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Vinayak Burman returns with a deeper Season 3 of The Lifeboat

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MUMBAI: After striking a chord with listeners across its first two seasons, The Lifeboat, the long-form conversation podcast curated and hosted by Vinayak Burman, is ready to set sail once again. The third season of the series will premiere on December 30, 2025, promising its most evolved and emotionally resonant edition yet.

Season 3 marks a clear shift in tone and texture. Moving beyond surface-level success narratives, the new episodes lean into themes of resilience, reinvention, vulnerability and personal purpose. The result is a more intimate listening experience that invites audiences into the quieter, less spoken-about moments behind ambition and achievement.

The upcoming season brings together a diverse mix of founders, creators, investors and cultural voices. The lineup includes Karan Motwani; Rachana Gupta and Vishal Gupta of Gynoveda; Nitin Jain, Founding and Managing Director of Neo Group; and actress-turned-entrepreneur Pooja Bedi, among others. Each guest offers candid reflections on their personal values, defining career learnings and inner turning points that shaped their journeys.

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Launched in November 2023, The Lifeboat began as a refreshingly honest space where entrepreneurs and investors spoke openly about the realities of building and sustaining businesses. Season 1 featured voices such as Shashank Kumar of DeHaat, Vikas Lachhwani of mCaffeine, Supriya Paul and Shobhit Banga of Josh Talks, Smriti Chandra of Abler Nordic India, and Kaushik Mukherjee of Sugar Cosmetics, with conversations centred on navigating uncertainty, failure and growth.

Season 2 widened the lens further, exploring leadership, communication, personal evolution and spirituality. The speaker roster included Shweta Shalini, Priyavrata Mafatlal, Arjun Vaidya, Vineet Rai, Koreel Lahiri, Geetanjali Saxena, Aditya Hegde, Rohan More, Mrunalini Deshmukh and Avanne Dubash.

Reflecting on the new season, Vinayak Burman said the team had intentionally raised the bar. “While Season 1 and Season 2 were warmly received, this time we pushed ourselves to go deeper. The focus is on honesty and reflection. These conversations are richer, the voices more diverse, and the stories feel truly transformative,” he said.

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Season 3 of The Lifeboat will be available on YouTube and all major podcast platforms, offering thoughtful listening for anyone curious about what lies beneath success and how people stay afloat when life gets turbulent.

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Content India 2026 opens with a copro pitch, a spice evangelist and a £10,000 prize for Indian storytelling

Dish TV and C21Media’s three-day summit puts seven ambitious projects before an international jury, and two walk away with serious development money

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MUMBAI: India’s content industry gathered in Mumbai this March for Content India 2026, a three-day summit organised by Dish TV in partnership with C21Media, and it wasted no time making a statement. The event opened with a Copro Pitch that put seven scripted and unscripted television concepts before an international panel of judges, and by the end of it, two projects had walked away with £10,000 each in marketing prize money from C21Media to support development and international promotion.

The jury, comprising Frank Spotnitz, Fiona Campbell, Rashmi Bajpai, Bal Samra and Rachel Glaister, evaluated a shortlist that ranged from a dark Mumbai comedy-drama about mental health (Dirty Minds, created by Sundar Aaron) to a Delhi coming-of-age mystery (Djinn Patrol, by Neha Sharma and Kilian Irwin), a techno-thriller about a teenage gaming prodigy (Kanpur X Satori, by Suchita Bhatia), an investigative crime drama blending mythology and modern thriller (The Age of Kali, by Shivani Bhatija), a documentary on India’s spice heritage (The Masala Quest, hosted by Sarina Kamini), a documentary on competitive gaming (Respawn: India’s Esports Revolution, by George Mangala Thomas and Sangram Mawari), and a reality-horror competition merging gaming and immersive fear (Scary Goose, by Samar Iqbal).

The session was hosted by Mayank Shekhar.

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The two winners were Djinn Patrol, backed by Miura Kite, formerly of Participant Media and known for Chinatown and Keep Sweet: Pray & Obey, with Jaya Entertainment, producers of Real Kashmir Football Club, also attached; and The Masala Quest, created and hosted by Sarina Kamini, an Indian-Australian cook, author and self-described “spice evangelist.”

The summit also unveiled the Content India Trends Report, whose findings made for bracing reading. Daoud Jackson, senior analyst at OMDIA, set the tone: “By 2030, online video in India will nearly double the revenue of traditional TV, becoming the main driver of growth.” He noted that in 2025, India produced a quarter of all YouTube videos globally, overtaking the United States, while Indians collectively spend 117 years daily on YouTube and 72 years on Instagram. Traditional subscription TV is declining as free TV and connected TV gain ground, forcing broadcasters to innovate. “AI-generated content is just 2 per cent of engagement,” Jackson added, “highlighting the dominance of high-quality human content. The key for Indian media companies is scaling while monetising effectively from day one.”

Hannah Walsh, principal analyst at Ampere Analysis, added hard numbers to the picture. India produced over 24,000 titles in January 2026 alone, with 19,000 available internationally. The country now accounts for 12 per cent of Asia-Pacific content spend, up from 8 per cent in 2021, outpacing both Japan and China. Key exporters include JioStar, Zee Entertainment, Sony India, Amazon and Netflix, delivering over 7,500 Indian-produced titles abroad each year. The top importing markets are Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, the United States and the Philippines. Scripted content dominates globally at 88 per cent, with crime dramas and children’s and family titles performing particularly strongly.

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Manoj Dobhal, chief executive and executive director of Dish TV India, framed the summit’s ambition squarely. “Stories don’t need translation. They need a platform, discovery, and reach, local or global,” he said. “India produces more movies than any country, our streaming platforms compete globally, and our tech and creators win international awards. Yet fragmentation slows growth. Producers, platforms, and tech move in different lanes. We need shared spaces, collaboration, and an ecosystem where ideas, technology, and people meet. That is why we built Content India.”

The data, the pitches and the prize money all pointed to the same conclusion: India is not waiting for the world to discover its stories. It is building the infrastructure to sell them.

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