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Music and Youth

MTV Youth Marketing Awards announced

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The results of the MTV and Indiatimes.com co-sponsored event, Youth Marketing Awards were announced yesterday. The criterion for the awards, which are divided into two sections: marketing and advertising, is that the campaign should be “out of the box”. It shouldn’t be something which you have seen before and it need not be popular.

The awards which were instituted by MTV, which calls itself the 360 degrees brand, three years ago have come a long way since then. They had some 50 entries last year and the entries have risen to almost 450 this year.

Shumit Roy, head of the Mumbai Ad Club Mumbai, is the convenor for these awards. According to him, “When I say out of the box I don’t mean popular. I mean something which has never been done before. But it need not just be creative work. It should be appealing and groundbreaking both.”

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The results of the awards were as follows:

Print ad of the year:

 
Agency
Client
Campaign
Joint Silver
O&M
Britannia
Hide & Seek
Bullfight
Joint Silver
O&M
Onida
Lord Hanuman
Gold
Concept
Shiv Sena
Italian

 

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Print ad of the decade:

 
Agency
Client
Campaign
Silver
Not Awarded
Gold
O&M
Pepsi
No to Coke

 

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TV ad of the year:

 
Agency
Client
Campaign
Silver
Not Awarded
Gold
Not Awarded

 

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TV ad of the decade:

 
Agency
Client
Campaign
Silver
Lintas
Bajaj
Tribals – Sunny
Gold
Contract
Chicklets
Fatso

 

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Music and Youth

Mumbai gears up for the ultimate Global Youth Festival this December

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MUMBAI: Mumbai is about to witness something it has never seen before. The Global Youth Festival arrives on 6-7 December at Jio World Garden with 15,000 attendees and 60-plus experiences sprawled across six sprawling arenas. On its sixth edition, this is no ordinary jamboree—it is a carefully orchestrated collision of wellness, adventure, arts, music, yoga and social change.

Chief Minister of Maharashtra Devendra Fadnavis will throw open the proceedings with a landmark ceremony, signalling the state’s backing for a movement that has already mobilised youth across 20-plus countries and 170-plus cities. The sheer scale is staggering: 500-plus volunteers powering the machine, 600,000-plus volunteer hours logged across previous editions, and millions of lives touched annually.

The speaker roster is formidable. Diipa Büller-Khosla and Dipali Goenka, chief executive of Welspun India, will share the stage with Malaika Arora in conversations spanning leadership, creativity and culture. Union Minister for Sports and Youth Affairs Mansukhbhai Mandaviya will also attend, reinforcing GYF’s reach into the corridors of power.

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But this is not mere talk. The Solaris Mainstage promises concerts from renowned Indian artists. Innerverse delivers a 360-degree LED spectacle of art, technology and sound. The Love and Care Arena houses hands-on projects spanning women’s empowerment, child education, rural upliftment and animal welfare. India’s largest outdoor sound-healing experience awaits. An inflatable obstacle course, neon drifter karts and open-sky bouldering cater to thrill-seekers.

Some have branded GYF the “Coachella of Consciousness.” Others call it “India’s Largest Sober Festival.” Spiritual visionary Pujya Gurudevshri Rakeshji, who inspired the festival, will deliver the Wisdom Masterclass. Every rupee goes to charity.

After Mumbai comes Kolkata on 14 December. New York looms next year. For one weekend in December, Mumbai becomes the epicentre of youth-driven change—and nothing will be quite the same after.

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Tickets available on BookMyShow. Visit youthfestival.srmd.org or follow @globalyouthfestival on Instagram.
 

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