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Rollingstones to lick Mumbai 14 April

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MUMBAI: After being in hibernation for quite a while, Mumbai’s live event scene is all set to shake, rattle and roll courtesy The Rollingstones. The band will perform at the Brabourne Stadium on 14 April. Music aficionados may recall that Canadian rocker Bryan Adams had performed at the same venue nine years ago.

The Mumbai concert promises to be one heck of a firecracker, what with containers containing 100,000 kilos worth of equipment being shipped. Rollingstones’ production director Jake Berry said that there would a be a large video screen as well as a new improved sound system. 25,000 fans ears will be blasted by 240,000 watts of sound.

The stage will be 150 feet wide and 25 metres deep, which will take around three days to rig, Berry said. In fact, yesterday the band played in Melbourne at an indoor stadium to around 14,000 people.

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Event management company DNA Networks is in charge of the Rollingstones Licks Tour of Indiawhile McDowells No. 1 is the presenting sponsor. Chairman UB Group Dr. Vijay Mallya said, “Bringing the Rollingstones to India goes one step further towards cementing McDowell’s no. 1’s position as a Mega Brand which brings to its consumers Mega Entertainment. The timeless act goes hand in hand with the style, panache and supremacy of our brand.

With this event I have no doubt that we will be providing more excitement, which is consistent with the brand identity. I recently attended a Rollingstones concert in San Francisco at an open baseball stadium and this reinforced my belief that The Rollingstones are not a bunch of has beens. They are contemporary and appreciation for them cuts across age barriers.”

As far as other events are concerned, Mallya said,” We have been negotiating with Enrique Iglesias, but for a variety of reasons the concert has been postponed. After The Rollingstones, the monsoon arrives and that is not a conducive time to host an event. But in the latter part of the year, music buffs can look forward to more acts. When someone asked me why Elton John couldn’t make it to Mumbai I was at a loss for words. The tax regime at the time made holding a concert here unfeasible.

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However, I spoke to Maharashtra’s chief minister Sushilkumar Shinde a few days ago and he agreed that the entertainment tax restructure needs to be looked at. It is on this premise that we are going ahead and we are highly optimistic that concessions for the event will be granted.”

When asked about live horse racing on Ten Sports he said, ” When McDowell’s initially became associated with the sport, the cost benefit ratio escalated. However, not long after that, it started coming down rapidly. For years, we have been searching for innovative ways to promote the sport and make it more popular. Then the inevitable happened which was a channel was keen on broadcasting the events live.

This has vindicated our investment in the sport over an extended period of time and we will be looking at covering the Bangalore circuit soon. Another sport that I am keen on covering through television is football and cricket has shown that corporatisation of sport is healthy. I am all for diminishing involvement of government agencies in sport.” In terms of endorsements while there were no immediate plans to rope in ther group to promote the product he noted that since people always want to see The Rollingstones together there would be no point in featuring them individually in ad campaigns.

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Speaking on the Licks tour, the band’s legendary front man Mick Jagger said,” In the stadium the whole thing is more about having a big show. To me it is not just about being a musician and playing music, though it is one of the integral parts. More importantly, it is a big show and we entertain people. A stadium show should have quite a lot of well known songs. While there should be a few surprises from this sort of repertoire there shouldn’t be too many.” Talking about surprise stuff fans could look forward to, another band member Ronnie Wood said,” We have loads of lovely untapped material like Can’t you hear me knocking, If you can love me and Straight cut blues which are some of my personal favourites. These have never come out live before but now that we are doing them it is really cool.”

The event is co-sponsored by Pepsi, Max, Hewlett Packard. The Indian Express and New Indian Express are the media partners while Invest UK a division of the British Trade office is the official endorsee. The 135 strong team which includes the bands entourage and the production crew will be staying at The Taj Mahal, which is celebrating a 100 years. As reported earlier by Indiantelevision.com, Max will air the Bangalore event one month after it is performed on 11 April as the capacity is slightly larger with 35,000 people expected to attend. Tickets for that go on sale on 10 March while for the Mumbai event, tickets are on sale from 15 March. The prices for the Mumbai event are Rs. 2000, 1200, 750 and 500.

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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

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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.

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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.

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