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Prime time for India as Amazon’s streamer doubles down on desi drama

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MUMBAI: At a lively fireside chat during AVIA’s Future of Video India conference, part of the first-ever WAVES summit, Kelly Day, head of international & VP, Prime Video, and Gaurav Gandhi, VP for Asia Pacific & MENA, lifted the curtain on Amazon’s streaming strategy with India in a starring role.

Kelly Day waxed lyrical about the enduring allure of the big screen, declaring, “We believe in the theatrical window,” and reaffirming Prime Video’s intent to back the box office while keeping its streaming chops strong. The aim? Around 14–15 global theatrical releases a year, because nothing beats the magic of popcorn-fuelled premieres unless you can also watch it at home in your PJs.

But beyond the cinema, it’s the everything hub approach that’s taking centre stage. “We want to be the first place people think of when they want to watch something,” said Day, noting that with over 200 million Prime members worldwide, Prime Video is less about being everything to everyone and more about helping everyone find exactly what they want.

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For India, that means layering choice upon choice. Gaurav Gandhi detailed how the country has become Prime’s petri dish for innovation TVOD (Transactional Video on Demand) is booming with 7000 plus titles, and 60 per cent get rented every month across 95 per cent of India’s pin codes. The subcontinent is also home to 25 plus channel partners, making it second only to Japan in Prime’s global “channels” play.

“India is a super important locale,” Gandhi noted, adding that it’s not just a growth engine for Prime sign-ups but also a massive content factory, with one of the largest original slates outside the US. Even more impressive? One in four views of Indian content comes from overseas, proving that regional stories are finding global legs.

And when it comes to customisation, India’s Prime menu is a buffet: from Prime Lite to full-fat Prime, mobile-only editions to programming in 10 Indian languages, the streamer’s playbook here is all about slicing and dicing its offerings to match the country’s many moods. “We’re learning from India and taking that learning global,” Gandhi quipped.

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So while other platforms try to decode the Indian market, Prime Video seems to have cracked the subtitles and is quietly exporting the script.
 

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iWorld

Applause, Story TV team up to push microdrama content

Partnership to create premium short form shows for mobile first viewers

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MUMBAI: Applause Entertainment and Story TV are betting on short attention spans with a long-term vision, joining forces to create a slate of premium microdramas for mobile-first audiences.

The partnership brings together Applause’s storytelling pedigree and Story TV’s fast-growing digital reach, with plans to co-produce and distribute bite-sized dramas across genres. As part of the deal, Story TV will also adapt the romantic thriller Hello Mini into a vertical microdrama format, signalling a shift in how stories are being reshaped for smaller screens.

Backed by the Aditya Birla Group, Applause Entertainment has built a reputation for high-quality content with titles like Scam 1992 and Criminal Justice. Story TV, launched in 2025, has quickly scaled up with a library of over 1,000 titles across languages and genres, riding the wave of mobile consumption.

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Story TV founder and CEO Saurabh Pandey said, “Phones are now the primary screens for content consumption, and microdramas are evolving into a mainstream format. At Story TV, we are blending storytelling with technology to push this format further.”

He added that the collaboration with Applause Entertainment will help expand the reach of microdramas while introducing a layer of premium storytelling to the space.

Applause Entertainment chief business officer Prasoon Garg said, “At Applause, we have always focused on strong storytelling across formats. As microdramas gain momentum, this partnership allows us to explore the space with a platform that understands both the format and its audience.”
With mobile screens shrinking and content getting sharper, the collaboration hints at a future where storytelling is not just shorter, but smarter, designed to fit neatly into the scroll of everyday life.

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