News Broadcasting
CNN.com rated no. 1 web site for July 2004
MUMBAI: CNN.com has being ranked as the no 1 news organisation website for July 2004, according to Nielsen/NetRatings’ Home and Work Panel, as stated in an official release.
The online tracking company reported that CNN.com garnered 21 million unique users (P2+) for the month, tops among TV and newspaper Web sites.
The media release also notes the time consumed by users on on CNN.com in July 2004 have out-paced while compared to the other news organisation
Users of CNN.com spent more than 924 million total minutes on the site, up 9 percent from June 2004, according to Nielsen//NetRatings. Each user spent an average of nearly 8.5 minutes on the site each day.
The monthly report follows Nielsen//NetRatings’ analysis of Web traffic following the 2004 Democratic National Convention. According to that report, CNN.com garnered the most users among news organizations’ Web sites for all four days of the convention, averaging nearly 4.2 million unique U.S. home and work users on a daily basis, informs the media release.
News Broadcasting
India Today Group sweeps top honours at Ramnath Goenka Awards
Journalists recognised for fearless investigative and civic reporting.
MUMBAI: India Today Group just turned the Ramnath Goenka Awards into its own trophy cabinet because when your reporters dig this deep, even the judges have to award a clean sweep. India Today Group journalists have secured multiple top honours at the latest edition of the prestigious Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism Awards, reinforcing the network’s legacy as the gold standard of Indian journalism. The awards were conferred by vice president C. P. Radhakrishnan at a ceremony held on 27 March 2026.
Sreya Chatterjee won in the ‘Investigative Reporting – Broadcast’ category for her powerful India Today TV report ‘Operation Illegals: The Alarming Rise in Bangladeshi Infiltration Across India’s Fragile Eastern Frontier’. The investigation stood out for its depth, on-ground rigour and national relevance.
In the ‘Civic Journalism – Print/Digital’ category, Sreya Chatterjee along with Arvind Ojha were honoured for their indiatoday.in report on unregulated water extraction and the ‘Tanker Mafia’ in Delhi’s Bawana Industrial Area. The story exposed critical systemic gaps and environmental challenges affecting daily life.
Additionally, aajtak.in was recognised in the ‘Investigative Reporting – Print/Digital’ category for its hard-hitting exposé ‘The Surrogate Mother Market’, which highlighted the human, legal and ethical dimensions of the surrogacy ecosystem.
India Today Group emerged as the only network honoured in Investigative Journalism across both Print/Digital and Broadcast categories. The wins reflect the strength of its multi-platform newsroom and its unwavering commitment to credible, high-impact reporting that informs public discourse and drives accountability.
In an era when speed often trumps substance, these awards remind us that the most powerful stories are still the ones dug out with courage, told with clarity, and delivered with conscience, one fearless byline at a time.








