Author: Shruti Joshi
Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], December 19: At some point, streaming promised permanence. A digital utopia where films and shows would live forever, immune to dust, decay, and the indignity of late-night reruns. Watch anytime. Anywhere. Always. That promise has quietly expired. Streaming platforms are cutting content—not dramatically, not with announcements or apologies—but with the soft efficiency of an accountant closing tabs. One day, a show exists; the next, it doesn’t. No farewell banner. No warning. Just absence. And audiences are left wondering whether they imagined it in the first place. This isn’t chaos. It’s a strategy. And like most strategies born…
New Delhi [India], December 20: Quiet work. Hard borders. Zero applause expected. On Sashastra Seema Bal Raising Day, Union Home Minister Amit Shah put the spotlight where it belongs, on the men and women who guard India’s frontiers and stand firm in crises. Sashastra Seema Bal Raising Day is not about parades or grandstanding. It is about recognition. On 20 December 2025, Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation Amit Shah extended greetings to SSB personnel and their families, acknowledging a force that works far from the limelight but never away from duty. In a message shared on X, Shah…
New Delhi [India], December 19: India’s dynamic business ecosystem continues to be shaped by purpose-driven organisations that combine innovation, impact, and resilience. This group PR highlights a curated selection of companies making meaningful contributions across sectors, showcasing their journeys, values, and commitment to sustainable growth while creating positive change within their communities and industries. 1. Italy Study Centre (ISC) Italy Study Centre (ISC) is leading a global educational transformation by enabling students from diverse backgrounds to pursue higher education in Italy through 100% scholarship opportunities. Founded by Kumar Satyam, a visionary education leader, European Commission Expert Committee Member, and International…
Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], December 19: Once upon a time, global cinema required permission. A nod from Hollywood distributors. A dub deal. A festival blessing. A carefully negotiated release window that decided whether a film from Seoul, Chennai, Madrid, Tokyo, or Jakarta would be deemed “exportable” enough for the rest of the world. That era didn’t end with a press release. It simply collapsed under its own irrelevance. Today, regional cinema is crossing borders the way people scroll—casually, repeatedly, without waiting for validation. Non-English films are not “breaking through” anymore. They are arriving unannounced, subtitled, unapologetic, and increasingly unavoidable. The most…
New Delhi [India], December 19: Good Governance Week 2025 is officially live. And this year, the message is blunt and unmistakable: governance only counts if citizens feel it at the last mile. The Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances launched Good Governance Week 2025 with a clear operational spine. The nationwide campaign runs from December 19 to December 25, anchored by the now-familiar but sharper initiative, Prashasan Gaon Ki Ore. The Guidelines for the “Prashasan Gaon Ki Ore” Campaign 2025 were launched today by Smt. Rachna Shah, Secretary, DARPG & DOPT, during the virtual inaugural session of the campaign.…
India’s transportation and logistics story has largely been written in metro cities. Beyond Tier 1 markets, however, a vast and fast-growing network of Tier 2 cities continues to depend on fragmented, unreliable, or expensive transportation options. This is where WayWheel is stepping in, building structured, affordable, and dependable delivery solutions designed specifically for emerging urban centres. While most organised transportation and logistics platforms remain focused on saturated metro markets, WayWheel has chosen a different path. The brand operates not just in Tier 1 cities but Tier 2 cities also, where the need for reliable goods movement and local transport services is real, and alternatives…
The strangest thing about modern blockbusters isn’t their size. It’s their confidence. Or at least, the appearance of it. Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], December 19: On paper, cinema has never looked richer. Big-Budgets that once triggered boardroom palpitations—$200 million, $250 million, even flirting with $300 million—are now signed off with the casual air of a streaming subscription renewal. Studios still announce these films with polished trailers, thunderous music, and a reassuring whisper: this is the safe bet. Except it isn’t. Not anymore. And everyone inside the system knows it, even if no one wants to say it out loud. What’s happening…
New Delhi [India], December 19: Healthcare systems across the world are undergoing a subtle yet important transformation. While medical science continues to advance rapidly, equal emphasis is now being placed on how effectively that knowledge is communicated to patients. In an environment where consultations are time-bound and medical procedures increasingly complex, patient understanding has become central to care quality. Positioned at the heart of this shift is Eremedium, an India-born healthcare communication technology company focused on strengthening doctor–patient conversations through visual education. Founded in 2017, Eremedium was built on the insight that patient comprehension directly influences confidence, adherence, and outcomes.…
New Delhi [India], December 19: Energy drives development. Always has. India’s nuclear energy target is a blunt acknowledgement of that truth, not a political flourish. Human progress has never been subtle about its appetite for energy. In 1971, Earl Cook laid it out plainly in Scientific American. As societies evolve, their energy consumption climbs. Food alone sustains primitive life. Add homes, trade, farming, transport, industry, then technology. Each stage piles on demand. Today, the digital economy adds another layer. Data centres, networks, automation, AI. None of it runs on good intentions. It runs on electrons. This is where India stands.…
Publicly, audiences are exhausted. Privately, they’re booking seats. Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], December 19: Every year, the conversation resurfaces with ritualistic precision: Hollywood is out of ideas. Sequels everywhere. Reboots nobody asked for. Cinematic universes are expanding like unchecked bureaucracy. Social feeds fill with laments about originality, risk, and the death of cinema as an art form. And then the opening weekend arrives. The same franchises dominate box office charts. The same IP floods streaming “Top 10” lists. The same characters, logos, and storylines continue to outperform almost everything else. Franchise fatigue, it turns out, is real — just not decisive.…
