VBS 2026
Anil Wanvari maps LEO and AI shift at broadcast summit
22nd summit hears 7,000 satellites, 20 ms latency reshape media.
MUMBAI: While the audience settled into their seats, Anil Wanvari asked them to look up. Somewhere above the Indian Ocean, he began, a satellite the size of a dining table was racing across the sky at 28,000 kilometres per hour, completing an orbit of Earth before breakfast and another before lunch. It was not alone. There are more than 7,000 active satellites currently in low Earth orbit, up from fewer than 2,000 just five years ago. Within the next decade, that number could exceed 100,000.
With that image, Wanvari, founder and editor in chief of Indian Television Dot Com, opened the 22nd Edition of the Video Broadcast and Broadband Tech Summit 2026, framing this year’s theme Managing the Great Tech celeration as a lived disruption rather than a conference slogan.
Low Earth orbit satellites operate between 300 and 1,200 kilometres above the planet. By contrast, geostationary satellites that have carried broadcast signals for decades sit at 36,000 kilometres. The result is a stark difference in latency. Traditional GEO systems can introduce round trip delays of 600 milliseconds or more. LEO constellations can reduce that to as little as 20 milliseconds.
“That is the difference between watching a live event and being present at it,” Wanvari said.
For him, however, the LEO story is less about milliseconds and more about millions. Rural farmers in Rajasthan, fisherwomen off the Kerala coast and children in tribal schools in Chhattisgarh were invoked as examples of communities long stranded beyond the “last mile” of fibre. The sky, he argued, is now becoming their gateway.
India has the second largest internet user base in the world and has yet to cross 50 percent penetration. Every percentage point of new connectivity represents tens of millions of new users. The digital divide that once capped growth in media and entertainment is now being dismantled “batch launch by batch launch”.
The pressing question, Wanvari suggested, is not whether these audiences will come online. It is whether the industry is prepared to serve them meaningfully when they do.
If satellites are redrawing distribution maps, artificial intelligence is redrawing the production floor.
Wanvari described AI systems in Hyderabad studios that can log every shot of unedited footage, grade each frame, suggest cuts and assemble a rough edit in the time it takes a director to drink her morning coffee. Tasks that once required a team of 12 editors working for three weeks can now be executed in hours.
Production teams of 20, equipped with AI tools, can now deliver what previously demanded crews of 200. In newsrooms, AI can monitor 10,000 data sources simultaneously, identify breaking patterns in seconds and generate first drafts within minutes, localised across multiple languages.
Deepfake detection is being embedded directly into broadcast workflows, turning the same technology that threatens trust into a defensive shield for it. “Trust,” Wanvari noted, “is the most precious and fragile asset any media organisation possesses.”
Virtual production was another focal point. AI driven environments can render a 1947 Mumbai street, a Himalayan glacier at sunrise or a cricket stadium packed with 100,000 virtual fans in real time on LED volume stages, reducing dependence on physical locations, permits and weather conditions. Post production from colour grading and sound design to dubbing and accessibility features is being re engineered around automation.
The cost of high quality content creation, he argued, is “falling off a cliff” and will not return to its previous baseline.
Wanvari then shifted attention from orbit and studios to living rooms.
Next generation connected televisions, he said, are no longer passive display panels. They run AI inference locally, tracking not just what viewers choose, but whether they actually watch it, when attention drifts and what brings it back. Attention sensing technologies can detect engagement patterns and adapt recommendations accordingly.
For a generation that has never known rigid schedules, the traditional broadcast grid has dissolved into an infinite, personalised stream of content. Yet communal experiences endure.
Live sport, elections, breaking news and award nights remain gathering points. Wanvari painted a near future in which a Test match is accompanied by real time AI overlays showing ball trajectory, predicted swing and bowler fatigue indices. Viewers could switch between 17 camera angles mid over, point their phones at screens to see augmented statistics floating above players and join live watch parties across four cities, with reactions displayed as emotional heatmaps.
Every element of this ecosystem exists today in some form. The convergence, he suggested, will occur within the next three years.
Beyond satellites and AI, Wanvari highlighted a quieter shift: broadband as ambient infrastructure.
Public hotspots, community WiFi networks, 5G small cells mounted on lampposts and LEO terminals on school rooftops are weaving connectivity into everyday life. When broadband becomes as constant as air, consumption patterns change.
The Mumbai local train becomes a theatre. The auto rickshaw becomes a radio studio. The village tea stall becomes a live cricket viewing hub.
Short form and mid form content, spanning five to 25 minutes, are no longer secondary formats but primary design responses to fragmented, mobile and always connected lifestyles.
With internet penetration still below 50 percent, Wanvari described the “broadband everywhere” narrative as the single largest growth opportunity the industry has ever encountered.
For all the technological awe, the address returned repeatedly to responsibility.
Algorithms do not possess values, he argued. Humans do. Every recommendation engine reflects editorial choices. Every AI generated output is shaped by the data and priorities embedded within it.
Managing the great tech celeration, in Wanvari’s framing, is not about managing machines. It is about managing ambition, ethics and accountability.
He closed with a question that lingered long after the applause: when a child in a previously unconnected village goes online for the first time, what will they find?
The satellite may be moving at 28,000 kilometres per hour. AI may be editing in milliseconds. Connected TVs may be learning in real time. But the industry’s ultimate metric, Wanvari suggested, remains stubbornly human: whether the stories waiting on the other end of that first connection are worthy of the moment.
VBS 2026
VBS 2026: Indian media rides AI, hybrid tv and social fandom into a new era
Summit highlights AI, fan-first sports experiences, connectivity and intelligent content flows
MUMBAI: The media industry is entering its most turbulent technological shift in decades. Artificial intelligence, hybrid television ecosystems and creator-driven fandom are rapidly redrawing the economics of broadcasting.
At the Video Broadcast and Broadband Tech Summit 2026 in Mumbai, the people who build, regulate, fund and fill our screens gathered to reckon with a simple, unsettling truth: the broadcasting business is being rebuilt from the antenna down. Regulators sat beside streamers. Advertisers traded notes with telecom operators. And everyone had an opinion about AI.
Opening the summit, Indian Television Dot Com founder and editor-in-chief Anil Wanvari, framed the industry’s moment as one of “great tech-celerations”, as artificial intelligence, data and digital distribution transform how content is produced, delivered and monetised.

He highlighted the rapid expansion of low Earth orbit satellites, which are dramatically reducing latency and extending internet access to previously unconnected regions, bringing millions of new users online.
AI has slipped into the newsroom, the edit suite, the analytics dashboard, quietly compressing what used to take days into hours. Connected TVs are rewriting viewing habits in real time. Wanvari stressed that technology must be balanced with responsibility. “Trust is the most precious and fragile asset any media organisation possesses,” he said, adding that as connectivity expands, the industry must ensure the stories reaching new audiences are worthy of that moment.
Policy outlook: AI and 6G reshape broadcasting
The regulatory perspective came from Telecom Regulatory Authority of India principal advisor for broadcast and cable services Ashok Kumar Jha.

Jha outlined how emerging technologies such as AI and 6G connectivity could reshape India’s broadcast and broadband ecosystem, stressing that future policy must balance innovation with inclusive digital access.
As network infrastructure evolves, regulators expect convergence between telecom, satellite and broadcasting systems to accelerate.
Hybrid television takes centre stage
One of the summit’s central themes was the convergence of traditional broadcasting and streaming platforms.
In a panel moderated by KPMG partner – TMT Sonica Bajaj, industry leaders argued that the future will not be a battle between linear television and OTT services.

Zee Entertainment Enterprises chief revenue officer affiliate sales and head public & regulatory affairs Anil Malhotra, said linear television continues to dominate mass reach across India.
He pointed out that the country still has roughly 160 million linear TV households, underlining television’s enduring role as a shared family screen.
Meanwhile, Airtel head of telco engineering Ajit Pratap Singh, described how telecom operators are building unified platforms that integrate linear channels with streaming libraries, supported by AI-driven discovery tools.
Connectivity remains a crucial enabler. Eutelsat OneWeb senior director Nishitha Kapoor, argued that low-earth-orbit satellite networks could bridge India’s connectivity gaps. With around 314 million households in the country and only about half owning a television, LEO satellites could expand broadband access while also strengthening disaster recovery and network resilience.
Looking ahead to the next technological shift, CloudExtel CEO and co-founder Kunal Bajaj, said OTT growth was powered by the transition from 3G to 4G networks, while 5G will enable immersive formats such as augmented reality, virtual reality and shared viewing experiences.
However, Hughes Communications India CEO and managing director Shivaji Chatterjee, cautioned that broadcast distribution still offers unmatched efficiency for large live events. Delivering identical streams to millions of viewers via OTT consumes far more bandwidth than satellite transmission.
Satellite broadband could also play a role in expanding media access. Eutelsat OneWeb senior director Nishitha Kapoor, highlighted the potential of low-earth-orbit satellite networks to bridge connectivity gaps in underserved regions.
Newsrooms confront the AI dilemma
The summit also examined how artificial intelligence is reshaping journalism during the session The Newsroom of Tomorrow: Tools, Trust and Business Viability in Focus. The panel featured Govindraj Ethiraj, editor of The Core; Nilesh Khare, COO of Sakal Media Group; Prakaran Tiwari, chief executive producer at NDTV Profit; Manoj Padmanabhan, head – business media and entertainment at Amazon Web Services; and Neeraj Mishra, key account manager at Vizrt, moderated by Mayuresh Konnur, bilingual correspondent at Collective Newsroom.

Ethiraj argued that trust is now the real differentiator in a fragmented news ecosystem, noting that audiences increasingly consume information from alternative sources even as AI assists newsroom tasks such as editing and proofreading.
Khare said AI could reshape newsroom economics and scale, revealing that Sakal is building its own language model trained on six decades of archival data to reduce reliance on external platforms.
Tiwari stressed that perspective will remain journalism’s competitive edge, observing that AI is adapting to how audiences consume news. Padmanabhan positioned technology as an enabler rather than a replacement for journalists, saying AI acts as an assistant while the industry moves towards a single integrated newsroom.
Mishra highlighted how automation can help broadcasters manage rising content volumes, while moderator Konnur cautioned that the spread of deepfakes and synthetic media makes credibility and verification more critical than ever.
Automation reshapes sports and live production
Following discussions on AI, infrastructure and hybrid distribution, the summit also examined how automation is reshaping live broadcast production during the session The Journey From Live Events — Sports and News to Viewers: Exploring Tech-Driven Production.

The panel featured Mukund Acharya, CTO at Sony; Bhaskar Majumdar, GM – Saarc at Ross Video; Divyajot Ahluwalia, founder of wTVision and Quidich Innovation Labs; Megha Gambhir, CEO and founder of Stupa Sports Analytics; Subodh Aggarwal, general manager south asia at TVU Networks; Anand Pimprikar, head india and middle east at Tata Communications Media Enabled Services; and Rohan Padha, partner india at Deloitte, with Pimprikar chairing the session.
Ahluwalia said AI is enabling broadcasters to uncover patterns hidden in sports data, while Gambhir emphasised the growing role of data-driven insights and verification in live commentary. Acharya highlighted the scale of modern streaming, revealing SonyLIV has handled around 10 million concurrent viewers during major events.
Aggarwal noted that much of the automation powering live production remains invisible to audiences but is critical for reliability. Pimprikar said the pandemic accelerated the move to remote and network-based production, while Padha pointed to cloud-driven production models reshaping broadcasting economics and enabling deeper viewer engagement. Majumdar added that automation is now “bread and butter” for modern broadcasting, positioning AI as an assistive tool rather than a threat.
Cable and distribution rethink strategy
Distribution platforms are also adapting to the changing media ecosystem.
Fragmentation in India’s content ecosystem also came under scrutiny during a fireside chat with Manoj Dobhal, ceo and executive director of Dish TV India. Dobhal argued that while India produces vast volumes of content, value creation is constrained by a fragmented ecosystem that disconnects creators, producers, technology providers and global buyers.

“We know the problem is fragmentation,” Dobhal said, adding that it slows growth and prevents content from unlocking its full commercial value. He noted that creators often struggle to access international distribution and investor networks, despite India’s large diaspora and global appetite for Indian storytelling.
To address the gap, Dish TV plans to launch a three-day content marketplace in March 2026 that will bring together creators, producers, studios, investors and distributors under one roof. “It is not just about a career boost,” Dobhal said. “It is a roadmap,” suggesting that structured industry collaboration could help build long-term partnerships and create clearer global pathways for Indian content.
Meanwhile Vynsley Fernandes, whole-time director at Hinduja Global Solutions and CEO of NxtDigital, argued that AI, analytics and automation, what he called the “three As” will drive the next phase of media growth.
“These are not buzzwords,” he said. “They are enablers.” Analytics helps interpret consumer behaviour, AI anticipates demand and automation allows services to scale efficiently.
Highlighting NXTDigital’s footprint across roughly 4,500 pin codes, Fernandes said satellite internet, IPTV integration and OTT bundling will expand connectivity, particularly in underserved regions. He also stressed the importance of hyperlocal strategies, noting that demand can vary sharply even within the same neighbourhood. “The future is integration, not isolation,” he added, pointing to bundled offerings that combine television, broadband, VoIP and Wi-Fi.
Advertising enters the AI age
The advertising industry is undergoing a similar transformation.
A panel chaired by Rahul Kapoor, vice president partnerships at The Trade Desk, brought together marketing and ad-tech leaders to discuss the future of data-driven media.

Speaking about the growing role of AI, Pratap Jain, founder and CEO of Chana Jor, explained how his platform uses the technology to generate creatives and analyse audience behaviour. “We know from the data what people are watching and we create accordingly. AI helps us in doing that,” he said, while noting that human storytelling still brings “emotions and uniqueness which say a ChatGPT does not have.”
Opening the discussion, Sujay Ray, head of consumer experience, content and advocacy at L’Oréal India, stressed that storytelling remains the core of effective advertising. “The biggest challenge today is the lack of good stories,” he said, warning that brands are increasingly following trends rather than building distinct narratives.
From an agency perspective, Abhinay Bhasin, senior vice president – product and technology at dentsu India, described AI as an enabler of experimentation. “AI creates room for experiment,” he said, noting that brands can now test multiple creative routes quickly and optimise campaigns more efficiently.
The conversation also turned to changing media planning strategies. Anooj Shetty, national head – growth account advanced TV at WPP Media, said brands are now focused on deduplicated reach across platforms. “Every brand is very clear that it should get incremental reach,” he noted, highlighting the need for better measurement as campaigns span television, OTT and digital ecosystems.
Connected TV emerged as a key growth area, but with evolving definitions of success. Deepak Karnani of CereOne questioned traditional metrics, asking, “A CTV needs to deliver performance, but what is that performance?”
Meanwhile, Sandeep Balani of JioAds pointed out that digital’s biggest advantage can also create pressure for marketers. “One of the curses of digital is that it is very measurable,” he said, noting that advertisers often demand precise performance metrics even for upper-funnel formats.
Executives agreed that advertisers are moving beyond traditional television metrics toward unified measurement frameworks that combine streaming, digital and broadcast audiences.
Creators and access reshape sports engagement
Building on discussions around AI-driven and interactive fan experiences, another panel at VBS 2026 explored how creators, communities, and access are reshaping sports fandom beyond the match itself.
The panel was chaired by Shubha Pai, head – brand solutions, Google India, and featured Preranaa Khatri (chief business officer, Only Much Louder), Piyush Sharma (creative head, Punjab Kings), and Amit Doshi (founder & CEO, IVM Podcasts).

Pai highlighted that platforms like Youtube are central to modern fandom, capturing the intersection of creators, community and culture. “Cricket matches may end, but the passion around cricket continues 24 by 7,” she said, noting that 90 per cent of fans use second screens for commentary, memes, highlights, and discussions.
Sharma emphasised the emotional immediacy of fandom, with teams responding to fan questions and sentiments on platforms like Instagram and YouTube. “The wall between creators or teams and fans is disappearing,” he said, citing tools like comment analytics and sentiment analysis.
Khatri underscored the scaling power of digital platforms, enabling global fan communities, and stressed that partnerships must be authentic. Doshi highlighted podcasts as a vehicle for deeper engagement: “Highlights create excitement, but depth comes from long-form consumption,” while also warning that licensing costs limit long-form storytelling.
The panel concluded that access—to players, teams, and creators—will define future superfandom, turning casual viewers into year-round, engaged fans.
The rise of social-first sports fandom
Sports broadcasting is also evolving beyond the television screen.
At a panel titled “The Next-Gen Sports Fan Experience”, leaders from across the sports, streaming and technology ecosystem explored how artificial intelligence, cloud infrastructure and high-speed connectivity are redefining fan engagement.
Moderated by Niraj Ruparel, creative technology lead at WPP and WPP Media India, the discussion featured Shishir Gupta of Sony Sports Networks India, Siddharth Raman of Sportz Interactive, Avinash Mudaliar of OTTplay, and Jay Ganesan of Amagi.

Gupta said the traditional single-screen broadcast model is rapidly giving way to fragmented, multi-device viewing. “Sports still brings people together because it is live, but viewers now want bite-sized content and personalised formats,” he said.
Raman highlighted how real-time data enables more interactive storytelling through initiatives such as the Upstox Cricket Index and Boost Stamina Meter. “The power to orchestrate the content will lie with the viewer,” he said.
Ruparel pointed to immersive brand-led innovations such as Coca-Cola VR Cricket and the use of Google Pixel phones integrated into buggy cameras to capture new match perspectives. He also described an early prototype using Google Gemini that could allow fans to dial in and receive AI-powered match commentary in their preferred language.
Mudaliar stressed the importance of designing platforms for India’s diverse digital audience. “Our focus is the user in smaller towns with a modest device and limited connectivity. That viewer is equally part of the sports economy,” he said, noting that adaptive streaming ensures access even on weak networks.
Ganesan argued that sports production itself must evolve beyond broadcast-first thinking. “Different fans want different views—languages, players and data layers—and each of these experiences carries its own monetisation model,” he said.
Mudaliar added that nearly 90 per cent of Gen Z fans discover sports through social media, highlighting the next challenge for platforms: “converting those communities into long-form viewers.”
An industry in transition
Taken together, the summit’s discussions pointed to a broadcast sector undergoing structural change.
Artificial intelligence is reshaping production. Data is redefining advertising. And social platforms are transforming audience behaviour.
For broadcasters and technology companies alike, the message from VBS 2026 was unmistakable: the future of media will be hybrid, intelligent and relentlessly data-driven.






