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Mandals to the Metaverse Zee 24 Taas Goes Global with Ganpati

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MUMBAI: Ganpati Goes Global, and Zee 24 Taas Is Right at the Heart of It. From Glasgow to Girgaon, Ganpati is no longer just a local celebration, it’s a global phenomenon. And Zee 24 Taas isn’t just covering the news, it’s shaping the narrative. In an engaging conversation with Indian Television Dot Com Zee 24 Taas editor Kamlesh Sutar shared how the channel is reimagining festive programming to reflect both tradition and tech, rural reverence and social media sparkle.

“It starts with Shravan,” Sutar explains, “Dahi Handi and Gokulashtami kick off the season, followed by Ganesh Utsav, Navratri, and Diwali. Our audience spans the globe now diaspora in the US, UK, UAE, even Pakistan tunes in.” Last year, the channel’s Desho Deshi Se Bappa special featured live coverage from Glasgow, where the Grand Maharashtra Mandal’s celebrations lit up screens back home.

Zee 24 Taas plans to go bigger this year, capturing Ganesh festivities in cities with strong Maharashtrian communities Dubai, New York, Spain, and beyond showing how faith travels and festivals follow.

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Back home, the strategy is rooted in hyper-local storytelling. “Mumbai isn’t just Mumbai,” Sutar says. “We go down to the mohalla Dadar, Parel, Girgaon. And the same for other cities Ashur in Pune, Hatkanangle in Kolhapur. Hyper-local gives us deeper engagement and a stronger emotional connect.”

The channel’s on-ground teams no longer report from the field they are the field. Anchors now go live from pandals and mandals, turning static coverage into immersive storytelling.

Zee 24 Taas is also speaking the language of Gen Z. “Young people don’t tune into conventional news, they scroll it,” Sutar says. So the team infuses digital-first formats like Instagram Lives, trending reels, and celeb-driven content. A Celebrity Ganpati segment is in the works, roping in well-known faces to boost youth engagement across platforms. “We’re not just live on TV, we’re live on YouTube, Instagram, everywhere.”

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To keep audiences plugged into the pulse of the festival, Zee 24 Taas has lined up a comprehensive slate of special programming that blends devotion with entertainment. For television viewers, the schedule includes Shree Ganesh Aarti, a daily broadcast of the morning aarti from 27 August to 6 September at 6:45am, and Zee 24 Taas Sukhkarta, airing twice first as a build-up from 21 to 26 August at 10:30am, and later as a daily festival bulletin from 27 August to 6 September at 7:30am.

Global Bappa, telecast at 12:30pm, brings a glimpse of Ganeshotsav celebrations from across the world, while Bappa Aaj Kai Khanar spices things up with festive recipes during the same afternoon slot. Gharguti Ganesh Spardha, airing from 1:30pm to 2pm, invites viewers to showcase their home celebrations, while Celebrity Ganpati brings star-studded darshans to the screen from 5:30pm. Gavakadcha Bappa, scheduled at 7:30pm, offers local flavours through festival walk-throughs from across Maharashtra. Special aarti broadcasts like Shree Ganeshachi Pran Prathishtha will mark the festival’s start on 26 and 27 August. The finale, Pudhchya Varshi Lavkar Ya, on Anant Chaturdashi (6 September), will run from 7am to 11pm, capturing the immersion-day fervour.

Beyond the box, Zee 24 Taas is equally charged up on digital. Their festival content package includes a mix of festival news, informative stories on Ganesh Chaturthi’s significance and rituals, vibrant photo galleries featuring eco-friendly idols and pandals, and specially curated recipes. The channel’s social feeds will also be abuzz with original and syndicated videos, plus crowd-sourced web stories featuring images sent by enthusiastic devotees. This integrated multi-platform strategy ensures Zee 24 Taas celebrates Ganeshotsav not just as a regional affair, but as a global experience echoing across living rooms in India and beyond.

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Sustainability, too, has made its way into editorial choices. The channel spotlights eco-friendly idols, online pujas, and even the rise of online Ganesh shopping. “Modern-day concerns like the environment and accessibility are integrated seamlessly,” Sutar notes.

Zee 24 Taas is mindful of maintaining editorial sanctity while embracing advertiser partnerships. “Brand integration works when it’s organic,” says Sutar. “For instance, a mithai brand during Ganpati feels natural. We steer clear of irrelevant sponsorships. It has to be a win-win for the brand and for our audience.”

The channel’s approach ensures advertisers find a contextual home during peak seasons, and viewers get content that’s immersive, not intrusive. With tailored brand stories, past campaigns have seen solid ROI and lasting recall.

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At its heart, Zee 24 Taas’ festive coverage is driven by a simple belief: India’s festivals aren’t bound by state lines or even national ones. They resonate worldwide, evolve with technology, and unite communities through shared celebration.

And as Kamlesh Sutar puts it best, “I may not celebrate Ganpati at home anymore, but with Zee 24 Taas, I get to celebrate it with a million households across the world.”

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Kamlesh Singh receives Haldi Ghati Award from MMCF

India Today Group editor honoured for three decades of journalism at Udaipur ceremony.

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MUMBAI- Kamlesh Singh just turned a lifetime of sharp words into a shiny shield because when journalism wakes up a society, even the Maharana of Mewar wants to pin a medal on it.

The Maharana of Mewar Charitable Foundation (MMCF) conferred its prestigious Haldi Ghati Award on Kamlesh Singh, a senior editor at the India Today Group, during a ceremony in Udaipur on 15 March 2026. The national award, instituted in 1981-82, recognises “work of permanent value that initiates an awakening in society through the medium of journalism.”

Singh, who leads several editorial initiatives including Aaj Tak Radio, the Teen Taal community and The Lallantop, was presented the honour by Lakshyaraj Singh Mewar, Managing Trustee of MMCF. The citation highlighted his three decades of contributions to Indian media, innovations in digital journalism, mentoring young reporters, and his popular podcast persona “Tau” on Teen Taal, which fosters thoughtful public discourse.

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The Haldi Ghati Award, named after the historic Battle of Haldighati symbolising valour and resilience, is one of four national awards given annually by MMCF. Past recipients include Tavleen Singh, Piyush Pandey and Raj Chengappa.

Other honourees this year included Padma Vibhushan Pt Hari Prasad Chaurasia, Vedamurti Devvrat Rekhe, Treeman of India Marimuthu Yoganathan, Vir Chakra Capt Rizwan Malik, and US-based researcher Molly Emma Aitken, who received the Colonel James Tod Award for contributions to understanding Mewar’s spirit and values.

In an era where headlines often shout louder than substance, the MMCF quietly reminded everyone that real journalism isn’t about noise, it’s about the quiet, persistent work that stirs society awake, one thoughtful story at a time.

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