about the current dispensation in India:

     

    “India is in a desperate place. My beloved country has allowed itself to be beguiled by what I call the Hindu Taliban. Modi’s vile extreme right wing politics is a patriarchal monoculture of hate and is in contempt of the very things that were once the essence of our Indian spirit – tolerance and respect for all irrespective of origin, race or creed. Our utter disregard for the millions who live in concentration camp poverty in our midst is a crime of shameful arrogance. We will be damned for this.”

     

    According to Kapoor, the editor of India Today then got in touch with him and said they could not carry the interview if it included this answer.

     

    Kapoor withdrew the interview, which has now been carried in toto and with Kapoor’s comments on the episode, in The Wire.

    https://thewire.in/rights/anish-kapoor-modi-government-art

     

    At the same time, the Government of India has reacted angrily to a question in Parliament about India’s further fall in the Press Freedom Index released in May. From 142, India now stands at 150 out of 180 nations. The Press Freedom Index is released annually by Reporters Without Borders (RSF), a media body which advocates for journalists and their freedom to work without threat.

     

    There are so many ironies at work here that the mind is boggled.

     

    India Today continues to pretend that it subscribes to some “gold standard” in journalism. Long ago, it did. For many publications, standing up to a Congress government was the same as getting a gold medal in the Olympics. It meant you were real and brave. You exposed corruption. You criticised government actions and political wheeling-dealing. If the government hit back, then your chest puffed out further.

     

    To be fair, India Today also criticised BJP-led governments and other political parties. But that was long ago. Not for the last eight years. But that it should be so frightened of the consequences of a critical comment by a well-known artist just underlines once more the extent of the cowardice. Kapoor has not said more than what many commentators say, admittedly in a shrinking space for criticism. But India Today has neither the gumption nor the honesty to give Kapoor that much space. Not even to hide behind that disclaimer that these views are not that of the publication.

     

    Given this, it is hardly surprising that the Modi government will not accept RSF’s index. After all, its captive media friends never criticise the government, amplify all the government’s claims without question, cheer what is clear bad political practice as cleverness, and happily blame the opposition for everything that goes wrong. Why should the Modi government accept that anything is wrong with the media?

     

    Even more horrific and amusing is the fact that the bulk of the media itself is happy to carry the government’s viewpoint without any question or comment.

    https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/govt-rejects-world-press-freedom-index-findings-says-methodology-questionable-non-transparent/articleshow/93028242.cms

     

    That is a level of capitulation which is formidable.

     

    Apart from all the journalists who have been arrested, killed, threatened, which all points presumably to a vibrant and “robust” media to use one of the government’s favourite words, I leave you with this nugget.

     

    According to the Union Government’s own reply in the Lok Sabha, it has spent Rs 900 crore on advertising in the media since 2019.

     

    Which do you think is a better excuse: cowardice or greed?

     

    Ranjona Banerji is a senior journalist and commentator. She writes on MxMIndia on Tuesdays and Fridays. Her views here are personal.