iWorld
Remo stirs the floor as Dharmesh drops the mic on Hip Hop India
MUMBAI: If you thought the beats were wild, wait till you see the twist. Realme Hip Hop India Season 2 is serving up more shockers than a plot-heavy soap. Streaming exclusively on Amazon MX Player, the show’s latest promo has left fans reeling after judge Remo D’Souza dropped a bombshell, the grand finale will now be a Top 4 face-off, not the Top 2 as expected.
With emotions running high and rivalries reaching breaking point, the fight for a finalist’s spot has never looked fiercer. And just when the heat couldn’t turn up any higher, in comes Dharmesh Yelande, not just to judge but to slay the stage himself. His surprise performance shook the room, electrifying both contestants and co-judges alike.
The tension was thick enough to slice with a moonwalk. As dancers put everything on the line for that coveted finalist slot, the pressure pushed some to tears and others to thrilling new heights. This week promises not just jaw-dropping choreography, but a full-blown emotional rollercoaster.
Between high-octane face-offs, musical curveballs, and one dramatic reveal after another, Hip Hop India Season 2 continues to raise the stakes and the swag. Stream it now on Amazon MX Player via the Amazon app, Prime Video, Fire TV, and Connected TVs.
Because in this battle, the beat never drops, only the mic does.
iWorld
Meta launches AI connectors for ads in open beta
Tools enable campaign creation, reporting and insights via AI platforms.
MUMBAI: If ads were once about gut feel, Meta now wants them run on autopilot with AI riding shotgun. The company has unveiled its Meta ads AI connectors in open beta, a move aimed at embedding campaign creation, management and analysis directly into the AI tools advertisers already use. The push reflects a broader shift in digital advertising: from platform-led workflows to AI-assisted, cross-tool execution.
At the heart of the rollout are Meta’s ads model context protocol (MCP) server and a command line interface (CLI), which together allow advertisers to securely link their ad accounts to AI agents. The promise is straightforward real campaign data, not generic prompts, powering decisions across workflows.
The connectors are designed to streamline multiple layers of campaign management. Advertisers can generate detailed performance reports, create and edit campaigns using natural language, manage product catalogues, and diagnose signal quality, all without leaving their preferred AI environment.
Meta is also leaning into ease of adoption. For MCP, the company says setup requires no coding, developer credentials or API integrations, positioning the tools as accessible for businesses of varying sizes and technical maturity.
The launch complements Meta’s existing AI business assistant within Ads Manager, which focuses on recommendations and troubleshooting inside the platform. The connectors, by contrast, extend that intelligence outward into third-party AI tools that marketers increasingly rely on for cross-channel planning and automation.
The underlying strategy is clear: instead of forcing advertisers deeper into its ecosystem, Meta is meeting them where they already work while still keeping its data and ad infrastructure at the core of decision-making.
As AI continues to reshape how campaigns are conceived and executed, Meta’s latest move signals a future where managing ads may feel less like operating software and more like having a conversation.







