Ad Campaigns
Swiggy dials up the decibels with ‘Prime Time Menu’ for Father’s Day celebration
MUMBAI: If your dad insists on cranking the TV up to ear-splitting levels during the 9 pm debate, Swiggy just served up the perfect Father’s Day gift.
India’s food delivery giant launched the ‘Prime Time Menu’ campaign, turning its in-app experience into a full-blown homage to prime-time news channels—dramatic tickers, booming anchors, and all.
The campaign, built around a digital film, captures the daily struggle of a daughter trying to survive the sonic boom of her father’s nightly news rituals. From anchor rants to khulaasas drowning out her study sessions and dance practice, the chaos finally finds comic relief when she decides to embrace it—with food. She gifts him Swiggy’s ‘Prime Time Menu’, sparking laughs and relief in equal measure.
Swiggy, known for its quirky, relatable brand tone, partnered with Bad Studio Production LLP to deliver this loud love letter. The platform turned its app interface into a parody of a live newsroom. Users are treated to anchor-led food segments, animated breaking headlines, and dramatic scrolls reporting on spicy samosas and scandalous burgers.
“At Swiggy, we love finding joy in the everyday quirks of our consumers. ‘Prime Time Menu’ is our way of celebrating something almost every Indian family can relate to, a father’s unshakable love for news and current affairs. It’s a campaign built on insight, nostalgia, and humour, and it’s another step in making the Swiggy experience deeply personal, culturally resonant, and ultimately, fun”, said Swiggy VP-brand Mayur Hola.
Live now on the Swiggy app and across digital platforms, the campaign has turned up the volume on dad culture. It’s equal parts tribute and playful roast. With tickers louder than thunder and food promos cheekier than anchors, the campaign delivers dad-core humour at its best.
Because this Father’s Day, if you can’t beat the noise, feed it.
Ad Campaigns
Amazon Ads maps 2026 as AI and streaming rewrite ad playbooks
NATIONAL: Amazon Ads has laid out a sharply tech-led vision for the advertising industry in 2026, arguing that artificial intelligence, streaming TV and creator partnerships will combine to turn brand building into a more precise, performance-driven business.
At the heart of the shift, the company says, is the fusion of AI with Amazon’s vast trove of shopping, browsing and streaming signals, allowing advertisers to move beyond blunt reach metrics to campaigns designed around real customer behaviour.
“The future of advertising is not about reaching more people, but the right people with messages that resonate,” said Amazon Ads India head and vice president Girish Prabhu. “By combining AI with deep customer insights, we help brands move from broadcasting campaigns to having meaningful conversations wherever audiences spend their time.”
One of the biggest changes, according to Amazon Ads, will be the collapse of the wall between media planning and creative development. Retail media, powered by first-party data, is increasingly shaping everything from brand discovery to final purchase, pushing marketers to design campaigns around audience insight rather than internal instinct.
AI is also moving from a support tool to a creative engine. Agentic AI, which automates and accelerates production, is expected to make high-quality creative accessible even to small businesses, compressing weeks of work into hours and giving challengers the ability to compete with larger brands on speed and scale.
Behind the scenes, AI-driven analytics will take on a bigger role in campaign optimisation, identifying patterns, spotting opportunities and recommending actions that would previously have required teams of analysts.
Streaming TV is another big battleground. With India’s video streaming audience now above 600 million and connected TV users at 129.2 million in 2025, advertisers are set to treat streaming not just as a branding channel but as a performance engine, measured increasingly by sales, sign-ups and bookings rather than just reach.
Finally, Amazon Ads sees creators and contextual advertising reshaping how brands tell stories. Creators will act less like influencers and more like long-term partners, while scene-aware ads on streaming platforms will allow brands to insert hyper-relevant offers into the flow of what viewers are watching.
Taken together, Amazon Ads argues, these shifts mark a move towards advertising that is both more human and more measurable, where AI handles the complexity, and creativity does the persuading.








