GECs
Discovery sinks $500K into fund for new programming
MUMBAI: Silver Spring-based Discovery Channel US and Discovery Networks International are shelling out big dollars for producers to come up with new, cutting edge programming.
The two have launched a $500,000 Global Landmark Development Fund, seeking groundbreaking programming ideas from producers around the world.
“This is an exciting challenge for producers to bring us ideas as ambitious and innovative as ‘Planet Earth’ and ‘North America’,” said Luis Silberwasser, executive vice president and chief content officer, referring to two of its most successful programming series.
“By working on a global scale, we have a unique opportunity to enlist the world’s best production companies to make their most ambitious ideas a reality.”
‘North America’, with episodes covering various geographical regions of the continent, is Discovery’s first independently-produced natural history series.
GECs
Rose and Shine as &TV Decodes India’s Love Language
Valentine’s campaign turns quiet gestures into grand moments.
MUMBAI: In India, love rarely arrives with violins. More often, it shows up as a cup of tea, a fixed light bulb, or a joke cracked at the right moment. This Valentine’s Day, &TV decided to put that unsaid affection centre stage. With its campaign titled ‘India ka Love Language’, the channel has stepped beyond the screen to spotlight a cultural truth: in Indian households, love is frequently understated, particularly by men. It is expressed not through sweeping declarations but through everyday gestures, silent support and routine acts of care.
To translate that insight into action, &TV rolled out an on-ground activation across Delhi, choosing a single rose as its symbol. But this was no grand, cinematic spectacle. The idea was simple. Hand someone a rose. Pass it on to a person who matters. Let the gesture do the talking.
The activation was designed to feel organic rather than orchestrated, nudging people to acknowledge affection that often goes unspoken. Instead of performative romance, the campaign leaned into familiarity, warmth and the quiet humour that defines many Indian relationships.
At the heart of the initiative sits Bhabiji Ghar Par Hain! 2.0, a show that mirrors this philosophy. Known for its playful banter and everyday dynamics, the sitcom captures relationships where fondness is woven into jokes, misunderstandings and shared routines. The line, “Aapke pyaar ke liye ek anokha tohfa, Sahi pakde hain!”, fits naturally into this world, making the show an extension of the campaign’s emotional pitch.
Zee5, chief channel officer, &TV and business head for Hindi Kaveri Das said the idea was to celebrate the kind of affection that rarely makes headlines but defines real life. She noted that in Indian culture, love is often quiet, especially when it comes from men who may not always articulate it. The initiative, she said, was an attempt to acknowledge that silent affection and bring it into the open.
By taking a television thought into a real-world setting, &TV has turned Valentine’s Day into less about spectacle and more about sincerity. In a season crowded with grand gestures, the channel’s message is disarmingly simple: sometimes, the strongest “I love you” is the one that never needed saying.






