MAM
LunchBox serves up Onam feast with a tongue-twisting festive challenge
MUMBAI: What’s harder, finishing a 20-dish feast or pronouncing “Erissery” without fumbling? This Onam, Lunchbox is spicing up celebrations by offering both: a Mini Onam Sadhya delivered nationwide and a quirky Pronunciation Challenge that could win you a trip to Kerala. Traditionally, the Onam Sadhya is a vegetarian banquet of over 20 dishes served on a banana leaf from the creamy Kaalan to the subtly spiced Avial. LunchBox is packaging this cultural spectacle into a homely yet festive offering that travels from Kerala kitchens to tables across India.
For non-Malayalis, names like Thoran, Olan, and Erissery often trip the tongue, so LunchBox turned it into a nationwide game. Every Sadhya order comes with a sleeve featuring dish names and a QR code leading to an AI-generated video of King Mahabali himself teaching you the right way to say them. Diners are then invited to record a 15-second voice note and send it via Instagram DM for a chance to win.
The prize menu is as generous as the feast:
● Grand Prize: A couple’s all-expenses-paid trip to Kerala (flights, hotels, breakfasts).
● 2nd & 3rd Prize: Staycations for two couples in Kerala.
● Holiday vouchers worth Rs 5,000 for two winners.
● Rs 500 flight discounts for 16,000 customers on domestic routes.
The travel rewards come through LunchBox’s exclusive tie-up with Easemytrip.
Explaining the concept Rebel Food CMO Nishant Kedia said: “Onam is about joy, unity, and sharing. The Pronunciation Challenge goes beyond food, it builds connections, sparks laughter, and opens the festival to everyone.”
For foodies in Mumbai, Bangalore, Chennai, and Hyderabad, the competition adds another festive layer to the banana-leaf banquet. And for those simply craving comfort food, LunchBox’s chefs have ensured the Sadhya still feels like a slice of Kerala, no matter the pin code.
With flavour, fun, and even free holidays on the plate, Lunchbox has ensured that this Onam celebration is anything but ordinary.
MAM
VML India lands two finalist spots at Cairns Hatchlings 2026
The Mumbai agency is back in Australia with two teams, a UN brief and 24 hours to impress
MUMBAI: VML India is heading to Australia again. The Mumbai-based creative agency has secured two finalist spots at the Cairns Hatchlings 2026 competition, one in the Audio category and one in Design, making it the only Indian agency to have reached the finals in both editions of the contest since its launch in 2025.
Four people will make the trip. Senior copywriter Shilpi Dey and senior art director Raj Thakkar will compete in Audio. Art directors Shabbir and Shruti Negi will go head-to-head with the world’s best in Design. The finals take place at the Cairns Convention Centre from 13th May, culminating in an awards ceremony on 15th May.
The work that got them there is worth examining. For the Audio category, Dey and Thakkar tackled a brief for LIVE LIKE MMAD with a campaign called Inner Voice, Interrupted. Using spatial audio techniques, the campaign recreates the overwhelming self-doubt that descends after a long workday, physically panning negative thoughts left and right before cutting the noise entirely to reveal a confident inner voice. Strategically targeted at commuters via Spotify during evening rush hours, the campaign reframes the hours after work as an opportunity for personal growth and charitable action.

For the Design category, Shabbir and Negi worked on a brief for Canteen’s Bandanna Day, a campaign highlighting how cancer pushes teenagers out of their own defining moments. Using a pixelated design language to create stark contrast between a blurred world of isolation and a focused world of connection, the campaign, titled The Flipside of Cancer, shows teenagers fading into the background of birthdays, skateparks and school proms. As a Canteen bandanna appears, the blur flips and the teenager snaps back into sharp focus.

Kalpesh Patankar, group chief creative officer of VML India, made no attempt to disguise his satisfaction. “We are immensely proud to see our teams consistently excel on the Cairns Hatchlings platform since its inception,” he said. “They have masterfully tackled challenging briefs across diverse categories, demonstrating both layered storytelling and a unique creative approach. This exceptional teamwork is truly inspiring.”
Dey and Thakkar, returning to the finals after last year’s run, were candid about the demands of the audio medium. “It’s one of the most demanding mediums, where we only have a few seconds to capture a listener’s world with sound alone, so absolute clarity is essential,” they said. “The true measure of creative work is its ability to create positive change, and our audio submission was made to help those who need it most while encouraging people to silence the inner voices that hold them back.”
Shabbir and Negi, competing in Design for the first time, described the experience as “a completely different beast.” “We see it as an opportunity to showcase our expertise, raise the bar, and challenge ourselves in new ways, while also learning from creative minds from across the globe,” they said.
In Australia, the four finalists will face a live 24-hour brief from the United Nations before presenting in a live pitch session. Twenty-four hours, one brief, one shot. VML India has been here before. It knows exactly what is at stake.







